Nikolai Nesterenko knew everything about the Battle of Tsushima… After an accident, his consciousness was temporarily transferred into the head of Vice Admiral Rozhestvensky. Once he learned how the voyage of his squadron would end, the “first after God” organized—during the voyage and forced stops—a full-fledged, effective combat training using all the latest achievements of naval thought of that time. Trained crews and determined officers turned a motley collection of ships into a formidable force that, within two days of battle, drastically changed the course of the Russo-Japanese War. But the first Tsushima is only the beginning… Even though everything didn’t go quite as planned, the actions Rozhestvensky took after breaking through the squadron toward Vladivostok were still successful. But that’s not enough… The Pacific Fleet is forced to look for new ways to wage naval war. Unable to defeat the enemy in direct confrontation, they have to search for its weak points and strike only there. Now what matters is no longer “who defeats whom,” but “who convinces whom.” And all roads lead back to Tsushima.