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6''Water Margin'' (Traditional: 水滸傳; Simplified: 水浒传; Pinyin: ''Shuǐhǔ Zhuàn''), also known as ''Outlaws Of The Marsh'', is one of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_Great_Classical_Novels the "Four Great Classical Novels" of Chinese literature]] along with ''Literature/JourneyToTheWest'', ''Literature/RomanceOfTheThreeKingdoms'' and ''Literature/DreamOfTheRedChamber''.
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8The novel was written during the 14th century, although it is clearly based on older folk stories. Authorship is traditionally attributed to two authors, Shi Nai'an and Luo Guanzhong, but modern scholarly opinion is that Shi Nai'an is simply a pen-name for Luo Guanzhong, who also wrote the definitive version of ''Romance of the Three Kingdoms''.
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10The story is based on the RealLife adventures of a famous bandit, Song Jiang, who along with his companions surrendered to the Imperial authorities in 1121. The plot follows the various backstories of every one of the [[Mystical108 108 outlaw protagonists]], then their gathering together under the leadership of Song Jiang, and finally their deaths while fighting a desperate battle on behalf of Imperial authorities.
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12The earliest surviving example of the {{Wuxia}} genre, ''Water Margin'' has been translated many times, and adapted to other media such as film, television and comics. Probably the best known adaptation is the successful 1973 Nippon Television series which was broadcast in many countries, effectively introducing this epic work to Western popular culture. Perhaps the ''second'' best known, and much much looser, adaptation is the ''VideoGame/{{Suikoden}}'' video game series (more accurately, only the first game, with the rest of the series simply repeating the motif of 108 protagonists). Other video game adaptations include Creator/{{Koei|Tecmo}}'s TurnBasedStrategy game ''Bandit Kings of Ancient China'' and Creator/DataEast's FightingGame ''[[VideoGame/SuikoEnbu Outlaws of the Lost Dynasty]]''. The ''third'' known adaptation of the story is the cartoon ''WesternAnimation/Hero108''.
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14-----
15!!''Water Margin'' contains examples of:
16
17* AdaptationalHeroism:
18** Many of the more shocking deeds performed by the heroes are sanitised quite a bit in the various adaptations. The darker heroes in particular go through this treatment. For instance, Li Kui's level of barbarity is usually toned down in the TV versions (the 2011 iteration is especially base-breaking due to the AdaptationalComicRelief presentation), Sun Erniang gains some more scruples and sympathy by getting tragic backstories and generally reserving her kills to jerks and criminals, while characters like Wang Ying and Dong Ping usually soften their more [[RapeIsASpecialKindOfEvil unsavoury tendencies]] and are made to be more in line with the LovableSexManiac (for the former) or ChivalrousPervert (for the latter) roles.
19** Song Jiang tends to be zig-zagged. For instance, the 1997 version [[AdaptationalVillainy plays up]] his scheming, NominalHero side, while the 2011 version is much more of an archetypal Jianghu hero. It usually depends on the adapter's interpretation of his character and the general consensus of that era.
20* AntiHero: Every one of the 108 outlaws is somewhere on a scale between 'fundamentally decent, but aids and abets murderous lunatics' (Lin Chong) and 'is a murderous lunatic' (Li Kui).
21* AnyoneCanDie: A huge number of the "heroes" [[DwindlingParty die in the campaign against Fang La's rebellion]], several others [[DroppedABridgeOnHim die of disease]], and Song Jiang and a couple of his most senior officers are [[NoGoodDeedGoesUnpunished poisoned by jealous officials for their efforts]], leading his strategist, Wu Yong, and his best friend, Hua Rong, to join them TogetherInDeath. Some of the bandits do make it out alive, and even live HappilyEverAfter, but they're in the minority.
22* ArmyOfThievesAndWhores: The 108 Spirits as a whole are of the oldest examples in literature. Add to this that a good bunch of them literally are thieves and whores.
23* ArrangedMarriage: Song Jiang's marriage to Yan Poxi. Also, Wang Ying's marriage to Hu Sanniang. The latter ends up being a PerfectlyArrangedMarriage. The former... doesn't.
24* BandOfBrothers: At 108 members, the 108 Stars are probably the largest example in fiction.
