Rome: Total War Gold Edition | 
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| From: Sega of America, Inc. Category: Video Games
List Price: $19.99 Buy New: $8.45 You Save: $11.54 (58%)
New (67) Used (11) from $6.97
Avg. Customer Rating: 42 reviews Sales Rank: 289
Format: Unknown Format Platforms: Windows Me, Windows 98, Windows Xp, Windows 2000 ESRB: Teen Media: CD-ROM Edition: Gold Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Batteries Included: No Age: 12 - 20 years Operating System: Windows 2000 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5.4 x 1.1 Legal Disclaimer: Warranty does not cover misuse of product.
MPN: 85166 Model: ROMETOTALWRGOLD UPC: 010086851663 EAN: 0010086851663 ASIN: B000E2D3LC
Release Date: February 1, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: Brand New Factory Sealed, Orders Ship Within 1 Business Day, Guaranteed Delivery We Will Send Delivery Confirmation
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| Features:
| • | Up to 10,000 men on screen at once are yours to command | | • | A century-spanning campaign the charges players with managing the economic, civil, religious and military arms of their empire | | • | Unprecedented scale and detail make Rome: Total War one of the definitive historical war game |
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Product Description Rome: Total War Gold puts you in command of the ancient world's greatest armies. Storm clouds will gather over Europe, Asia and North Africa as you lay siege to civilizations using powerful war engines. Prepare your army and develop strategies for victory, then enjoy wealth and power unlike any who came before you. Gold Edition features the original Rome: Total War and its expansions, The Barbarian Invasions.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 37 more reviews...
Rome Total War delivers one of the deepest, most addicting stradegy games of all time! August 6, 2008 I fell in love with Rome: Total War the first minute I heard about. Four years later I still play and enjoy the game.
Rome Total War - I would have to say this ranks among the top PC games of all time. When you start the game you are given the choice of one of the three Roman Factions. As you play the game and conquer factons, you unlock those factions to be played in campaign mode. I would have to say that the campaign mode is extremely deep, and may cause you many sleepless nights. As you play with your Roman faction, you are assigned missions by the Senate to go and conquer certain territories or blockade certain ports. Of course you are given discretion in the ability to conquer other territories or if you just don't want to listen to the Senate at all. Whenever you fight a battle you enter the battle map. This is what separates the Total War series from Civilization. Rome: Total War itself looks great with incredible graphics and beatiful settings. My favorite part of the battles is that the maps are accurate of your location on the campaign map. If you are by the sea, you will see the body of water in the same direction relative to your army as it was on the campaign map. The combination of the battle map and the campaign map (a civilization style map) is what hooks you to the game. You're able to control what happens in battles. In other games, if your army is smaller, you lose. What's great about Rome Total War is that you may use stradegy in the most bleak situtations to come out victorious. I played battles where my army was outnumbered 5:1 as I defended a city where I was able to drive the enemy away. Eventually you will reach the peak of the mountain as you conquer Rome and lead all the factions. What's great is that once you finish a campaign (which will take a long time to begin with), you can play again with a different Roman Faction or another faction which you conquered. I have only a couple criticisms of the game. My first is that all that all the soldiers within each unit look exactly alike. Thankfully, there are many different soldier types to adress this issue. Secondly, in the battles, your soldiers repeat a couple motions over and over. It becomes repetitive. Thankfully this issue was resolved in medieval total war. My last complaint was that you had no control over naval battles. When the odds in a battle were close to 1:1, it was simply a flip of the coin who won. All in all, Rome: Total War will give you hours and hours of gameplay, which you will probably never get bored of.
Barbarian Invasion - I'll make this one short and sweet. Barbarian Invasion was a good expansion, but a little disappointing. The game shifts to the period towards the end of the Roman Empire, as it is divided between the East and West. This time you are given the ablity to play as one of the two Roman factions (Eastern and Western) or several other barbarian factions such as the Franks or Safavids. When I got the expansion, I decided to try something new and play with a barbarian faction. Simply to say, it soon became a frustrating experience as many of my settlements revolted and my money was going down the drain. Barbarian Invasions is much more diffucult than the original game, with an added complication in religion. The new night battles are cool, but they aren't enough to overcome the frustration on the campaign map. Chances are you'll probably be taking this disc out and putting in the original Rome: Total War.
To simply put it I gave this game five stars mostly because of the original game. The expansion set will provide a nice little diversion but is not nearly as addicting as the original. I also highly recommend Medieval II: Total War.
This game rocks! July 17, 2008 This game keeps me playing. I can play as different factions during the time that Rome was gaining power through the world. I enjoy the game because it has everything I want to do such as building & destroying cities and learning and applying new strategies. I am currently playing and enjoying the game right now.
Birthday Delight July 13, 2008 This game, along with Battlefield 1942 Complete, were purchased for my 12 yeara old son ( per his request) for his birthday.
Since their receipt, All he tells me is that he loves the game and how he is able to play it and use his own facilities to determine the out come.
He still is learning how to use this game to it's fulles potential, and I might recommend it for a little older audience. But, he loves it.
great game June 22, 2008 MY 15 YEAR OLD SON LOVES THIS GAME AND I FEEL LIKE HE IS LEARNING A BIT OF HISTORY TOO
It was okay. Watch the hype April 6, 2008 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
This review speaks to both Rome and Barbarian Invasion. There are some differences, but the gameplay is essentially the same.
I'm a long time fan of strategy war games going all the way back to the first Strategic Conquest game by Delta Tao. I love every flavor of Civilization, from Sid Meier's to Stardock, and games like Stronghold. So, I was looking forward to playing Rome because I thought it had elements of all of those classics. And it does. You have to build and maintain cities, raise armies and duke it out on the battlefield.
But it just didn't grab me. Not in the way those other games did. For one thing, I never could figure out what made one city a happy cash cow and another city a money pit full of pissed off plebes. It seemed to have more to do with population than with infrastructure or tax rates (certain buildings give moral bonuses; higher tax rates make people unhappy). It just seemed kind of random. The only way to conquer a city and not have a riot on your hands for ten terms seemed to be to enslave the population or exterminate them. Me, I don't even like to step on a Sim Ant when I can avoid it.
I played Rome: Total War through one time as the Romans and Barbarian Invasion through three times; once as the Saxons, once as the Romans and once as the Horde...actually I never finished the Horde game. I was just over it by that point.
So, as with most games, it's going depend on what the player enjoys and the sort of game they like to play as to whether or not Rome is for you. By this point, the game is old enough where you can find it fairly cheap on E-bay or Amazon, so it's worth checking out. I think part of my problem was reading all these rave reviews, I had big expectations that weren't quite satisfied. Hope you get more out of it.
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