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Napoleon's Last Battles is a "quadrigame" — a box with four different battles played using the same rules. [1] This game covers the last four battles of Napoleon's final campaign of 1815: Ligny: The French and Prussians clash in the first battle of the Waterloo campaign.
As with all other games in the Total War series, Napoleon consists of two gameplay types: a turn-based geopolitical campaign – which requires players to build structures in a faction's territories to produce units and create a source of income, research new technologies, deal with other in-game factions through diplomacy, trade and war, send agents on missions, create and command armies, and ...
Daniel Weitz reviewed the game for Computer Gaming World, and stated that "This game is a must for anyone interested in the problems of army-level command or Napoleonic simulations. If Napoleon had an Apple and this game at Leipzig, he would have seen the handwriting on the screen and headed for the Rhine, kicking his aides-de-camp all the way ...
Rules of Survival was a free-to-play [1] multiplayer online battle royale game developed and published by NetEase Games. It was first released via beta access in November 2017 and released globally on May 31, 2018. By October 2018, the game had reached 230 million players worldwide. [2] On May 30, 2018, the game was released on Steam.
1815 is a two-player wargame in which one player controls Napoleon's forces, and the other the Allied forces arrayed against France. The game covers Napoleon's final battles in the three-day span from the Battle of Ligny to the Battle of Waterloo. The game is 49 turns long, but as critic William W. Easton noted, the game "is essentially simple ...
March of the Eagles is a grand strategy video game developed by Paradox Interactive and released on 19 February 2013. [1] The game centres on the time period of 1805–1820. It started life as a sequel to AGEOD's Napoleon's Campaigns, and was originally titled Napoleon's Campaigns II. As AGEOD was bought by Paradox, they developed and retitled ...
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Mike Siggins reviewed Napoleon's Battles for Games International magazine, and gave it a rating of 5 out of 10, and stated that "quantity cannot replace quality and at the end of the day this is no more than a decidedly average set of miniatures rules with a few smart counters thrown in." [1]