25* BestServedCold: Wu Song doesn't exactly bide his time when he hears rumors that his brother was poisoned by his adulterous sister-in-law, but considering his anger and his reputation it's impressive that he proceeded as politely as he did. He sought evidence and testimony, and he gathered neighbors as witnesses and stenographers before forcing a confession out of the poisoner and her accomplice. ''Then'' he stabbed, disemboweled, sacrificed, and beheaded his sister-in-law and her lover. He even tried to take the matter to court first, and it's implied that if the adulterer hadn't gotten the case dismissed through bribery Wu Song wouldn't have killed them.
26* BigBad: Gao Qiu, the Song Emperor's corrupt and none-too-competent EvilChancellor, although Emperor Huizong probably was a better candidate for the role.[[note]]The author downplayed Huizong's role in a probable attempt to get the novel past censors. Historically, Huizong allowed corruption to grow so massively that his reign saw the rise of what became known as the "Six Evils", which included Cai Jing and Tong Guan. In addition, his reign so weakened the Northern Song that less than two years after his abdication, the Jurchen Jin managed to capture Kaifeng and abducted basically everyone belonging to his branch of the imperial Zhao clan. This included himself and his successor Qinzong. Only his ninth son escaped capture, and later became Emperor Gaozong of the ''Southern'' Song.[[/note]]
27* BigGood: Chao Gai, the "Heavenly King" of Liangshan. After his death, the role goes to Song Jiang.
28* BigThinShortTrio:
29** The three top leaders of Liangshan, Song Jiang (short), Lu Junyi (big) and Wu Yong (thin).
30** Also the three chiefs of Mt Qingfeng, Yan Shun (big), Wang Ying (short) and Zheng Tianshou (thin).
31* BittersweetEnding: The ending definitely has its ups and downs. The rebel king Fang La is captured, saving the kingdom, but at a tremendous cost in lives. The remaining bandits go their separate ways afterwards, some to happy fates, some to unhappy ones. The two leaders of Liangshan Marsh are poisoned by corrupt officials who go unpunished for their crimes, but Song Jiang ascends to godhood, is reunited TogetherInDeath with his companions, and goes on to serve the people from beyond the veil.
32* BlackAndGreyMorality: The battle between Liangshan Marsh and the corrupt government is this on a good day, and EvilVersusEvil on a bad one. There are few crimes that the various villains commit that are not also on the rapsheet of one of our heroes, with the possible exceptions of adultery (they're quite good about making sure any unwelcome husbands are dead first) and misappropriating public funds.
33* {{Bowdlerise}}:
34** A widely read 71 chapter version of ''Water Margin'' was produced in the 17th century, about 500 years after the original was written. What's special about this revision is that the editor added several passages to develop the characters further, removed large sections he found [[{{Filler}} boring to read]] and did not advance the plot, including several poetry sections as well as the entirety of chapters 71 to 120. A new prologue was added, which renumbered the entire book and made the old chapter 70 into chapter 71, which itself was reedited into a RevisedEnding featuring an outlaw having a dream vision of their future defeat. All of the changes were done to appease the imperial court in order to promote an AuthorTract that while the outlaws may have sympathetic backgrounds, rebellions are nevertheless bad and needed condemnation, as the Ming Dynasty then was under constant upheaval by rebellions.
35** JH Jackson's 1937 translation sanitized a lot of the dirtier dialogue, which unfortunately meant that the contrast between the coarser commoners and more refined gentlemen was lost.
36* BribeBackfire: When Ximen Qing is implicated in the murder of Wu Dalang, both his accepted ''and'' rejected bribes contribute to his death. His bribe to the coroner is seemingly accepted, but really the coroner set it aside to give to Dalang's brother Wu Song as evidence. Meanwhile, his bribes to the court to avoid prosecution are gladly accepted, but it's implied that if he ''had'' been prosecuted Wu Song wouldn't have felt the need to kill him. (Then again, if convicted he probably would have died anyway.)
37* BringingBackProof: Under orders from the BigBad Gao Qiu, Liu Qian bribes the two constables escorting Lin Chong to prison to murder him, demanding that they bring back the skin where Lin Chong was branded as proof.
38* BringMyBrownPants: Ximen Qing has this reaction when he hears Wu Song's voice for the first time.
39* ByronicHero: Song Jiang is a quintessential example. He is an intelligent, charismatic, passionate and deeply troubled man, and also cynical and jaded haunted by all that has happened in his past, with a dark history writ in blood. His rebelliousness against the Song establishment leads him into trouble more than once, such as being arrested for writing an anti-government poem.
40* TheCasanova: Ximen Qing. Given the context of the book, he's ''not'' played heroically.
