
Heroes of the Three Kingdoms 5
If you have ever wanted to command 800 Three Kingdoms generals across a terrain-locked real-time strategy map, this is the series entry that finally gets the formula tight enough to be worth your time.
Compare Prices(0 stores)
Loading prices...
We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.
Screenshots & Media

About Heroes of the Three Kingdoms 5
I went into Heroes of the Three Kingdoms 5 expecting a competent but dated real-time strategy game from a Taiwanese studio with a long lineage in this niche. What I found was something genuinely more considered than its modest Steam page suggests: a layered RTS that blends large-scale battlefield command with a seasonal domestic management cycle that actually respects the player's time. The headline number is 800 playable generals, and it matters more than it sounds. Every commander sits somewhere on a force-intelligence spectrum, and the game distributes internal affairs tasks proportionally to the abilities your units actually carry. Assign a high-intelligence officer to civilian development work and returns are strong; park a brute-force warrior there and watch your efficiency collapse. That cause-and-effect loop is cleaner than a lot of games triple its price. The seasonal internal affairs mode, which fires every three months of in-game time, bundles rank promotions, defections, equipment swaps, and procurement into one tidy cycle with auto-delegation buttons. Micromanagement-averse players will breathe easier once they find that toggle. Veterans can override every decision manually. The system earns points on both ends. The battlefield layer is where the depth concentrates. The thousand-soldier battles are real, with independent squad orders available alongside global commands, so you are managing formation pressure and flanking angles rather than just clicking an attack-all button. Terrain is hard geography here: mountain ranges block land movement, river networks become genuine strategic corridors, and ports function as chokepoints that control whether a water route opens or stays closed. Taking a city can expose your rear flank or seal an entire province, and the game does not hide that tradeoff from you. The advisor skill system adds another decision layer, with over a hundred tactical strategies available, covering ambushes, defensive works, defection plots, and vanguard positioning. Pairing the right combo skills between generals stacked in the same unit can swing a fight in seconds, which introduces a pre-battle roster puzzle that strategy players will recognize as the game's primary hook. Honest caveats: the resolution cap at 1024x768 is a genuine 2005 artifact that the Steam release does not fix, and there is no windowed mode. On a modern 1440p or 4K display this creates an ugly upscaled presentation that the screenshots do not adequately warn you about. The English-language community is small, and most guide content is in Chinese or Traditional Chinese. The tutorial is functional but sparse. None of these issues kill the game, but a newcomer arriving without prior knowledge of the series will spend the first two hours in confusion before things click. It is worth pushing through. The Steam user score sits in positive territory with 84 percent approval across roughly 225 reviews, which for a niche title in a non-English-native language is a reasonable signal that the core audience finds what they are looking for. For anyone who has played Romance of the Three Kingdoms by Koei and found its pace too deliberate, Heroes 5 offers a faster, action-adjacent take where every strategic layer still earns its presence. The internal affairs depth is real, the battlefield control vocabulary is richer than it first appears, and the general roster is wide enough to support multiple playthroughs behind different faction starts. If the display limitations and thin English documentation do not scare you off, this is a well-constructed RTS from a studio that knows its subject. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
Steam Deck & Linux
Valve rates this game Steam Deck Unsupported.
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7/8
- Memory
- 512 MB RAM
- Storage
- 3 GB available space
- Graphics
- nVidia GeForce4(64M或更高)
- Processor
- PentiumIV 1.6GHZ或更高
Community Discussion
Be the first to comment on Heroes of the Three Kingdoms 5.
Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- USERJOY Technology Co.,Ltd.
- Publisher
- USERJOY Technology Co.,Ltd.
- Release Date
- Nov 12, 2020





