
The Heroes' Struggle for Hegemony in the Late Ming Dynasty
About This Novel
When they traveled to the prairie in the late Ming Dynasty, they faced the worst living environment, and a war between the various Mongolian tribes was imminent! They are on the loser side! After the tribal melee, the Qing army launched a large-scale western expedition! In such a harsh environment, watch how the three of them farmed the land, made weapons, flew against the wind, and grew into a generation of grassland overlords! Finally, horses set foot on the Central Plains and compete for the world!
What Readers Think
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Official(3)Scraped 7d ago
Of course, it doesn't matter how you write the novel, no matter how outrageous it is.
One mountain cannot accommodate two tigers, except one male and one female. The same principle applies to time travel. Even if you have a comrade who is worthy of being entrusted with your back, in ancient times no one knew whether he would shoot you from behind. After all, basic trust between people needs to be based on strong laws.
Luo Liba Suo
Let me first say that I didn't jump to watch it after finishing it. The first thing I wrote was Luo Liba Suo. In the first few chapters, he was writing about going to Taipingbao to develop. When I saw nearly two chapters, I had not yet gone to Taipingbao. After reading the latest updated chapter title, I didn't even know the title of Taipingbao. I wonder how many millions of words the author plans to write? The fight with Lin Danhan is worth 300 chapters, the fight with Hou Jin is worth another 400 chapters, and then entering the border and fighting the border army is 500 chapters, and each state capital is worth 400 chapters according to the development speed of going to Taipingbao. Let's talk about some other issues, including sweet potatoes and roasted potatoes. These crops only began to be planted on a large scale during the Kangxi and Qianlong periods. If wine potatoes made from sweet potatoes could be obtained in the Mongolian grasslands at this time, how could the refugees in Shaanxi who couldn't live anymore rebel. Let's talk about the ridiculous economic common sense. Each soldier gets 20 taels of silver to settle down on 30 acres of land, and 4 taels of monthly salary. The key is that every time he goes on an expedition, he has to pay 3 to 4 taels of settling expenses. I don't count it as much. Even if there are 10,000 soldiers before entering the customs, the one-time settlement fee is 300,000 taels (excess is calculated to replenish the troops). The military salary is calculated as 1.42 Million taels for three years, and the settlement fee for each battle is 500,000 taels (four or two hundred people at a time, a mafia gang with dozens of people, all have to pay for resettlement, and it is clear that two or three large-scale battles, a dozen or so small-scale armed fights are only a lot more), and how many years the post-war pension will last. Calculated, 500,000 taels are not enough, let alone the wages of the craftsmen who develop and research the daily food and armaments. I don't know where to find so much money. Anyway, the money is spent as soon as you open your mouth. I simply don't understand the production level at that time and what the purchasing power of one tael of silver was.
Speechless
It's not interesting to see two people traveling through time together.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(3)Scraped 7d ago
Of course, it doesn't matter how you write the novel, no matter how outrageous it is.
One mountain cannot accommodate two tigers, except one male and one female. The same principle applies to time travel. Even if you have a comrade who is worthy of being entrusted with your back, in ancient times no one knew whether he would shoot you from behind. After all, basic trust between people needs to be based on strong laws.
Luo Liba Suo
Let me first say that I didn't jump to watch it after finishing it. The first thing I wrote was Luo Liba Suo. In the first few chapters, he was writing about going to Taipingbao to develop. When I saw nearly two chapters, I had not yet gone to Taipingbao. After reading the latest updated chapter title, I didn't even know the title of Taipingbao. I wonder how many millions of words the author plans to write? The fight with Lin Danhan is worth 300 chapters, the fight with Hou Jin is worth another 400 chapters, and then entering the border and fighting the border army is 500 chapters, and each state capital is worth 400 chapters according to the development speed of going to Taipingbao. Let's talk about some other issues, including sweet potatoes and roasted potatoes. These crops only began to be planted on a large scale during the Kangxi and Qianlong periods. If wine potatoes made from sweet potatoes could be obtained in the Mongolian grasslands at this time, how could the refugees in Shaanxi who couldn't live anymore rebel. Let's talk about the ridiculous economic common sense. Each soldier gets 20 taels of silver to settle down on 30 acres of land, and 4 taels of monthly salary. The key is that every time he goes on an expedition, he has to pay 3 to 4 taels of settling expenses. I don't count it as much. Even if there are 10,000 soldiers before entering the customs, the one-time settlement fee is 300,000 taels (excess is calculated to replenish the troops). The military salary is calculated as 1.42 Million taels for three years, and the settlement fee for each battle is 500,000 taels (four or two hundred people at a time, a mafia gang with dozens of people, all have to pay for resettlement, and it is clear that two or three large-scale battles, a dozen or so small-scale armed fights are only a lot more), and how many years the post-war pension will last. Calculated, 500,000 taels are not enough, let alone the wages of the craftsmen who develop and research the daily food and armaments. I don't know where to find so much money. Anyway, the money is spent as soon as you open your mouth. I simply don't understand the production level at that time and what the purchasing power of one tael of silver was.
Speechless
It's not interesting to see two people traveling through time together.