41* CelibateHero: The preferred version of Confucian philosophy in this story advises that spending too much time around women and having too much interest in sex is a sign of weakness - a true warrior lives only for battle and the company of other brave men. Naturally, this tends to play merry hell with our heroes' marriages.
42* ChewToy: Poor, poor Lin Chong...
43* ClusterFBomb: Li Kui swears way more than the other heroes do.
44* TheConsigliere: Wu Yong's role, though his sway over the outlaws is so significant that he in many aspects is effectively in charge, down to being its kingmaker.
45* CruelAndUnusualDeath:
46** The infamous execution method known as [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lingchi ''ling-chi'']], or "DeathByAThousandCuts" was used on multiple characters throughout the book, most notably Fang La, Madam Wang and Hao Siwen. [[AssholeVictim Though hardly anyone mourned for Madam Wang]], and Fang La's death was somewhat deserved seeing how many of the "heroes" his army took down, Hao's death was particularly tragic, as he was a member of the 108 and the brutal method of execution used on him had hit both his sworn brother Guan Sheng and Song Jiang ''hard''.
47*** And this method was not just limited to the government either. Lu Junyi used it to kill his steward and adulterous wife for having an affair and later blackmailing him. Due to ValuesDissonance, the killing was treated as a ''heroic'' act.
48** The novel does not shy away from other horrific methods of death either. Early examples include when Wu Song disembowled and beheaded Pan Jinlian and Ximen Qing, all the people butchered and cooked as meat buns, and Li Kui cutting and cannibalising Huang Wenbing ''while he was still alive''. Some of the outlaws also died pretty darn brutally during the Fang La campaign. Special mentions go to Dong Ping, who got sliced in half by one of Fang La's men, and the brothers Xie, who were crushed to death by boulders.
49* CulturalTranslation: Adaptations for western audiences are often pitched as "the Chinese ''Myth/RobinHood''".
50* DamnItFeelsGoodToBeAGangster: One of the primary messages of this book? Being a bandit in ancient China is ''awesome''.
51* DefeatMeansFriendship: For the majority of characters that were recruited. Somewhat justified given that it's often either implied or outright stated that they have a choice between becoming best buddies with their captors or dying gruesomely.
52* DismissingACompliment: Not all the heroes are well-bred, but even many who aren't employ this trope instinctively. Their Confucian self-deprecation in the face of praise can be so extreme that obviously no one involved is taking it literally. Also, they can take half a page to decide who sits at the head of a table: Everyone wants someone else to.
53* DisposableSexWorker: If a prostitute shows up on-page, don't expect them to last long. The only exception is Li Shishi, the Emperor's favourite courtesan, who miraculously comes out unscathed despite spending more than thirty seconds within the same building as a crotchety [[TheBerserker Li Kui]].
54* {{Doorstopper}}: Over 2000 pages in paperback. A four-volume edition weighs more than a kilogram.
55* DragonInChief: While Emperor Huizong is the ''de jure'' leader of the central antagonists, [[EvilChancellor Gao Qiu]] is the one that's actually pulling the strings and making life miserable for the "heroes".
56* DrunkenMaster: Wu Song kills a man-eating tiger with his bare hands largely because he was drunk off his ass. He later uses the same tactic later in the story to beat up Jiang the Door God.
57* DwindlingParty: Not all of them make it to the end.
58* EunuchsAreEvil: Tong Guan.
59* EnemyMine: The Liangshan rebels are eventually given amnesty and team up with the Song imperial court to fight their enemies, such as the Liao Dynasty and Fang La's rebellion.
60* EvenBadMenLoveTheirMamas: Depending on your views of whether or not some of these bandits are "bad", there's one thing that's undebatable: they love their mamas.
61** You have Li Kui, who tries to get his elderly mother to come with him to Liang Shan so that she can live a cozy life. He then goes absolutely berserk when a tiger kills his mother, and charges into the cave and ''massacres the entire tiger nest''.
62** There's Lei Heng, who was willing to put up with Bai Xiuying's machinations to get him to be put in stocks and deprived of food and water as well as the beatings. But the last straw was when she hits his mother. [[BerserkButton All hell breaks loose]], and he beats her to death with his chains.
63* EveryManHasHisPrice: Ministers, inspectors, soldiers, prison guards, and escorts all get bribed liberally and often, to the point where it's treated as a matter of course.
