Stronghold 2 game review1/27/2024 ![]() This is part of the charm of the game, but also somewhat daunting to those who are Stronghold novices. The depth of the gameplay also means that slight changes in your economy can sway the tide of battle in your favor down the road – or against it. It was an excellent formula for the original games and Firefly Studios has kept that entirely intact. Those familiar with the original games in the series will also know that a careful balance between your economy, your warfare tactics and the way you govern your people is the key to success. Read on to find out why we liked Firefly Studios’ reboot of their signature franchise.įor those not familiar with the Stronghold games, it’s still no surprise that this game takes place during the Crusades. This one I only finished a few levels before returning to Crusader.Stronghold: Crusader II stays true to the original 2002 game without feeling dated, and brings back a brand of strategy games we don’t see that often these days. a huge army deployed everywhere to avoid being flanked by something flying over the side of mountain that you thought was impassable. A castles protection is limited when it can have its walls brought down by a wizard or flown over by a dragon. Now Stronghold Legends does not have all the problems of Stronghold 2 even though it uses the same engine. That being said, I only finished about 50-75% of the missions in S2. The way to win in S2 is to keep your population as small as possible and still train an army. It almost gets to the point that you need more workers to accommodate one new house than the house provides. ![]() A larger population in S2 means you need to add a "Dung Farmer" to haul away waste, a Falcon Trainer to kill the rats brought on by a high population, and others. When you use that strategy in Stronghold 2 it can backfire. In Stronghold(original) you can pump up your economy by adding a few more houses and you get an instant workforce you only need to add a few farms to feed everyone. Its ok, but you need to change your tactics. I agree that Stronghold 2 overemphasises micro-management. I have played every Stronghold title except Crusader Extreme. Just adds lots of complexity while not really boosting the gameplay. Unless you're really into managing every little detail, with low tolerance for fuckups before your kingdom starts reeling rather hard on it's side, I wouldn't get SH2. Far too often you're all taken up on the opposite end of the map, trying to make sure your soldiers don't get slaughtered, only to zoom back to your base to find you've been out of food for too long and half the peasants have left because of some cockup in the micromachinery that is the economical and building system of SH2. On top of this you're usually waging a war on some enemy. The main problem with SH2 is they added more micromanagement to basically everything, and after a while (when you get into the larger settlements with many buildings interacting) it gets confusing and hard to manage. ![]() Haven't tried SH:Legends but I can sum up SH2. Petrell: What about the later games in the series (SH2 and SH:Legends)? How do they compare and do they add to castle building/economic/medieval village management part of the game or do they concentrate on story/rts part instead?
0 Comments
Leave a Reply.AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |