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Medieval: Total War is a turn-based strategy and real-time tactics computer game developed by Creative Assembly and published by Activision.Set in the Middle Ages, it is the second game in the Total War series, following on from the 2000 title Shogun: Total War.
Medieval II: Total War: Kingdoms: Creative Assembly: Historical: WIN: Grand strategy. Turn-based campaign map with real-time tactical battles. Expansion to Medieval II: Total War. 2007: Medieval II: Total War: Creative Assembly: Historical: WIN: Grand strategy. Turn-based campaign map with real-time tactical battles. Sequel to Medieval: Total ...
Medieval II: Total War is a strategy video game developed by the since-disbanded Australian branch of The Creative Assembly and published by Sega. [1] It was released for Microsoft Windows on 10 November 2006.
Medieval: Total War was released in August 2002. Using the same game engine as Shogun, the game takes players to medieval Europe. The expansion pack is called Viking Invasion, and the combined edition is called the Battle Collection. It was one of the best-selling games in the Total War series.
Every faction gets paid an additional amount of florins every turn. This payment is referred to as "the King's Purse". In Medieval II: Total War, some factions had a high king's purse payment and some had a low payment. Rather than having a fixed king's purse, each faction in the Britannia Campaign has a dynamic king's purse—the sum of money ...
The number of cities and regions is different from Total War: Rome II, but the size of the map is similar. The map of Total War: Attila further extends into modern-day Russia in lieu of the eastern provinces of the Hindu Kush found in Total War: Rome II, shifting the player's attention to the nomadic Huns. The largest settlement in a province ...
I suggest renaming the article to Medieval II: Total War - Kingdoms. That's how MobyGames lists it, at least. SharkD 08:44, 22 January 2009 (UTC) More discussion has occured here. SharkD 01:43, 29 January 2009 (UTC)
The 2005 review reported that the modification, whose development team included two historians, was to replace the "economic system, [soldiers'] equipment and the provinces" of Rome: Total War; [5] the latter review praised the mod for having "altered and deepened" the gameplay of the original title, and wrote that Europa Barbarorum was the ...