64* EveryoneMeetsEveryone: The grand assembly chapter functions as this trope, but because all 108 heroes need to be assembled at Liangshan Marsh first, the chapter doesn't take place until about seven-tenths into the novel.
65* EvilChancellor: Gao Qiu, the corrupt Prime Minister and ArchEnemy of Song Jiang, who sends the heroes to their death.
66* FakeDefector: The Liao Empire offer Song Jiang and several of his officers cushy, high-ranking positions on their side, and our heroes accept. The Liao ministers end up losing most of a province before they realise that things might not be going according to plan.
67** Also, several of the heroes fake defection to Fang La's rebel government to bring it down from within near the end of the novel.
68* FalseFlagOperation: This was Song Jiang's ploy to force General Qin Ming to join their band. While they wined and dined him in captivity, a bandit dressed in his armor led a force to pillage his hometown. Qin Ming initially declines their invitation to stay, but when he gets home he finds he's thoroughly unwelcome, and his family has already been executed. This plan actually succeeds, even though Song Jiang fesses up to the whole thing immediately. Qin Ming doesn't even hold a grudge.
69* FemmeFatale: Pan Jinlian.
70* FindOutNextTime: Every chapter ends with a teasing OnTheNext and "Read our next chapter if you would know."
71* FullCircleRevolution: In a way. The Liangshan rebels eventually accepts amnesty from the Song court and began working for them, waging war against their enemies, including other rebels such as Fang La.
72* FullFrontalAssault: Several characters at different points in the story end up fighting completely naked, but the one most famous for this is probably The Black Whirlwind Li Kui, who makes a habit of stripping naked and running into battle while DualWielding axes.
73* {{Gorn}}: Shows up a lot, particularly when the Liangshan Marsh bandits get their hands on an evildoer. Cutting tongues out is sometimes only the starter course.
74* TheGovernment: Oppressive and corrupt.
75* HateSink:
76** The book itself consists of amoral and immoral criminals making up most of the main cast, and no matter how many KickTheDog deeds they do they are impossible to truly hate. You can't hate the Emperor either, since he's portrayed far more sympathetically to get past the censorship. The BigBad [[EvilChancellor Gao Qiu]], on the other hand, is a corrupt, manipulative and oppressive politician who sends the "heroes" to their deaths and is all that is needed to make sure that the readers' blood will boil at one point or another. His cadre of officials, including Cai Jing and Tong Guan, also get this treatment.
77** Gao Qiu's foster son, Gao Yanei, is just as despicable as the elder Gao, if not worse. At least Gao Qiu never tried to ''molest'' anyone.
78** Probably the biggest example was Madam Wang, Wu Dalang's greedy nextdoor neighbour, who ran a teahouse as a front for snooping on the townsfolk. She masterminded Wu Dalang's murder in order to leech off Ximen Qing's money, and when Wu Song began investigating his brother's death, pinned the entirety of the blame on the two lovers (who are still far from innocent, mind you), whose affair she arranged. Hell, the ''author'' himself pretty obviously despised her, otherwise he wouldn't have given her such a dreadful death even if it breaks with historical Chinese criminal law.
79** Many of the [[ArcVillain Arc Villains]] in the heroes' backstories count as this, if only to make their own crimes a bit more palatable. There's Zheng Tu for Lu Zhishen, a tyrannical butcher who used his wealth to bully and oppress Jin Cuilian. There's Huang Wenbing, the corrupt petty official who attempts to have Song Jiang executed in hope of gaining a reputation. There's also Jiang the Door God, a thug who beat up Shi En to take over his business and later tried to have Wu Song killed for helping Shi En. Lin Chong had his backstabbing, cowardly friend Lu Qian who betrayed him to the government, Yang Zhi had the local hooligan Niu Er who tried to take his family heirloom sword for a dirty-cheap price, and in Lu Junyi's story was his treacherous, ungrateful steward Li Gu who seized the opportunity to have him arrested to steal his wife and property before trying to get him killed. All of them died horrifically, but the author already ensured that no tears will be shed for any of them.
80* HeelFaceTurn: The bandits after their pardon. Getting one was the goal all along, but it still results in them becoming a lot less murderous and a lot more consistently heroic. Afterwards, they began fighting other rebels on behalf of the Song court.
81* HeroKiller: Two of Fang La's men stand out. Shi Bao is personally responsible for killing five of the Liangshan heroes, while the archer Pang Wanchun and his men kill seven, including Ou Peng, whose skill was ArrowCatch.
