Zhou Yu gazed gloomily at the edges of the Liaodong Peninsula, reluctantly admitting that the methods used by the Hun People were crude, yet effective.
They built barriers at all the ports where one could dock, making landing difficult even if you reached the shore. Meanwhile, in other places that were hard to dock, they stationed scattered troops mainly for scouting—a truly revolting tactic.
"It seems we need to find another place; landing here appears rather challenging," Zhou Yu said gloomily, noting the Huns' very tight defenses on the Liaodong Peninsula.
"I've already dispatched ships to scout northward," Li Yan also said with a headache, realizing the Huns' level of defense was unexpectedly stringent.
"How is it?" Zhou Yu asked, but he already had a hunch. Such arrangements would either leave them a place to land or have defenses as strong as this side; given the intelligence displayed by the Huns so far, Zhou Yu leaned toward the first outcome.
