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per Red Link, work titles should be linked even if the work page doesn't happen to exist yet


Also known as "Invasion Literature", this genre was largely published between 1871 and 1914. Started with ''The Battle of Dorking''. Before 1903, the invader was France. With ''The Riddle of the Sands'' (not one of these, technically speaking), switched to Germany (the Entente Cordiale and all that). (''Literature/TheWarOfTheWorlds'' was actually a case of this, with the Germans swapped out out for advanced aliens). Believe it or not {{Literature/Dracula}} has been classified by some literary critics (including Wikipedia) as an example of an "invasion novel".

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Also known as "Invasion Literature", this genre was largely published between 1871 and 1914. Started with ''The Battle of Dorking''. Before 1903, the invader was France. With ''The Riddle of the Sands'' ''Literature/TheRiddleOfTheSands'' (not one of these, technically speaking), switched to Germany (the Entente Cordiale and all that). (''Literature/TheWarOfTheWorlds'' was actually a case of this, with the Germans swapped out out for advanced aliens). Believe it or not {{Literature/Dracula}} ''{{Literature/Dracula}}'' has been classified by some literary critics (including Wikipedia) as an example of an "invasion novel".
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A rather large sub-genre of military fiction and technothrillers, Possible War works are works dealing with a hypothetical, but semi-plausible conflict in the world at the time they were written. Accuracy may vary, as many of these tend to be [[AuthorTract works trying to increase defence spending]].

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A rather large sub-genre SubGenre of military fiction and technothrillers, Possible War works are works dealing with a hypothetical, but semi-plausible conflict in the world at the time they were written. Accuracy may vary, as many of these tend to be [[AuthorTract works trying to increase defence spending]].
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Depicting the historical Japan (WWII-era IJA) as villains is one thing, but....

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* ''Sunset'' (''일몰, Ilmol''): A very obscure RealTimeStrategy game that focuses on a war between the modern day South Korea and Japan.
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Generals isn't Mêlée à Trois, it's US & China allying against GLA.


* ''VideoGame/CommandAndConquerGenerals'': The game starts at some point after an anthrax-tipped missile launched by the Global Liberation Army (read: Al Qaeda) is shot down over the Atlantic. The game then features a MeleeATrois between the US, the GLA, and China, with all other nations absent despite taking place all over the Middle East and Central Asia and featuring reckless bioweapons usage (the final GLA mission involves taking over the Baikonour cosmodrome to bombard the US with tons of anthrax-laden missiles).

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* ''VideoGame/CommandAndConquerGenerals'': The game starts at some point after an anthrax-tipped missile launched by the Global Liberation Army (read: Al Qaeda) is shot down over the Atlantic. The game then features a MeleeATrois between the US, US and China mostly doing their own operation against the GLA with the occasional joint operations and fighting rogue Chinese generals allying with the GLA, and China, with while all other nations absent despite taking place all over the Middle East and Central Asia and featuring reckless bioweapons usage (the final GLA mission involves taking over the Baikonour cosmodrome jointly guarded by US and China to bombard the US with tons of anthrax-laden missiles).
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Published between 1871 and 1914. Started with ''The Battle of Dorking''. Before 1903, the invader was France. With ''The Riddle of the Sands'' (not one of these, technically speaking), switched to Germany (the Entente Cordiale and all that). (''Literature/TheWarOfTheWorlds'' was actually a case of this, with the Germans swapped out out for advanced aliens). Believe it or not {{Literature/Dracula}} has been classified by some literary critics (including Wikipedia) as an example of an "invasion novel".

to:

Published Also known as "Invasion Literature", this genre was largely published between 1871 and 1914. Started with ''The Battle of Dorking''. Before 1903, the invader was France. With ''The Riddle of the Sands'' (not one of these, technically speaking), switched to Germany (the Entente Cordiale and all that). (''Literature/TheWarOfTheWorlds'' was actually a case of this, with the Germans swapped out out for advanced aliens). Believe it or not {{Literature/Dracula}} has been classified by some literary critics (including Wikipedia) as an example of an "invasion novel".

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