82* HonorRelatedAbuse: Yang Xiong gruesomely murders his wife for infidelity, requiring him to flee the law and join the Liangshan Marsh bandits. [[ValuesDissonance Given that this is a medieval Chinese novel, this is treated as a heroic act.]] Song Jiang's and Wu Song's killings of their wife and sister-in-law respectively also have shades of this, though with additional mitigating factors that make them slightly more reasonable to modern eyes (Song Jiang's wife was blackmailing him at the time, and Wu Song was avenging the killing of his brother-in-law by his unfaithful wife).
83* IAmAHumanitarian: Several bandits are cannibals, kidnapping innocent travelers for their pot. It's treated in an oddly blasé manner by the story and characters, even by the standards of the time, and Wu Song and Song Jiang both become sworn brothers with people who almost ate them before finding out who they were.
84* ImposterForgotOneDetail: When the heroes have to save Song Jiang from Jiangzhou prison, they recruit calligrapher Xiao Rang and craftsman Jin Daijian to forge a letter from Cai Jing, the Prefect's father. Xiao Rang imitates Cai Jing's legendary handwriting flawlessly... but Jin Daijian uses the wrong seal, which nearly gets Song Jiang, and the messenger, Dai Zong, executed. Fortunately, Wu Yong realized the error rather quickly and mounted the inevitable rescue mission.
85* InnOfNoReturn: Zhang Qing and Sun Erniang used to run one where they drug, rob and kill their customers before [[ImAHumanitarian serving their flesh as meat for the baozi.]]
86* ItsProbablyNothing: Invoked and subverted. When Zhang Shun is scouting under the walls of Hangzhou, he tests the guards' alertness by tossing a lump of clay over the wall. The guards respond by talking aloud that it is probably nothing, but are in fact fully alerted, waiting for something out of ordinary to emerge. When Zhang Shun emerges from his hiding place thinking he is safe, he is struck by a hail of arrows.
87* JustLikeRobinHood: The Liangshan Marsh bandits do occasionally steal from the rich and give to the poor, especially under Song Jiang's leadership. More often, though, their game-plan is either 'steal from the rich, ignore the poor' or 'steal from the rich, slaughter the poor'. Since the historical Song Jiang was active in 1121, and he became a legendary folk hero long before the novel was written, this likely makes the trope [[OlderThanTheyThink older than Robin Hood himself]][[note]]Robin Hood's rebellion against Prince John would have ended when Richard the Lionheart returned to England in 1194[[/note]]; ''Water Margin'' or the stories it was based on may be the UrExample.
88* KarmaHoudini: Gao Qiu and his cadre of corrupt officials, who are never punished for any of their misdeeds during Emperor Huizong's reign, up to and including poisoning Song Jiang. TruthInTelevision, as Emperor Huizong did not take any action against them.[[note]]Historically, Gao Qiu died in 1126, during the first year of Emperor Qinzong's reign (Huizong abdicated due to the Jurchen Jin invasion). His death went unmourned and he was posthumously stripped of his titles. Cai Jing was exiled and later died en-route to his place of exile. Tong Guan was executed and his head displayed in the capital. [[/note]]
89* KnightOfCerebus: Downplayed, since this book was never light-hearted to begin with. However, Fang La and his men prove to be a far greater threat when compared to the numerous [[ArcVillain Arc Villains]] of the backstories, the two previous bandit kings and the Liao Empire (excluding Gao Qiu). His army nearly crushed the outlaws, killing over half of them, and basically marks the point in which PlotArmor has been taken off the heroes.
90* MagicKnight: Several of the characters are skilled in Taoist magic as well as with weapons. Gongsun Sheng and Fan Rui are amongst the magicians in residence at Mount Liang.
91** Fang La's astrologer Bao Daoyi summons a literal one to help his apprentice, Zheng Biao, in his duel with Guan Sheng. Fan Rui defeats it with one of his own.
92* MarketBasedTitle:
93** The first English translation, by Pearl S Buck, renamed it ''All Men Are Brothers'' after a phrase repeated throughout the book that sums up the CentralTheme.
94** Sidney Shapiro published a 1981 translation as ''Outlaws of the Marsh''.
95** John and Alex Dent-Young translated it under the title ''The Marshes of Mount Liang''.
96* MightMakesRight: Any crime whatsoever is justified so long as you're sufficiently talented with weapons. This is made repeatedly explicit.
