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Imperator_Boru
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Imperator_Boru


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PostSubject: Total War Facts:101   Total War Facts:101 EmptyMon Sep 10, 2007 7:51 am

Medieval II: Total War is the indirect sequel to 2002's Medieval: Total War, and the fourth game in the critically acclaimed Total War series from The Creative Assembly. The game is set between the years 1080 and 1530. Like the original Medieval, it focuses on medieval warfare, religion, and politics in Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East. However, unlike its predecessor, the timeframe stretches into the era of the historical discovery of the New World, and simulates the discovery and conquest of the Americas.


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Imperator_Boru
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PostSubject: Gameplay:   Total War Facts:101 EmptyMon Sep 10, 2007 7:52 am

Gameplay:
Similar to previous titles of the Total War series, the game consists of two modes of play: battles and single-player campaign. Battles can be played in multiplayer, in user-defined scenarios, or in historical scenarios which simulate real battles such as the Battle of Arsuf or the Battle of Agincourt. Battles are also featured in the campaign.

The campaign allows the player to assume control of a faction of the time period, and build a civilization, both economically and militarily in order to conquer other factions. Gameplay consists of controlling the faction's military, economic, and social systems via a large campaign map. During the player's turn, armies, fleets, and agents can be moved on the map. When an army engages another army, the player can choose to fight the battle personally, in the battle mode, or automatically calculate the outcome.

The goal of the campaign depends on which type of campaign is played. The short campaign requires the player to defeat one or two enemy factions (for example, England must defeat its historical enemies Scotland and France) and control at least 15-20 settlements. The long campaign requires the player to control at least 45 territories and one or two significant cities, such as Jerusalem, Rome or Constantinople.


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Imperator_Boru
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Imperator_Boru


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PostSubject: Settlements:   Total War Facts:101 EmptyMon Sep 10, 2007 7:53 am

settlements:
Each faction controls a number of settlements, and must conquer others in order to continue growing. Unlike previous Total War titles, there are two kinds of settlements, each with different advantages and disadvantages: cities and castles. Castles have better defensive capabilities and have access to a larger selection of soldiers, but generate less income and have no access to higher technologies. Cities generate much larger income and are technological centers of a faction, but are more difficult to defend and only have access to militia troops, which are generally inferior to those trained at castles. Players may convert a settlement to a different type, although larger cities may not be converted into castles.

As in other Total War games, in each settlement the faction may construct a number of buildings, each with different functions, such as training troops, upgrading weapons and armour, expanding the economy, increasing the settlement's defenses or strengthening religion. A new feature of Medieval II is the ability to build guild halls. A given settlement may only have a single guild hall, although there are several different types. The guild hall provides certain bonuses such as increased movement for troops, better weapons, or better agents; some even grant access to new units, such as the ahistoric yet effective unit of "Sherwood Archers" available to England upon construction and subsequent upgrade of a Woodsmens' Guild. Guild halls may also be later upgraded to a "Master Guild Hall", which may provide a larger bonus or even grant a bonus to all of the faction's settlements while still retaining a more notable bonus in the city the structure is built, and then possibly upgraded to the "Guild Headquarters," which provides the greatest bonuses, although each guild can only have one headquarters anywhere in the world at any time.
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PostSubject: Religion   Total War Facts:101 EmptyMon Sep 10, 2007 7:54 am

Religion:
Religion plays a large role in the game. The major religions in the game are Roman Catholicism, Orthodox Christianity, and Islam. "Heresy" and paganism play minor roles. Other religions, notably Judaism, are not featured due to the fact that they were not the established or official religions of any of the factions featured in the game. The player must monitor and safeguard the spiritual state of their faction's domain, maintaining it through building places of worship for their faction's religion and by training Priest or Imam units to spread their faith. The presence of faiths other than the faction leader's in a city tends to generate unrest, and so religious buildings and units combat this by converting people to their own religion and eliminating the heretics and witches that appear on the map.

Catholic factions must also contend with the Pope, who can issue missions (similar to the Senate in Rome: Total War), call for Crusades, or even excommunicate factions. A player who strongly enforces the faith, builds cathedrals and completes the Pope's missions will receive favor from the Pope; a player who ignores his missions, fights with other Catholic nations and allows the faith to flounder will incur the Pope's displeasure and may be excommunicated – which also leads to unrest, which may cost the player's faction entire cities immediately, and the possibility of a Crusade being declared against a settlement belonging to the player's faction. Papal missions pursue the interests of the Catholic Church, and include the construction of religious buildings, cessation of hostilities against fellow Catholics, and the assassination of heretics and witches.

