Romance of the Two Networks – Chapters 67-69Romance of the Two Networks – Chapters 67-69
This ain’t no parlor trick, jack. Cao Cao’s hubris has come home to roost in the form of a Taoist endowed with the power of black magic. No feat seems
This ain’t no parlor trick, jack. Cao Cao’s hubris has come home to roost in the form of a Taoist endowed with the power of black magic. No feat seems
It is OFFICIAL. There are THREE KINGDOMS at play, y’all! Xuande has Shu. Cao Cao has Wei. Sun Quan has Wu. We got ourselves a ball game. Sadly I’m not
The Young Phoenix falls. Xuande and Cao Cao become harder and harder to tell apart, as Xuande rages and Cao Cao flounders. The South forms a stupid scheme that still
We are finally at the halfway point, and our three kingdoms have emerged for sure. You could argue they already had, but now they have names and everything, it’s a
We are OFFICIALLY over Kongming and Xuande. We sadly have to say goodbye to Zhou Yu, and even more sadly don’t have to say goodbye to Sun Quan. Sick archery
Kongming has excuses, and the three brothers have cities to conquer. The Southlands show a startling lack of competence as their schemes fall flat on their faces. Why does Lu
We’re finally here… the Battle of Red Cliff. Kongming calls for wind, Zhou Yu calls for fire, and Cao Cao cries for mercy. At last, Cao Cao’s advantage is beginning
I know I set myself up, but I am rather disappointed by Kongming’s arrow scheme. That’s not nearly as cool as I was hoping. Besides, there’s such a better scheme
Can Kongming win the south over? Is the pope CATHOLIC, my friend. Our favorite hermit matches wits with all of the southland (and wins), finds himself on the other side
Liu Biao has fallen, and his lands are in disarray. How preventable was this, you may ask? SO PREVENTABLE. Xuande’s honorable nature screws over China once again, as Cao Cao