Sengoku Japan · 1500s
Not every samurai was a swordsman in the front line. The most dangerous ones sat still, read the field, and won the battle before it began. If this was your past life, your power was never noise — it was foresight.
Japan's Sengoku period (roughly 1467–1600) was a century of near-constant war between rival lords. Behind every successful daimyō stood strategists and retainers who studied terrain, weather, supply lines, and the temperament of the enemy. Influenced by Sun Tzu and refined by hard experience, the ideal was to win without fighting where possible — to make the outcome inevitable before a single arrow flew.
This world prized restraint as much as courage. A strategist spoke little, observed everything, and understood that loyalty, timing, and reputation could decide a campaign more surely than steel. The bushidō ethic that grew from this era valued composure in the face of death and a quiet, unshakable sense of duty.
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