Empire: Total War (PC)

Release Date: 04/03/2009

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SummaryProduct Details

Empire: Total War will see the debut of 3D naval combat within the Total War franchise. PC Gamers will be able to intuitively command vast fleets or single ships upon seascapes rich with extraordinary water and weather effects that play a huge role in your eventual glorious success or ignominious defeat. After pummelling your enemy with cannon fire, close in to grapple their ship and prepare to board taking control your men as they fight hand to hand on the decks.

  • Developer: The Creative Assembly Ltd
  • Publisher: Sega
Reviews

Game Reviews

The Empires strike back

For the last decade the Total War series has utterly dominated the arcane world of the military strategy simulation. Its expert blend of turn-based campaign planning and epic real-time battles is hugely addictive, whether the fighting rages across feudal Japan (Shogun: Total War), the Holy Land (Medieval: Total War), or indeed most of the globe, as it does here.

Yes, this time developer Creative Assembly has directed its war machine at the whole of the 18th century, taking in everything from the industrial revolution, to the fight for American independence to the rise of the firearm. Empire: Total War is as magnificently detailed and sprawling as the great novels of the era, and it is so utterly involving you may need to be dragged screaming from your PC.

The 100 year war

The game's Grand Campaign kicks of in 1700. You select a nation then guide your country to global domination over the course of 100 rollicking years. Play Empire: Total War as Britain and you must avoid conflict in Europe while heading East to dominate the trade routes; play as Poland and you may want to ally yourself with the German states to counter the looming threat of Russia.

You command vast armies of grenadiers, infantrymen and other specialists, directing them across intricately detailed battlefields.

Along the way you'll need to research new technologies to improve your military arsenal, while also ensuring that domestic policies create a wealthy, intelligent and willing population. The micro-management burrows right down into the thick of taxation, agriculture and politics (want a nice friendly democracy or a harsh dictatorship? Each has its advantages, and costs...), though you can stick all that on auto if you just want to get out onto the battlefield and cause some mayhem.

Battles over vital territories are the meat of the game. You command vast armies of grenadiers, infantrymen and other specialists, directing them across intricately detailed battlefields. Your men clamber into wrecked buildings and over higher ground for cover, the landscape becoming much more a part of your tactical game than ever before.

Gun crazy

The introduction of gunpowder provides a new dimension as you manoeuvre your cannons and musketeers into key regions, allowing you to lash enemy forces with distant gunfire. The fighting is beautifully fluid, whip-lashing across fields and valleys, and punctuated with explosions and rampaging cavalries. The visuals are so intricate it's like watching an epic war film.

There are more cunning ways to get at an enemy, with espionage and assassination proving sneaky alternatives to all-out war.

And of course, there are now naval battles. In Empire: Total War you can command an armada into fraught ocean encounters, broadsiding enemy vessels and blasting them to pieces. Unfortunately though, the combat system is fiddly and confusing, and most players will feel overwhelmed in larger face-offs. It's the one part of the game that doesn't feel perfectly balanced.

In the background, there are resources to capture and exploit, and diplomatic deals to strike; after all, you can't fight everyone all the time. There are also more cunning ways to get at an enemy, with espionage and assassination proving sneaky alternatives to all-out war.

World war fun

Empire: Total War is so vast and so deep, it really feels like you're taking a decisive role in one of the most fraught periods in world history. From all-out battles to the protection of merchant routes and the forming of alliances, this is genuinely gripping, even educational stuff. It also works on so many levels - economic, religious, social, technological - there's something in here for everyone with an interest in how war shapes the world map.

Then there's the excellent multiplayer battle option, and the promise of more online support to come. Even if you grow tired of the single-player modes (unlikely), there's much more fun to be had. Empire: Total War is, in short, essential.

GAME's Verdict
plus points
  • Massive in scope and enormously deep.
  • Lovely visual representations of battles.
  • Two excellent single player campaigns, plus online multiplayer.
minus points
  • Naval battles are confusing.
  • AI can glitch and stall at times.
  • May be too deep if you're used to shooters.

Review by: Keith 'Strat-Head' Stuart
Review Published: 06.03.09

User Reviews

Adam Davies posted on 17 Nov 2009
I bought this game hoping to be blown away. I have been a long time admirer of the TW series and really was expecting something great.Well I was blown away. Blown Away at how a mainstream developer can be allowed to release a game so unbelievably riddled with bugs and glitches. It isn't just a case of the odd bug here and there, it literally doesnt work (for me it freezes the whole PC needing a re-boot every 5 mins of play)! This isn't anything to do with specs of PC's, mine could run this 5 times over, its a programming problem that is still (months and months later) not fixed. The support staff openly admit to not knowing how to fix it... It does work if you turn the games sound of completely but should people really have to go without sound to play an expensive game like this? I hope they spent my money wisely because they wont be getting any more of it from me. Big let down, and ill be taking this back tomorrow. Maybe they should concentrate on BETA testing their games rather than
zahad rajput posted on 09 Oct 2009
good game im gonna buy this game this saturday
John Parker posted on 24 Sep 2009
This is an excellent, excellent, EXCELLENT game. Graphics are great, fight scenes are great and the huge campaign is great. Just a shame my PC's started to play up =/ !
Mark Cyrson posted on 15 Jul 2009
This most recent installment of the fantastic total war series is brilliant. I highly recommend that anyone who has any kind of interest in Real Time Strategies gets this game and even if you don't you should still get it. Thanks to the introductory campaign tutorial (Road to Independce) the game is much easy to play even if you have no experience of strategies, you become gently submerged into the gameplay of empire total war rather than being dropped into the deep end, like other tutorials in other games I have experienced. Empire Total War has an extremely good replayability factor aswell since you can play the main grand campaign with plenty of different countries. My one quandry with E:TW is that the battles can become slightly repetitive as, despite claims by creative assembly (the developers), the AI is weak and sometimes path finding can be horrific when you try to fight in anything except open fields (My throat became hoarse from shouting at the screen after my men blundered
Charlie Bick posted on 21 Jun 2009
hello guys! what game would you recommend instead then please?
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This product is worth upto 160 points