Difference between revisions of "Warfare Treatise II"

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|BookName=The Art of Strategy
|BookName=The Art of Strategy
|LearnText=Allows you to learn the following combat mastery abilities:
|LearnText=Allows you to learn the following combat mastery abilities:
|PassiveSkill1=Armor Crusher
|PassiveSkill1=Offensive Tactic
|PassiveSkill2=Stance Training
|ActiveSkill2=Defensive Tactic
|PassiveSkill3=Setup
|PassiveSkill1=Right on Target
|PassiveSkill2=Intimidation
|Description=The most popular edition of "The Art of Strategy", its authorship is attributed to at least a dozen different military commanders, scholars, and government officials.
|Description=The most popular edition of "The Art of Strategy", its authorship is attributed to at least a dozen different military commanders, scholars, and government officials.
|Price=750
|Price=750
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Teaches :
Teaches :


*{{cl|Orange|Setup}}
*{{cl|Active|Offensive Tactic}}
*{{cl|Orange|Armor Crusher}}
*{{cl|Active|Defensive Tactic}}
*{{cl|Orange|Stance Training}}
*{{cl|Orange|Right on Target}}
*{{cl|Orange|Intimidation}}


==Acquired From==
==Acquired From==

Revision as of 13:38, 7 March 2022

Warfare Treatise II/Tooltip

Description

The Art of Strategy

Effect

Teaches :

Acquired From


Book content

( . . . )

-In order to keep peace, the ruler shall never forget about war.

-A poorly trained soldier can cause just as much harm on the battlefield as enemy spies and saboteurs outside of it.

-If there's a possibility of forcing your choice of battlefield upon the enemy, it shall be pursued by all means.

-Exploit every available opening. The ends justify the means.

-Know your enemy. Even the bravest knight will perish if he charges blindly into a pikemen line.

-Battles can often be won before they even begin. Starve your enemy out, break their morale, sow the uncertainty among their soldiers. A good fight is never clean.

-Numerical superiority is not always an advantage. Without proper guidance it might crumble upon itself. A single soldier can defeat a hundred enemies if they approach him one by one.

( . . . )


See also