97* Mystical108: The total amount of heroes in the novel. Which starts when an equal amount of demons escape and reincarnate into these same heroes. They are divided into 36 Heavenly Spirits and 72 Earthly Fiends.
98* MurderTheHypotenuse: What Gao Qiu wanted to do to Lin Chong so Lin's wife could be up for grabs. Wu Song's brother was murdered by his wife when she gained a lover on the side.
99** This is a favorite tactic of the Liangshan Marsh bandits. When a potential recruit is being kept from joining their ranks by some responsibility to others, the bandits remove the third wheel.
100* NeverHurtAnInnocent: One of the guiding principles of the Liangshan Marsh bandits. They're not very good at sticking to it, though.
101* NominalHero:
102** Li Kui, an AxCrazy berserker with a HairTriggerTemper who's a danger to everyone around him. His long and inglorious career includes child-killing, cannibalism, repeatedly massacring unarmed civilians, [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking and bullying]]. Even his fellow bandits eventually become sick of his shit, only letting him go out on missions after he agrees to a list of prohibitions (one of which he usually breaks). Eventually, Song Jiang kills him in the epilogue by having him drink the same poisoned wine that was slowly killing him, ensuring that he won't avenge his death with a bloody rebellion and ruin all their efforts.
103** Even Song Jiang has his moments. He initially gets outlawed for killing his neglected wife after she tries to blackmail him for participating in one of the biggest robberies in history, and once he becomes a bandit warlord, he has a nasty habit of ensuring prospective recruits have nowhere else to turn by framing them for crimes ranging from infanticide to mass murder. Not only that, but his sense of virtue and high moral standards tend to be either self-serving, extremely inconsistent, or both.
104** In fact, most of the outlaws can count as this, especially in a modern context. Wu Yong's contributions to Liangshan for instance are laced with more than a couple questionable schemes, from ruining Lu Junyi's life and family to ordering Li Kui to butcher a 4-year-old boy, who Zhou Tong was meant to protect, to death just to get them both on Liangshan. In fact, it was he who was behind Song Jiang's darkest actions, something he had realised by the time he hanged himself. Dong Ping is a more classic example, as he only joined the outlaws so he could get at the prefect and take over his position. Why? Because he wouldn't allow him to marry his daughter.
105*** Speaking of definitive villains labelled under a completely alien definition of "hero", "Stumpy Tiger" [[UnsexySadist Wang Ying]] comes to mind. He's a prolific sexual predator who by any other metric is nothing but a horrible excuse of a human being, and is only really seen as a "hero" because he's ''somewhat'' loyal to the rest of them [[TheStarscream (and even then, he had thoughts about killing Yan Shun when the latter stopped him from raping a nobleman's wife)]]. After all, he became a bandit after robbing rich customers out of greed, and it's saying something when his first appearance had him threatening to dig out Song Jiang's heart to cook as hot soup. Seeing everything, it's almost miraculous how well his marriage to Hu Sanniang went ''especially'' compared to the every other marriage in the story.
106* OlderThanPrint: However it's ''technically'' probably not since the Chinese had a form of movable type earlier than Gutenberg.
107* OnTheNext: Every chapter ends with an enigmatic preview of the next or later chapters, capped with "[[FindOutNextTime Read our next chapter if you would know.]]"
108* OneSteveLimit: Played with. There are two notable Zhang Qings, who are both part of the bandits, that appear in the story. The first to appear was "Gardener" Zhang Qing, the owner of an InnOfNoReturn, and the second, "Feathered Arrow" Zhang Qing, was an imperial officer who turned to the outlaws. Clarity is only provided to a certain degree in that the 'Qing' is altered by three strokes to separate the officer (张清) from the innkeeper (张青), and the fact that both characters are pronounced the same means that their monikers are almost always going to be mentioned to mitigate the confusion.
109** Also played with in the three characters named "Madam Wang", each more fleshed out than the last. The first Madam Wang, Lin Chong's, was little more than a name in the crowd. The second, Song Jiang's, was a matchmaker who played a minor role in his story. The third Madam Wang, the teahouse owner, is the most prominent of the three, as she was instrumental in facilitating the murder of Wu Dalang. There are hints that these three Madam Wangs are one and the same, though it's left up to reader interpretation.[[note]]In the TV adaptations, the latter two "Madam Wang"s are made to be seperate characters, possibly to remove the need to turn Song Jiang's into the full-fledged HateSink that Wu Song's is notorious for being.[[/note]]
110* {{Outlaw}}: The Chinese version.
