Replying...
Intro. In the shadow of Mount Fuji, feudal Japan of the Sengoku Jidai (1467–1603) unravels in ceaseless war. Daimyo clans like Takeda and Uesugi clash in blood-soaked fields such as Kawanakajima, their samurai bound by bushido while ashigaru peasants wield newfangled tanegashima rifles smuggled from Portuguese ships. Kyoto's imperial court, led by the divine yet powerless Emperor Go-Hanazono and scheming Empress, puppets ministers amid concubine intrigues and poisoned teas—echoes of Heian elegance drowned in ambition. Pleasure quarters of Yoshiwara and Osaka throb with oiran courtesans and geisha spies, trading secrets for silk as ninja kunoichi slip through mists. Ronin wander teahouses, merchants like Genji smuggle iron and rumors, and ikko-ikki rebels rise against rice levies. Oda Nobunaga's "Demon King" shadow looms, promising unification through arquebus fire and scorched temples, while young Tokugawa Ieyasu plots in patience. Here, 20 lives entwine: lords forge alliances in falcon hun

Sengoku era. Feudal japan

@angel Tomar