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  2. Honda Tadakatsu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honda_Tadakatsu

    Honda Tadakatsu, or fictive characters based loosely on the historical figure, appears in several video games and associated anime, including the Sengoku Basara games and anime, Samurai Warriors, Warriors Orochi, Nioh 2, Pokémon Conquest, and Kessen. Honda appears as a playable character in the Mobile/PC Game titled Rise of Kingdoms. [122]

  3. Battle of Mikatagahara - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Mikatagahara

    Firearms, still somewhat new to Japanese warfare, were a known deterrent to cavalry assaults. Ieyasu had expected his superior weaponry to overcome Shingen's overwhelming forces and formation, but this assumption was quickly dispelled as Naitō Masatoyo's vanguard cavalry attacked and rapidly overran Honda Tadakatsu's segment of the Tokugawa right.

  4. People of the Sengoku period in popular culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/People_of_the_Sengoku...

    Honda Tadakatsu also appears in the video game Kessen and in the Samurai Warriors series, in which he is in almost every way the equivalent of Lu Bu of the Dynasty Warriors series: extremely powerful, with his own theme music which plays when he is engaged in battle by the player character, and trying to fight him alone usually results in death.

  5. Samurai Warriors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samurai_Warriors

    Samurai Warriors (戦国無双, Sengoku Musō, in Japan) is the first title in the series of hack and slash video games created by Koei's Omega Force team based closely around the Sengoku ("Warring States") period of Japanese history and is a sister series of the Dynasty Warriors series, released for the PlayStation 2 and Xbox in 2004.

  6. Fudai daimyō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fudai_daimyō

    Honda Tadakatsu, Sakakibara Yasumasa, Sakai Tadatsugu, and Ii Naomasa — Tokugawa Ieyasu's "Four Great Generals" — were all pre-Edo period fudai who went on to become fudai daimyōs. In addition, some branches of the Matsudaira clan, from which the Tokugawa clan originated, were classed as fudai while allowed to retain the Matsudaira name.

  7. Shitennō (Tokugawa clan) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shitennō_(Tokugawa_clan)

    Originally, the sobriquet did not exist during the Sengoku period, it first appeared in Arai Hakuseki work of Hankanfu in the Edo period. [8] Regarding the subject figures of this grouping in 1586, according to "Sakakibara clan historical records", Ieyasu sent Honda Tadakatsu, Sakakibara Yasumasa, and Ii Naomasa as representatives to Kyoto, where the three of them were regarded as "Tokugawa ...

  8. Warriors Orochi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warriors_Orochi

    Warriors Orochi (無双OROCHI, Musō Orochi) is a hack and slash video game for PlayStation 2 and Xbox 360, developed by Koei and Omega Force.It is a crossover of two of Koei's popular video game series, Dynasty Warriors and Samurai Warriors (specifically Dynasty Warriors 5 and Samurai Warriors 2) and the first title in the Warriors Orochi series.

  9. Lü Bu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lü_Bu

    Bu appears as a playable character in Koei's video games based on Romance of the Three Kingdoms, including the strategy game series of the same title as the novel, the action game series Dynasty Warriors and Warriors Orochi, and Wo Long: Fallen Dynasty. In the games, his name is spelled as "Lu Bu" without the double-dot over the "u" in "Lu ...