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Rome: Total War Gold Edition

Rome: Total War Gold Edition

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From: Sega of America, Inc.

List Price: $19.99
Buy New: $9.98
as of 11/25/2009 04:25 CST details
You Save: $10.01 (50%)



New (29) Used (11) from $7.08

Seller: GoGamer
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 69 reviews
Sales Rank: 1121

Format: CD-ROM
Platforms: Windows 98, Windows 2000, Windows Me, Windows XP
Genre: Strategy Games
ESRB: Teen
Media: CD-ROM
Edition: Gold
Batteries Included: No
Age: 12 - 20 years
Operating System: Windows 2000
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9
Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 5.4 x 1.1
Memory Card
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

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

2 World Dominating Games in 1!   Welcometo Rome. Welcome to War.



Uniting the multi-award winning Rome: Total War and its official expansion pack,Barbarian Invasion, you must guide history's greatest armies to their finestvictories.

Play as one of three great Roman families, whose thirst for  power willstop at nothing.  You must use military genius to build an empire thatstretches across Europe and Africa.  Finally march on Rome to seize controlof the greatest empire in the world .  Then, in Barbarian Invasion, havingbuilt your empire, you can defend it, as either the Eastern or Western romanEmpire, or lead a Barbarian horde and bring the once mighty empire to its knees.


  • Rome: Total War
  • Rome: Total War Barbarian Invasion Expansion Pack





Rome: Total War

Create, rule, conquer and manipulate the Roman Republic and Empire to become the"Imperator" of Rome in this award-winning game from thehighly-acclaimed Total War series. Fight as, or against ancient history's mostlegendary generals including Julius Caesar, Hannibal and the rebel Spartacus.

From the Punic Wars against Carthage to the death of Augustus, the firstEmperor of Rome, control mighty armies of up to 10,000 fully polygonal, highlydetailed, motion-captured warriors clashing in panoramic real-time battles. At your disposal are over a hundred different troop types including legionaries,hoplites, barbarian hordes, war elephants, gladiators and scythe chariots tocolossal war machines such as siege towers,


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 69
1 2 3 4 5 6 ...14Next »



4 out of 5 stars Just what I expected   November 5, 2009
Angela Fontenot Ortego (louisiana)
This was a great deal ...just have to watch to make sure you have the right computer details ...but good deal.


5 out of 5 stars For the Husband   October 29, 2009
M. Silver (Calhoun TN)
Lots of fun. My husband has played this game for many hours on our laptop. It's kind of like "Risk".


3 out of 5 stars Fun game, but it has some issues   September 21, 2009
J. Chess (Lincoln, NE)
RTW is a great game as far as strategy goes. Gets all the main points of economy, public happiness/health, army building, war, and construction of cities. The bones of the game are great, but there are some things that really bother me about it. This review will focus mostly on the main game, as Barbarian Invasion is practically the same game with cosmetic differences. The game play is the same.

One is the historical inaccuracies. Although rather minor for game play and such, it just bugs me that they didn't open their history books to make a historical game. The Egyptians look like Pharonic armies when in reality, during the time of Rome, they were under the control of the Ptolemaic Pharaohs. They were basically Greek and their armies were as such. Phalanx based. There are other historical inaccuracies, but that is definitely the biggest one.

Another thing that bugs me is the AI. They are kind of dumb, even on hard. It is very predictable in most battles with what they will do and you can position your army to counter such things. It is almost like clockwork and if you think about it before battles, you can go in prepared to fight what they have.

The game does crash from time to time, which gets highly irritating, as it happens most often at the end of a pitched battle that I win (maybe that is just when I notice it most...). Installing the Barbarian Invasion expansion and getting the 1.6 patch really helps this issue.

To get the true experience for this game I highly recommend getting the Rome: Total Realism mod. It corrects many of the historical inaccuracies, ramps up the difficulty to make it more realistic, and fixes some silly AI problems.

Overall, even with its flaws, this game has kind of taken over my gaming. I have owned for maybe a year and it is easily the game I play most. It has that ability to make you think if you go one more turn you will finally have nothing to do, you find there is a bunch to do and you keep going. The game is easily a favorite of mine, but only gets 3 stars due to the flaws.



4 out of 5 stars Great Game   September 2, 2009
Scott M. Meyer (New York)
This is a great game. My only complaint is that the AI is sometimes very suicidal it seems. Sending in Generals to die for no reason and other units that do not always respond immediately, which during a tough battle can be devastating. All in all, I love this game.


4 out of 5 stars Rome: Total War Review   August 26, 2009
Incognito (Anywhere, Maryland, USA)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I ordered Rome: Total War in early August of 2009. It arrived from almost all the way across the country in three days after it was shipped by its previous owner, TIMMCSALES. The games is almost like a chess game but a lot more fun in my opinion (no offense, chess players). You play as one of the houses of Rome in Rome: Total War, the Julii, the Scipii, or the Brutii, or, after finishing a short or regular Imperial Campaign, you can play as any one of the various tribes in the game as well as the various Houses. You divide you time between conquering enemy factions and governing your various towns and cities in Rome: Total War. It's almost like you're the President, except you don't get impeached or have to quit after four or eight years. In combat, you command armies of hundreds or even thousands of highly-detailed units like Carthagian war elephants, onager catapults, or vast phalanxes of infantry and cavalry units. You can participate in diplomacy, spying, sabotage, or assassination of enemy or neutral factions' towns or characters, which show up on the map like game pieces on a board. I strongly recommend buying this game.
In Rome: Total War Barbarian Invasion, you play as either the Western or Eastern Roman Empire or one of the various barbarian tribes bent on pillaging what's left of the Roman Empire. In Barbarian Invasion, if you lose all of your settlements, you can create a horde (perhaps you have heard of the Mongolian horde?) and still go on with the campaign, though once you capture another settlement, you have to begin paying off the debt you racked up while you controlled the horde. I am almost certain you can only use the horde option if you play as a barbarian faction, though, so don't count on getting a horde if you are playing as the one of the Roman Empires. Also, religion is an even bigger factor in Barbarian Invasion than it was in the original Rome: Total War. Your villages are either Christian, Zoroastrianism (which is basically fire worship, as weird as that may seem today), and paganism, which is just every remaining religion. If you don't pay attention to your settlements' religions, than you may find yourself facing a revolt. If you are one of the Roman factions, you're really in trouble if your settlements revolt, as they may form an entirely new faction. Even if your settlements are happy, if your governor has a low loyalty rating (a new way of rating your governors from one to ten) you may be facing a rebellious town or rebel faction. It's best to nip any troublemakers in the bud as soon as and if possible. While I am slightly more preferential to its parent game, it would be a foolish idea not to buy Barbarian Invasion if you are in the market for a new source of entertainment.


Showing reviews 1-5 of 69
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