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Heroes of Jin Yong (simplified Chinese: 金庸群侠传; traditional Chinese: 金庸群俠傳; pinyin: Jīnyōng Qúnxiá Zhuàn), first published in 1996, is a tactical role-playing game developed by Taiwanese game developer Soft-World's Heluo Studio (later known as Oriental Algorithm System), based on the storyline and characters from Jin Yong's wuxia novels.
Grandmaster Xuedao (血刀老祖; Xuědāo Láozǔ; 'Blood Sabre Elder') is the leader of the Blood Sabre School (血刀門; Xuědāomén).He mistakes Di Yun for a grand-apprentice and saves him from death and teaches him martial arts.
In order of appearance in the novel: Mu Jianping (沐劍屏; Mù Jiànpíng) is Mu Jiansheng's younger sister and a princess of the House of Prince Mu.Due to a conflict between the House of Prince Mu and the Tiandihui, she is taken hostage by the Tiandihui and sent to the imperial palace to be placed under Wei Xiaobao's watch.
Zhang Zhaozhong (張昭重; Zhāng Zhāozhòng), nicknamed "Fiery Hand Judge" (火手判官), is a highly skilled swordsman from the Wudang School.Tempted by wealth and fame, he decides to leave Wudang and serve the Qing government.
The Duan family of Dali (大理段氏) is the royal family of the Dali Kingdom and a reputable martial arts clan in their own right.They are known for using the "Yiyang Finger" (一陽指), which allows them to project streams of energy from their fingers.
The cauldron is a reference to a story in the Zuo Zhuan in which King Zhuang of Chu enquired the weight of the Nine Tripod Cauldrons – revealing his secret desire to seize the Mandate of Heaven. The deer is a reference to a remark by Kuai Tong recorded in the Records of the Grand Historian : "the Qin emperor lost his deer, and all under ...
A Deadly Secret, also translated as Requiem of Ling Sing and Secret of the Linked Cities, is a wuxia novel by Jin Yong (Louis Cha).It was first published in the magazine Southeast Asia Weekly (東南亞周刊) and the Hong Kong newspaper Ming Pao in 1963.
Born on 10 March 1924, in Haining, Zhejiang in Republican China, Cha was named Zha Liangyong and is the second of seven children. He hailed from the scholarly Zha clan of Haining (海寧查氏), [7] whose members included notable literati of the late Ming and early Qing dynasties such as Zha Jizuo (1601–1676), Zha Shenxing (1650–1727) and Zha Siting (查嗣庭; died 1727). [8]