
Bright Sword: Invincible from the 358th Regiment
About This Novel
Fang Ligong, an expert in combat science, traveled to the world of Liangjian and became the chief of staff of the 358th Regiment of the Shanxi-Sui Army. Fang Ligong: "Tuanzuo, the Eighth Route Army is breaking out. We happened to attack the Japanese Bantian Regiment." "Tuanzuo, Wanjia Town was robbed by the Eighth Route Army. We can't just watch. How about killing the 8th Mixed Brigade of the Imperial Association Army?" "Tuanzuo, the Eighth Route Army is attacking Ping. Anxian City, we should take the opportunity to ambush the Japanese 41st Division." "Tuanzuo, we have to recruit troops. There are only 5,000 troops in the 358th Regiment, which is too few." "Tuanzuo, I want to form a heavy artillery battalion."...
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 17d ago
You can't watch it without thinking. A battalion must defeat a division
Holy book
Not bad, not bad, not bad, not bad, everyone who has seen it knows it.
It's still pretty cool
I don't know much about the military, so I would like to ask: Did the Chinese army have brigade-level units at that time? Was the 5-6 thousand people of the national army at that time equivalent to the division level? If not, what about the brigade level? There are about 6,000 people at the same time, which is equivalent to a division. This division is too small, only one-third, so the brigade has no sense of existence and is skipped? If there is hope that the author would change it, otherwise a good book would become a mindless read because it is too exaggerated and unrealistic.
Basically there's nothing wrong with it, why did it stop updating?
This book looks good, but the number of words is too few
Very good, I like it very much, but why is it gone? ! ! [Emot=default,06/]
Rating
Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 17d ago
You can't watch it without thinking. A battalion must defeat a division
Holy book
Not bad, not bad, not bad, not bad, everyone who has seen it knows it.
It's still pretty cool
I don't know much about the military, so I would like to ask: Did the Chinese army have brigade-level units at that time? Was the 5-6 thousand people of the national army at that time equivalent to the division level? If not, what about the brigade level? There are about 6,000 people at the same time, which is equivalent to a division. This division is too small, only one-third, so the brigade has no sense of existence and is skipped? If there is hope that the author would change it, otherwise a good book would become a mindless read because it is too exaggerated and unrealistic.
Basically there's nothing wrong with it, why did it stop updating?
This book looks good, but the number of words is too few
Very good, I like it very much, but why is it gone? ! ! [Emot=default,06/]