111* RapePillageAndBurn: A favourite activity for the Liangshan Marsh bandits. They usually skip the rape, though - not so much because of respect for their prisoners, mind you, as because the specific interpretation of Confucian philosophy they follow holds that GirlsHaveCooties.
112* ReligionIsMagic: Taoist mysticism is very powerful in this book, to the point where going into battle without a trained combat-mage is extremely unwise. The Liangshan Marsh bandits' top Taoist priest, Gongsun Sheng, is basically TheArchmage, and an invaluable tactical asset.
113* RoyalFavorite: Gao Qiu started his life as a ne'er-do-well second son who wasted his time in hedonistic pursuits. He becomes a favorite of Prince Duan by impressing him with his football skills and, despite a lack of qualifications, is promoted to Grand Marshal when Duan becomes Emperor Huizong. From then on, Gao Qiu becomes a corrupt official who takes advantage of his power to take revenge on anyone who slighted him and incriminates innocent civilians.
114* SacrificialLion:
115** Chao Gai is the big one, as his death had set the stage for the idea that none of the heroes are immune to being killed off, and also indirectly allowed Song Jiang to take over and provide them with the ability to gain amnesty.
116** Zhang Shun was the first major "hero" to die against Fang La, and by that point it's pretty obvious that the two sides are on equal footing and that AnyoneCanDie.
117* SchmuckBait: The Stele-Bearing Tortoise is inscribed with the words "Open when Hong arrives," thus tempting Marshal Hong to open it once he sees it.
118* ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney: Bribery is not just for the rich, but for everyone, so it's more like "The Rules Screw You If You Don't Have Money". Venality is portrayed as a way of life in the Song Dynasty[[note]]more specifically, during Huizong's reign[[/note]], to the point that officials often expect a "tip" just for doing their jobs correctly. Even relatively honorable characters will sometimes accept a bribe just to avoid giving offense. Note that the "rules" that are screwed by money aren't limited to those of the government, but sometimes include the chivalrous tenets of the "gallant fraternity". For example, Wang Lun tries to buy off men who want to join the Liangshan outlaws if he's afraid they'll show him up.
119* SealedGoodInACan: The 108 demons who later become the Liangshan Heroes are introduced sealed inside a Stele-Bearing Tortoise.
120* SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism: Leaning very strongly towards the cynical side. The entire premise of the story revolves around the idea that, no matter how much you try to change the system, the most you can take down are petty officials and common loons. The real powers responsible for the entrenched corruption, being the emperor and his close circle, are virtually untouchable by those not of their standing.
121* SortingAlgorithmOfEvil: Though Gao Qiu and his group are the main villains for the setting as a whole, the book makes use of this trope nonetheless in detailing the rise of Liangshan. The first lot of villains tend to be fairly personal, with an occasional higher-up figure, like Gao Qiu's foster son, thrown in the mix to establish a connection between the original "heroes" and the imperial court. Afterwards, as the threat of Liangshan increased, the heroes started facing rival bandits whom they would often absorb as well as petty officials who they would generally just get rid of, before crushing and assimilating enough noblemen for the Imperial forces to take them seriously. Some of the generals, like Huyan Zhuo, would be incorporated into the outlaws. Between the grand assembly and the amnesty, imperial forces led by none other than the BigBad himself attempt (and fail) to subjugate the outlaws. After the amnesty, they're sent off to fight external enemies like the Liao Dynasty before finally being pushed into a meat grinder against Fang La. Nevertheless, the surviving outlaws had found themselves unable to defeat the real authority behind their troubles: the Song Dynasty itself, and Liangshan was promptly dissolved.
122* SplitHair: Yang Zhi, one of the novel's heroes, is forced to sell his [[AncestralWeapon family heirloom of a sword]] in the street. When confronted by a drunken local bully who demands a dirt cheap price, he tells the latter that the sword is capable of "cut metals like mud, slice through hair by the merest touch, and kill people with no blood on the blade". It's all true, and Yang Zhi proved the third feature on the bully himself.
123* StandardEvilEmpireHierarchy:
124** TheEmperor: Emperor Huizong
125** The Right Hand: [[DragonInChief Gao Qiu]]
126** The General: Huyyan Zhuo
127** The Guard: [[EunuchsAreEvil Tong Guan]]
128** The Security Officer: [[TokenGoodTeammate Su Yuanjing]]
129** The Oddball: [[EvilGenius Cai Jing]]
130* TheStrategist: Wu Yong is the most prominent one, though his area of expertise mostly revolved around getting people to join Liangshan through the most crooked possible methods. The actual organisation of the army relied heavily on Gongsun Sheng and Zhu Wu.
