Talk:Wei Yan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Contents |
[edit] The Rebellious Wei Yan of Shu
===Through the games series of dynasty warriors, Wei Yan seems to always be seen as a bloodlusting animals who lives only for battle. I, myself, do not consider Wei Yan to be rebellious yet more of a person for battle and long for peace. Just before the Wu Zhang Plains took place, Zhuge Liang rejected the plans Wei Yan had ready against the Wei Army.
[edit] The Rebellion of Wei Yan
===At the battle between Sima Yi of Wei and Zhuge Liang of Shu, Wei soldiers began fleeing from the ploy that Zhuge Liang (Who is dead at the time) had surprised them with. In the fast retreat of Wei, the Shu general Wei Yan advances after them thus turning his advance into ignore. Due to the respect that the soldiers have for the Shu Strategist, the soldiers kill Wei Yan for his disregard to the plot. The point that I can tell of Wei Yan is that even if his actions may have made him seem like the rebellious general, he only wanted a few things out of battle.
--Jin Mai 04:09, 24 Jun 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Wow
Why did they make wei yan so so... lacking verbal capability in the game, I heard he was a pretty smart guy. Whopper 12:44, 23 January 2006 (UTC)
[edit] A Rebel of Shu
Wei Yan may have been a funny guy from DW 4, but he was overall a capable general that even Liu Bei could trust. Though Zhuge Liang said he could not trust him, you still have to give this guy a massive amount of credict due to his skills on the battle field. The only thing I wish for is that he lived a bit longer even after the death of Zhuge Liang. For Wei Yan, he was a man who, I believed at many times, wanted to die in battle against his enemies.
In the end, Wei Yan not only performed well on the field, but he was the sixth most top ranking general whose skill coul've rivaled Guan Yu, Zhang Fei, Zhao Yu, Ma Chao, or Huang Zhong.--Zhang Liao 23:29, 16 July 2006 (UTC)