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== Changes ==
 
== Changes ==
The original release of ''Age of Empires'' featured a different version of the scenario, based on the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Baekgang Battle of Hakusukinoe], that ended with  Yamato withdrawing from korean peninsula. The mission remained unchanged, only the background was changed.
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The original release of ''Age of Empires'' featured a different version of the scenario, based on the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Baekgang Battle of Hakusukinoe], that ended with  Yamato withdrawing from Korean peninsula. The mission remained unchanged, only the background was changed.
   
 
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Revision as of 21:24, 19 April 2018

Kyushu Revolts (Tang Invasion in some copies) is the eight and last scenario of the Yamato Empire of the Rising Sun campaign in Age of Empires.

Scenario Instructions

Kyushu Revolts 405 AD.

A Kyushu army is marching toward Hyuga once more. You must defeat the Kyushu army or risk the loss of our Hyuga vassals to a new Kyushu confederation. Win the battle to become the greatest Yamato leader and unite all of Japan.

Objective

  • Destroy the Kyushu homeland.

History

Negotiations between the Kyushu and Yamato continued for several years while both sides built military strength. The Kyushu broke off negotiations and attacked toward the Hyuga to their south once more. The Yamato were prepared to respond with their own armies, however, and battle was joined to decide the fate of both clans and which would rule Japan.

Tang Invasion, 663 AD

The defeat of the Scilla armies 100 years ago brought relative peace to the Korean peninsula. The Yamato have been able to benefit from trade in this area and your influence has expanded. A new threat has appeared, however. Chinese armies of the Tang Dynasty have penetrated the peninsula from the north. One army is marching on your colony, while another deals with your Paekche friends. You must defeat the Tang army or your foothold in Korea is lost. Win the battle to become the greatest Yamato leader and launch the Yamato as a world power.

Objective

  • Destroy the Tang.

History

Although a loose status quo was maintained in southern Korea, other forces were on the move. China, rejuvenated under the Tang dynasty, showed interest in the peninsula and Chinese armies began invading from the north. At the battle of Hakusukinoe in 663, a combined Paekche and Yamato army clashed with a large Tang army to decide the fate of Yamato and Tang influence on the peninsula.

Strategy

Your Yamato base (Blue) starts in the Bronze Age, with most Stone or Tool Age buildings, and some Short Swordsmen and Bowmen defending your town. The Kyushu (Shang, Red) have a larger base and several units, so start gathering resources to defend yourself.

Age up as soon as possible, as Heavy Cavalry and Horse Archers should comprise most of your armies. Your initial infantry forces will make good cannon fodder while your real army is being trained.

The map is divided into three parts, separated by shallows: your side to the south, their side to the north, and the central part. Take control of the central part quickly by destroying their towers with Stone Throwers, and killing their units - there's lots of Gold and Stone Mines there, so get those resources before they do. Sentry Towers and Horse Archers can protect your Villagers while they work.

When you have a large, upgraded army, start attacking one side of their town, and destroy everything until you've reached the other side.

Scenario Instructions

The Kyushu forces were crushed by the Yamato army, ending all threats to Yamato hegemony. For the next 800 years, control of Japan would be contested mainly by families within the Yamato clan, rarely by outsiders.

The Paekche and Yamato forces were crushed by the Tang army at the battle of Hakusukinoe. We know little of the battle but the Chinese reported over 100,000 enemy dead. Loss of this battle forced the withdrawal of the Yamato from the peninsula. The could only influence the area through trade and diplomacy for several centuries. Had the battle been won, the Yamato presence would have continued and perhaps extended further into Korea and Asia.

 Changes

The original release of Age of Empires featured a different version of the scenario, based on the Battle of Hakusukinoe, that ended with  Yamato withdrawing from Korean peninsula. The mission remained unchanged, only the background was changed.

Yamato 8

The scenario instructions from the original version of the scenario.

Campaigns in Age of Empires
ReturnRome-AoEIcon Age of Empires
AoE Ascent of Egypt icon Ascent of EgyptHunting · Foraging  · Exploration · Dawn of a New Age · Skirmish · Farming · Trade · Religion · River Outpost · Naval Battle · A Wonder of the World · Siege in Canaan
NuRoR hoplite idle Glory of GreeceLand Grab (Claiming Territory) · Citadel (Acropolis) · Ionian Expansion (The Conquest of Crete) · The Trojan War · I'll Be Back (Colonization of Ionia) · The Siege of Athens · Xenophon's March · Wonder (Alexander the Great)
NuRoR priest idle Voices of BabylonThe Holy Man · The Tigris Valley · Lost (Vengeance) · I Shall Return · The Great Hunt  · The Caravan · Lord of the Euphrates · Nineveh (The Conquest of Nineveh)
Yamato, Empire of
the Rising Sun
The Assassins · Island Hopping · Capture (Definitive Edition) · Mountain Temple (The Mountain Temple) · The Canyon of Death · Oppression (Coup) · A Friend in Need (Jinshin War) · Kyushu Revolts (Fujiwara Revolts)
RomeIcon Age of Empires: The Rise of Rome
The Rise of RomeThe Birth of Rome · Pyrrhus of Epirus · Syracuse (The Siege of Syracuse) · Metaurus (The Battle of the Metaurus) · Zama (The Battle of Zama) · Mithridates
Ave CaesarCaesar vs Pirates (Caesar's Revenge) · Britain (The Invasion of Britain) · Alesia (The Siege of Alesia) · Caesar vs Pompey (The Battle of Pharsalus)
Pax Romana
(Imperium Romanum)
Actium (The Battle of Actium) · Year of the Four Emperors (The Year of the Four Emperors) · Ctesiphon (Ransom at Ctesiphon) · Queen Zenobia (Zenobia, Queen of Palmyra) · Coming of the Huns (The Coming of the Huns)
Enemies of RomeCrossing the Alps · Third Greek War (Third Macedonian War) · Spartacus (The Revolt of Spartacus) · Odenathus vs Persians (Odaenathus, Lord of Palmyra)
Age of Empires Definitive Edition icon Age of Empires: Definitive Edition
Reign of the HittitesDemo: Homelands  · Growing Pains  · Opening Moves  · Fall of the Mitanni  · Battle of Kadesh
DE: Opening Moves  · Raid on Babylon  · The Battle of Kadesh
AoE The First Punic War icon The First Punic WarStruggle for Sicily (The Battle of Agrigentum) · Battle of Mylae · Battle of Tunis
AoE2Icon-ReturnRome Age of Empires II: Definitive Edition - Return of Rome
RoR Trajan TrajanLegates and Legions · Roman Repute · Heads Will Roll · An Old Enemy · Blood in the Water
RoR Pyrrhus of Epirus Pyrrhus of EpirusA Second Alexander · The Many Kings of Macedon · Pyrrhic Victories · Savior of the Greeks · Sisyphus
RoR Sargon of Akkad Sargon of AkkadThe Chosen One · Divine Will · The Prophecy · The Land of Kings · Subartu
Demo versions
Dawn of CivilizationDawn of a New Age  · Skirmish · Crusade · The Wreck of the Hyskos  · Last Stand
Bronze Age Art of War
Names in brackets represent campaigns and scenarios renamed and/or reworked in the Definitive Edition.