The Pope also appoints Priests and Bishops from the various factions as Cardinals; when the Pope dies, the Cardinals elect one candidate from among the three most pious to be the new Pope. A player with many Cardinals can thus use them to influence who becomes the new Pope, and how the player votes in the election has an effect on the new Pope's relations with the player. However a player with few or no Cardinals can still influence a Papal election by bribing other factions to vote in a particular way. A chosen Pope that had belonged to the player's faction before being appointed will begin with a more favorable view concerning the actions of that faction, while a Pope chosen from among the units of a player's enemy may look negatively upon that player's faction.

From time to time, Crusades (for Catholics) and Jihads (for Muslims) may be called at the request of factions. Crusades and Jihads both use a religious leader's authority to single out a region for conquest by factions of his faith; each faction of the appropriate faith may then raise Crusader or Mujahideen armies by committing a General and an army consisting of at least 8 units. These armies gain access to special religious units to recruit for use in battle. Crusades and Jihads move significantly faster than normal armies, but will begin to suffer from desertion if they fail to make sufficient progress or lose their leaders. Successfully capturing the target region gives rewards to the faction; failure results in negative traits for the faction's leaders and the loss of the army. It should also be noted that, perhaps due to a game bug, factions of religions not pertaining to a holy war (be it Crusade or Jihad) may be rewarded in their participation against a target city; Hungary, for example, may be rewarded at the end of a successful Jihad if it captured Constantinople from the Byzantines and granted ownership of the city over to a Muslim faction despite Hungary being a Catholic nation.
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Imperator_Boru
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Imperator_Boru


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PostSubject: Agents and characters:   Total War Facts:101 EmptyMon Sep 10, 2007 7:55 am

Agents and characters:
Each faction has a number of agents it may use to maintain order and influence other factions. These include the Priests/Imams, as well as princesses, merchants, assassins and spies. Each agent has attributes that develop the more he is able to successfully be used. Princesses, for example, have a "Charm" attribute that governs their success in diplomacy and the likelihood that a proposal in marriage will be accepted. Spies and Assassins have a "Subterfuge" attribute which governs how likely they are able to infiltrate enemy cities or find information about enemy armies. Except for princesses, all agents are trained at settlements which contain the appropriate buildings - for example, Christian priests can be trained in any settlement with a church or chapel. Princesses cannot be so trained; they are born into the player's ruling family, and become active as agents once they come of age.

In addition to their agents, each faction is ruled by a family, the male members of which act as generals in battle. Each general has a number of attributes which determine how well he governs a settlement and how well he leads an army in battle. A general's actions can affect his attributes- for example, a general who routinely kills prisoners of war may see his "dread" increase, making him frightening to foes; a general who prefers to release prisoners may instead increase his "chivalry", which makes his own troops braver.

Diplomacy is performed by diplomats and princesses and functions much as in previous Total War games, mainly involving negotiating treaties such as cease fires, alliances and marriages. The interface for negotiation has changed from previous games, however; a new system has been integrated to show the other faction's attitude toward the player's faction, intelligence estimates (such as how wealthy the faction is and what other factions they are at war with), as well as how fair the other faction feels the player's proposals are.
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Imperator_Boru
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Imperator_Boru


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PostSubject: Turn system:   Total War Facts:101 EmptyMon Sep 10, 2007 7:55 am

Turn system:
Medieval uses a system of "turns". With each turn representing two years, although the season still changes each turn, as in Rome: Total War. A side effect of this system is that there are inconsistencies. For example, while each turn represents two years, characters only age six months per turn. Also, due to the movement system, when discovering America, it takes about 8-10 turns (i.e., 16-20 years) to get to America from western Europe; Christopher Columbus took about a month to make each of his first two voyages. It should be noted that time taken per turn can be changed, and the 1.2 patch now makes characters age the correct amount.
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Imperator_Boru
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PostSubject: Battle system:   Total War Facts:101 EmptyMon Sep 10, 2007 7:57 am

Battle system:
One of the main focuses on the Total War franchise is its incorporation of battle within the greater sphere of gameplay. A battle consists of two or more factions' armies fighting each other. Battles play similar to those in Rome: Total War, with formations of various kinds of troops fighting. The objective of the battle is defeat the enemy army by completely destroying it or causing the whole army to flee; in a siege battle, the objective is to completely destroy the army or to take control of a plaza in the center of the settlement. There is also an option which allows the player to allow for time limits on battles, meaning that the attacker must defeat the defender within a certain time limit (determined by the computer) or the battle results in a victory for the defender.

