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Chapter 49 of Romance of the Three Kingdoms – titled “Zhuge Liang Borrows the Eastern Wind; Zhou Yu Launches the Fire Attack” – marks the dramatic climax of the Battle of Red Cliffs, where meteorology, mysticism, and military genius converge to shatter Cao Cao’s dream of unification.
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Among the brilliant minds who shaped the Three Kingdoms era, none captured Cao Cao’s trust – or foresaw the future with such uncanny precision – as Guo Jia, styled Fengxiao.
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After Yuan Shao’s crushing defeat by Cao Cao at the Battle of Guandu in 200 CE, his chief strategist Jü Shou was captured. Refusing to surrender, Jü Shou was executed shortly thereafter. But he was not the only loyal advisor to suffer for speaking truth to power. Another key figure—Tian Feng, Yuan Shao’s most…
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In Romance of the Three Kingdoms, Lu Su is often depicted as a mild-mannered, even gullible figure—caught awkwardly between the brilliance of Zhuge Liang and the ambition of Zhou Yu. This portrayal, however, grossly misrepresents the historical Lu Su. Far from being a passive bystander, he was a strategic visionary on par with Zhuge…
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Chen Gui and Chen Deng, the father and son, are the twin strategists of Xuzhou who wielded intelligence, psychological insight, and political foresight to reshape the fate of the war-torn Xuzhou.
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“Kill with a borrowed knife” (“Kill with a borrowed sword”, or “Borrow one’s hand to kill”) is a famous Chinese idiom and also the third stratagem of thirty-six. It means to convince others or even your enemies that your enemies are theirs, and make them believe they will be defeated, betrayed or otherwise end…