Romance Of The Three Kingdoms 2

Romance Of The Three Kingdoms 2 Rating: 3,9/5 606 votes
Romance of the Three Kingdoms II
Developer(s)Koei
Publisher(s)Koei
SeriesRomance of the Three Kingdoms
Platform(s)MS-DOS, PC-8801, PC-9801, MSX2, Amiga, NES, Super NES, Genesis, WonderSwan, PlayStation, Windows 95
Release
  • JP: 1989 (PC-8801, PC-9801)
  • JP: 15 September 1991 (SNES)
  • JP: 1991 (Amiga)
  • JP: 3 August 2000 (PlayStation)
  • NA: September 1991 (SNES)
  • NA: 25 December 1991 (Genesis)
Genre(s)Turn-based strategy
Mode(s)Single Player, multiplayer (max 8 (12 in Windows))

'Romance of the Three Kingdoms II' is the second in the series and was first released in 1989. Experience the strategies of the Three Kingdom. A variety of strategies brings the world of the Three Kingdoms to vivid life. Romance of the Three Kingdoms II ('Sangokushi II') is the sequel to Koei's popular strategy game Romance of the Three Kingdoms, based on a book that depicted the events of a turbulent period of Chinese history during which the three Kingdoms of Wei.

Mom hid my game 3ds walkthrough. Romance of the Three Kingdoms II (Japanese: 三國志II, Hepburn: Sangokushi Tsū, lit. 'Three Kingdoms II') is the second in the Romance of the Three Kingdoms series of turn-based strategy games produced by Koei and based on the historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms.

Gameplay[edit]

Upon starting the game, players choose from one of six scenarios that determine the initial layout of power in ancient China. The scenarios loosely depict allegiances and territories controlled by the warlords as according to the novel, although gameplay does not follow events in the novel after the game begins.

The six scenarios are listed as follows:

Romance of the three kingdoms 2 guide
  1. Dong Zhuo seizes control of Luoyang (AD 189)
  2. Warlords struggle for power (AD 194)
  3. Liu Bei seeks shelter in Jing Province (AD 201)
  4. Cao Cao covets supremacy over China (AD 208)
  5. The empire divides into three (AD 215)
  6. Rise of Wei, Wu and Shu (AD 220)

After choosing the scenario, players determine which warlord(s) they will control. Custom characters may be inserted into territories unoccupied by other forces, as well. A total of 41 different provinces exist, as well as over 200 unique characters. Each character has three statistics, which range from 10 to 100 (the higher the better). A warlord's Intelligence, War Ability and Charm influence how successful he or she will be when performing certain tasks, such as dueling or increasing land value in a province.

The player wins the game by conquering all territories in China. This is accomplished by being in control of every province on the map.

New features[edit]

  • A reputation system that affects the rate of officers' loyalties towards their lords
  • Added treasures and special items that can increase an officer's stats
  • Advisers can help their lords predict the chances of success in executing a plan. An adviser with Intelligence stat of 100 will always accurately predict the result.
  • Intercepting messengers
  • Ability to create new lords on the map based on custom characters created by players

Reception[edit]

Computer Gaming World stated that Romance of the Three Kingdoms II 'did a better job of simulating the chaos of' second-century China than the game's predecessor.[1] In a 1993 survey of pre 20th-century strategy games the magazine gave the game four stars out of five.[2] On release, Famicom Tsūshin scored the Famicom version of the game a 30 out of 40.[3]

Music-Title: Mewmore / 'Professor Layton's Theme' (Remix) from Professor Layton and the Curious Village. Details: A number of five-sided shapes are hidden within the picture below. How many can you find? Answer when you think you've found every hidden shape. The answer to the chocolate puzzle on Professor Layton and the Curious Village is the phrase, 'Text Me'. The hint can be found by looking directly at the keyboard in the game. Asked in Professor. Professor layton and the curious village puzzle 70

References[edit]

  1. ^White, Roger (April 1992). 'Ancient China Syndrome'. Computer Gaming World. p. 80. Retrieved 24 November 2013.
  2. ^Brooks, M. Evan (June 1993). 'An Annotated Listing of Pre-20th Century Wargames'. Computer Gaming World. p. 136. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
  3. ^30 Point Plus: 三國志II. Weekly Famicom Tsūshin. No.336. Pg.31. 26 May 1995.

External links[edit]

  • Romance of the Three Kingdoms II at MobyGames
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