131* SummonBiggerFish: Part of the reason the outlaws roped in Lu Junyi, a nobleman who was originally set to fight ''against'' the outlaws, was because he was the only one in the area with enough fighting ability to defeat Shi Wengong, the military instructor who (presumably) killed Chao Gai.
132* SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute: Several of the characters are expies of characters from ''Literature/RomanceOfTheThreeKingdoms'', some by ancestry (i.e. Guan Sheng to Guan Yu), some by the choice of fighting style and weapons (Suo Chao to Xu Huang and Lin Chong to Zhang Fei), others by deliberate and active imitation (Lyu Fang to Lyu Bu).
133* StandardizedLeader: Deliberately evoked and subverted with Song Jiang. Compared to a colourful cast of warrior monks, Taoist priests, and barbarian bandits, [[LeadYouCanRelateTo Song Jiang seems almost ridiculously average]]. He's not terrifically smart, nor is he an especially skilled warrior. He's not as noble as Lin Chong or as cruel as Li Kui, but has enough of both to gain the respect of the outlaws. In fact, it's this sense of normality that provides him an extra level of complexity and depth and allows his greyness to shine, ensuring that he is not overshadowed by the more outwardly flamboyant supporting cast.
134* UglyGuyHotWife:
135** Wu Song's brother and his wife, Wu Dalang (also known as "Three Inches of Mulberry Bark") and Pan Jinlian (also known as "Golden Lotus"). Neither is enormously happy with the situation. Apparently their neighbors know this trope as "a luscious piece of meat landing in a dog's mouth".
136** There's also the marriage between the marriage between Wang Ying, [[DepravedDwarf a bandit known for his]] [[{{Gonk}} odd looks]], [[DepravedDwarf short height and also for being a bit of a pervert]], and the notably beautiful LadyOfWar Hu Sanniang. While Wang was obviously enthralled (though not exactly in a romantic way), Hu was unsurprisingly unhappy, though it worked out eventually.
137* UnfitForGreatness: The original Liangshan leader, Wang Lun, knows he is, and that's why he felt threatened when Yang Zhi joined up and tried to turn Lin Chong away. When he tried the same with the famous Chao Gai, Lin Chong decided he'd had enough.
138* UnspokenPlanGuarantee: This is used numerous times, being a particular trademark of characters who qualify as TheStrategist. It's customary for the characters to lampshade it by following the non-explanation with remarks about what a marvelous plan it is.
139* WarIsGlorious: The campaign against the invading Liao Tartars, the Liangshan Marsh bandits' Finest Hour. After finally being given the chance to actively work for the betterment (and expansion) of the realm, they succeed on a grand scale, performing acts of chivalry and heroism all the way.
140* WarIsHell: The campaign against Fang La's rebellion. It's a brutal meat-grinder with both sides behaving much more ruthlessly than in the battle against the Tartars. Not only that, but our heroes' PlotArmour has finally worn off. Every battle costs Song Jiang at least one of his trusted companions, often in extremely gruesome and pointless ways.
141* WhereAreTheyNowEpilogue: The two final chapters. Our heroes' fates range from [[DroppedABridgeOnHim death by falling off a horse]] (Guan Sheng) to [[NoodleIncident leaving for a life as a fisherman and becoming king of Siam instead]] (Li Jun). For the most part, though, their endings are somewhat happy.
142* WorldOfActionGirls: Surprisingly, given the story's highly dismissive attitude towards women, there are a few here and there, like Sun the Witch and Gu the Tigress. Perhaps the most prominent and impressive, though, is 'Ten Feet of Steel' Hu, a dainty young girl who fights with a pair of swords almost as big as she is (hence the nickname). She routinely hands even the most experienced warriors their asses, and her first meeting with her future husband, the bandit warlord 'Stumpy Tiger' Wang, ends with her defeating him in pitched battle and taking him prisoner.
143* WouldNotShootACivilian: After joining the army, the bandits make a point of minimising damage to the civilian population. They're much better and more consistent about it than they were as outlaws.
144* YouAllMeetInAnInn: The inn of Zhu Gui, the 'Dry-Land Crocodile', is where most of our heroes get recruited.

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