After the gunfire in Tokyo Bay, only a landscape strewn with wreckage remained, with the Japanese people busily clearing the ruins, a scene that was especially tragic.
As the saying goes, "Revenge doesn't wait for the next day." Along with the failure of the Malacca naval battle, the Japanese Navy had lost its maritime supremacy, and the Spanish Navy immediately came down upon them.
Intercepting merchant ships, bombarding ports—it had now become the daily work of the Spanish Navy. It seemed as if they couldn't go a single day without causing trouble, or it just wouldn't sit right with them.
Perhaps it was out of hatred or perhaps in order to once and for all resolve the security issues in the Philippines; during their operations against Japan, the Spaniards were particularly conspicuous.
Against this backdrop, it was naturally the Japanese people who suffered the misfortune. The Japanese population, already in a state of anxiety, was now in panic.