Martial Kingdoms

Martial Kingdoms
Developer(s) T-Time Technology Co., Ltd.
Platform(s) Microsoft Windows
Genre(s) Strategy
Mode(s) Single player

Martial Kingdoms (simplified Chinese: 天下霸图; traditional Chinese: 天下霸圖; pinyin: Tiān Xià Bà Tú) is a Chinese single-player wuxia strategy video game developed by Taiwan's T-Time Technology Co., Ltd. The game was released in 2003.[1] It has a sequel, Martial Kingdoms 2, which was released in 2007.[1]

Gameplay

The player chooses one from 13 martial arts sects to play as, and must conquer the other sects to rule the wulin (martial artists' community) and win the game. At the start of the game, each sect controls at least one duo (or base) out of 20 main ones, all located on a map of China. A sect is conquered when it loses all its bases or when its leader is killed.

There are different ways for a sect to increase its strength and power:

  • Recruiting and training new members
  • Taking control of unoccupied bases or conquering bases controlled by other sects, so as to acquire more resources such as gold, wood and iron ore.
  • Upgrading its factories to produce weapons, equipment and medicine of better quality
  • Discovering and learning more powerful skills through studying and gaining experience from battles
  • Forming alliances with other sects
  • Attracting special characters (seven of them) to join the sect

The player can manage the sect members and arrange their daily schedules to determine how much time each member spends on a certain task (e.g. collecting resources, making items, training) and what skill the member will be learning.

Plot

The game is set in the Ming dynasty during the reign of the Jiajing Emperor. The emperor is deceived by the treacherous chancellor Yan Song, and he fears that the wulin (martial artists' community) may pose a threat to him. He sends the Jinyiwei (secret police) to stir up conflict among the various sects in the hope that they will destroy each other.

There are four storylines that the player can choose from. In each storyline, the number of bases occupied by each sect at the beginning is different and some sects appear only in certain storylines. In addition, the player has the option of creating a new sect if he/she does not wish to play as any of the 12 default sects.

The 20 bases are:

The 12 default sects featured in the game are:

NameStorylinesMain baseSpecialties in martial arts / others
Demonic Cult
魔教
1, 2, 3, 4Dian LakePalm, finger, sword and spear styles
Beggars' Sect
丐幫
1, 2, 3, 4Yingtian PrefecturePalm and staff styles
Shaolin Monastery
少林寺
1, 2, 3, 4Mount SongFist, staff, palm and finger styles
Wudang Sect
武當派
1, 2, 3, 4Wudang MountainsSword, palm and fist styles
Emei Sect
峨嵋派
1, 2Mount EmeiSword, palm, finger and kick styles
Mount Hua Sect
華山派
1, 2, 3Mount Hua,
Mount Heng (only in storyline 3)
Sword and palm styles
Mount Wu Sect
巫山派
1, 2Wu MountainsSaber, kick, sword and staff styles; poison-based secret weapon attacks
Dongting Sect
洞庭幫
2, 3Dongting LakeStaff styles; qinggong
Taiyi Cult
太乙教
1, 2, 3HuangshanSaber, sword and staff styles
Baoxiang Monastery
寶相寺
1, 2, 3Mount TiantaiFinger styles
Heroes' Gate
英雄門
2, 3, 4Qilian MountainsSpear, saber, sword and fist styles
Shennong Sect
神農幫
1, 2, 3Changbai MountainsSaber styles; production of medicine and antidotes

See also

References

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