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6 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Another Epic Conflict, 19 May 2007
Author:
bs3dc from United Kingdom
Rome Total War - Alexander gives you the opportunity to attempt to
match the feats of one of the greatest generals in history, Alexander
the Great. You command the Macedonians who are in a tough financial
position as well as being surrounded by numerically superior enemies
including the mighty Persian fleet to the south.
This is more based on the real-time battles than on the empire building
of the original game. Your budget limitations as well as the 100 turn
deadline (very short in comparison to Rome or Barbarian Invasion) mean
an almost constant attacking policy against the Persians, barbarians
and Indian rebels to succeed. Sacking or exterminating captured
settlements is almost always necessary to pay for reinforcements -
often mercenaries since shipping them from Greece will nearly always
take too long. Men must be conserved which is no easy feat in the face
of such heavy opposition.
New units such as the the elite Phalangists and the heavy Companion
cavalry give the Macedonians the edge over their opponents. The faction
plays similarly to the Greeks in the original except that the cavalry
is far superior and the missile units are limited to javelin-throwers
that are out-ranged by Persian archers. The infantry hop-lites are
still extremely tough to break by frontal assault so the importance of
not being out-flanked can not be overstated. There is no artillery, but
this would be too cumbersome and therefore slow on the campaign map in
any case and so sieges must be resolved with assault or starvation.
Alexander has less replay value since the in the main campaign only the
Macedonians are a playable faction and there is no choice but to attack
everybody to fulfil the objectives. There are different ways of
approaching the campaign however, especially with the aid of the the
difficulty settings. Alexander and his bodyguard are an essential key
to success though failure will result if the leader himself dies.
There is a tough series of historical battles presented by the quality
voice acting of renowned British actor Brian Blessed which is a
definite bonus.
The game will appeal to those who prefer the real-time battles which
can be fought between thousands of troops over the other aspects -
diplomacy is not even an option since there are no diplomats. It still
feels a little like a stop-gap measure for fans eager for Medieval II:
Total War, but the cheap release price and the easy accessibility make
it worthwhile.
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