Friday, December 18, 2009

Walkthrough: Medieval II: Total War

In his walkthrough of Medieval II: Total War for the PC, Ethan demonstrated the sheer scale and complexity of the massive turn-based strategy game. The game even begins with an ambient introductory cutscene to set the historical scene before showing the player a series of menus where they can choose different campaigns and game modes to play through, and different factions, each with their own unique military units, strengths, and weaknesses play as.

The game's basic resource management and conquest goals are the same as similar, smaller-scale games like Age of Empires, Civilization, or Age of Mythology, although these are much more involved and it can take days or weeks to finish a single game. The interface is suited to display all the necessary information the player needs to run their empire by compactly grouping stats, indicators, scores, and units into sidebars or pop-out menus; players balance everything from their income, public order, religion, population growth, and politics, to trade, and even marriage. The player occasionally receives tidbits of historical information or period quotes relevant to the current actions they're taking or resources they're managing to enrich the believability and immersiveness of the game. Voiceovers and other audio cues even have regionally appropriate accents.

The interface impressively accomodates the flood of information the player receives to make it more manageable, allowing the to zoom in on and pan around around their map environment. When zoomed out, military units on the weather-correct map are represented by banners instead of individual figures, although the player isn't left out of the close up battle action at all; in battle mode, the player is treated to a closer cutscene of authentic looking soldiers that are a step up from the usual "cookie-cutter" men. The user can direct their units to use various strategies to win the battle, though the player does have the option of letting the computer automatically determine which side would win, albeit only based on numbers for the sake of saving time.

In this case, its greatest strength is also its greatest weakness: Although the huge scale makes it very challenging, there is certainly no obvious shortage of content and replay value, and that's not even including the multiplayer option or expansion packs.

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