
Silla
by Yumojiang
About This Novel
Shinra is also Luo, and Green Luo is also Luo. The third Rome is still Luo. There are inner lakes (sea), all of which are Roman. Then why is Silla, which I built with my own hands, not Rome? --New Roman Emperor Ferdinando
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(4)Scraped 1d ago
Update quickly
The updated Momojiji, can we unify Italy quickly and start grabbing territory?
......--!!!--......, The subject matter is too niche, how long you can persist depends on your cells.
Why hasn't the author updated recently? I really like reading this book, but it feels so bad that it has not been updated for so many days.
Haven't watched it yet
I'll go take a look first, Diving: Activate
Rating
Community(0)
Official(4)Scraped 1d ago
Update quickly
The updated Momojiji, can we unify Italy quickly and start grabbing territory?
......--!!!--......, The subject matter is too niche, how long you can persist depends on your cells.
Why hasn't the author updated recently? I really like reading this book, but it feels so bad that it has not been updated for so many days.
Haven't watched it yet
I'll go take a look first, Diving: Activate
Featured in 2 Booklists
Official(2)
Not the "Silla" on the Korean Peninsula! As we all know, Luo means Rome. The son of the protagonist Cassan, the King of the Two Sicilies. Some people may not agree with the reason for choosing the throne of the Two Sicilies and think it is hypocritical, but the protagonist's performance in front of a king's father is perfect. Hidden behind the brotherly respect is the ambition of a small country to dominate a big country. There are advantages to being young. Many plans will be regarded as childish manifestations and can cause many misjudgments to the opponent in the early stage. This is the unique advantage of the protagonist. The progress is pretty good, but the development is not smooth sailing. There are always trade-offs to be made, and it has the beauty of a P Club battle report. Note: cut




Cut. Previous recommendations: Not the "Silla" on the Korean Peninsula! As we all know, Luo means Rome. The son of the protagonist Cassan, the King of the Two Sicilies. Some people may not agree with the reason for choosing the throne of the Two Sicilies and think it is hypocritical, but the protagonist's performance in front of a king's father is perfect. Hidden behind the brotherly respect is the ambition of a small country to dominate a big country. There are advantages to being young. Many plans will be regarded as childish manifestations and can cause many misjudgments to the opponent in the early stage. This is the unique advantage of the protagonist. The progress is pretty good, but the development is not smooth sailing. There are always trade-offs to be made, and it has the beauty of a P Club battle report. Note: cut











