Official War Records • Repeatedly Ignored
Many kingdoms have approached 165 with confidence, plans, and speeches.
All believed they would be different.
🐻 Bear traps set.
🦈 Waters watched.
🤡 Chaos ready.
The outcome has never changed:
They lost to 165.
Not due to bad luck.
Not due to poor timing.
But due to a fundamental misunderstanding of what they were walking into.
Plans are made. Numbers are reviewed. Someone says, “This should be easy.” This is always the first mistake.
The march lands. Reports arrive almost immediately. Optimism disappears faster than troop power.
“That was close” is said. It was not close. Replays are analyzed. Reality is not improved.
Strategy helps. Coordination helps. None of it is enough. You do not beat 165.
If there were ever a perfect example of what not to do,
Kingdom 174 would be it.
They ignored boundaries, tested limits, and assumed consequences would not apply.
Confidence was not just high—it was loud.
They arrived talking.
They continued talking.
Even as the results made it very clear how things were going.
Attempts at trash talk were made and quickly outmatched.
What followed was not strategy, but frustration.
When the battlefield settled, the lesson was unavoidable:
actions bring outcomes, whether you’re ready for them or not.
Final record notes:
They challenged 165.
They challenged the rules.
They challenged reality.
Reality won.