Romance of the Three Kingdoms IV: Walls of Fire is definitely an hour or two of pure confusion when you first start to play it. Of course I'm assuming that you may be in my situation where you buy the game for the super Nintendo with no instructions, you're living with your mother-in-law in Arkansas with no access to the internet, and this just so happens to be the first game of the series that you've played.
One thing that I particularly liked in Romance of The Three Kingdoms 4 as opposed to other games of the same genre I had played was the ability to create you're own generals and leader and instill them with the powers of your choosing with a basic stat point creation.
Romance of the Three Kingdoms IV: Walls of Fire is definitely an hour or two of pure confusion when you first start to play it. Of course I'm assuming that you may be in my situation where you buy the game for the super Nintendo with no instructions, you're living with your mother-in-law in Arkansas with no access to the internet, and this just so happens to be the first game of the series that you've played.
One thing that I particularly liked in Romance of The Three Kingdoms 4 as opposed to other games of the same genre I had played was the ability to create you're own generals and leader and instill them with the powers of your choosing with a basic
stat point creation. I'm still not sure what the benefit of making people relatives are and the only benefit I saw of changing the age was that more stat points were available for people who were older.
Starting out you pick one city and then assign generals to lead different tasks in your city such as farming, building dams, training military, improving economy, etc. You can then perform numerous actions such as granting your people food to build their loyalty in you, or sending some of your generals to spy and various other things depending on what skills your generals start out with (these can not be chosen like the stats). Then of course there are options as recruiting soldiers, attempting to recruit enemy generals, creating alliances, attacking cities in order to build your empire, building weapons for your soldiers and a mass of other things.