Unlike in previous Total War titles, a new system of modeling troops on the battlefield has been introduced. Each soldier has a varying number of elements to it, such as arms, legs, body armor, shield heraldry, and so forth; each element has a varying number of styles. When a battle is entered, the computer randomly selects elements for each soldier in the unit, thereby making each soldier look different from the soldiers around him. Upgrades to a unit's armor are also depicted - a unit of unarmored spearmen upgraded to have leather armor will be depicted wearing it. Another departure from earlier Total War games is that combat is depicted more realistically, with soldiers performing motion-captured attacks - rather than one or two standard attacks - utilizing their shields, parrying blows and delivering killing strikes to downed foes, all sensitive to the weapon they are using and the weapon of their opponent. Blood can also be seen on the uniforms of soldiers who have been fighting and a mist of blood will be visible on soldiers hit by arrows. The amount of detail in the fight sequences can be turned up or down along with the other video options in the main menu.
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Imperator_Boru
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PostSubject: Factions:   Total War Facts:101 EmptyMon Sep 10, 2007 7:58 am

There are twenty-one factions, of which seventeen are playable in the Campaign game, although only five are playable in the beginning:

Kingdom of England (Gules, in pale three lions passant gardant Or) - Best bowmen in the game (Retinue longbowmen, Sherwood archers),and strong heavy infantry (heavy billmen) but little variety in cavalry, and completely lacking in spearmen (infantry preferring to wield polearms); difficulty: normal
Kingdom of France (Azure, three fleurs-de-lis Argent) - Possesses best heavy cavalry in the west (gendarmes, lancers), strong professional armies; lacks effective early infantry; difficulty: normal
Holy Roman Empire (Sable, a double-headed eagle displayed Or) - Strong all around, but lacks specialized late-period units. difficulty: normal
Republic of Venice (Gules, a winged lion or) - Excellent infantry and militia (Venetian heavy infantry), but poor cavalry; difficulty: normal
Kingdom of Castile/Spain (Or, a castle triple-towered gules) - Powerful early-game cavalry (Knights of Santiago) and good late-period technology, and have professional armies; difficulty: normal
The other factions may be unlocked one at a time, as soon as the player has defeated that faction in the campaign (regardless of whether the player wins the entire campaign). If the faction is already defeated, the player may unlock it by taking the last settlement they owned before being eliminated. For example: Scotland has fallen when the English took Edinburgh, their last city. If the player takes Edinburgh then Scotland should be unlocked. The rest may be unlocked all at once by successfully winning the short or long campaign as one of the five initially available factions.

Byzantine Empire - purple and white (purple dominant); Excellent all around Early Period infantry units like Varangian Guard and missile cavalry, but lack of Late Period units and gun technology (highest level of artillery is bombard). Can recruit professional soldiers in cities (Byzantine Infantry, Varangian Guard) with proper construction of barracks; difficulty: hard
Kingdom of Denmark (white raven on a red field) - Special units are Vikings (Viking raiders, dismounted huscarls); infantry mostly use axes instead of spears or swords, making them effective against armour but weak against cavalry; limited cavalry; difficulty: easy
Egyptian Sultanate - representing the Fatimid and successive dynasties - yellow and black (yellow dominant); excellent cavalry, such as mamluks, but weak infantry; difficulty: normal
Kingdom of Hungary - salmon pink and green (salmon pink dominant); Strong cavalry but lacking in effective basic infantry, can generate Battlefield Assassins with proper building of Assassins' Guild and/or Inn; difficulty: hard
Duchy of Milan (linked with Genoa) - green and white (green dominant); strong Italian militias and crossbowmen (Genoese Crossbowmen); excellent Late-Period technology; poor cavalry (with exception of Famiglia Ducale: elite heavy cavalry unit from the duke's family); difficulty: normal
Moors - representing the Almoravid dynasty - orange and white (orange dominant); Useful fusion of Camel cavalry and spearmen; has few, but effective, late-period units like Camel Gunners; difficulty: easy
Poland - red and white (white dominant); Possess excellent cavalry (hussars and Polish nobles) but poor infantry; difficulty: hard
Portugal - white and light blue (white dominant); Many units (such as arquebusiers and javelinmen) improved over normal units and excellent late-period technology, best navy in the game; difficulty: easy
Rus - dark blue and red (dark blue dominant); powerful cossack units, such as Cavalry and Musketeers, but poor Early Period infantry; difficulty: hard
Kingdom of Scotland - dark blue and white (dark blue dominant); Best spears and pikes in the game, but cavalry is poor and faction lacks any kind of notable gun technology aside from artillery; difficulty: hard
Kingdom of Sicily - grey and black (grey dominant); mix of units including Muslim archers, Italian militia units and Norman knights but cavalry is poor. However, it can field Chivalric Knights; difficulty: normal
Turks - representing the Seljuk dynasty (Early Period) and Ottoman Empire (Late Period) - green and yellow (green dominant); Game's strongest siege artillery upon inclusion of gunpowder as well as powerful late game infantry and ranged units, especially janissaries, but poor armour; difficulty: normal
Also, certain computer-controlled factions appear during the campaign game, but are only playable in custom, historical and multiplayer battles or by editing the game files:

Aztec Empire - light blue and yellow (light blue dominant); no weapons or armor technology, but high-damage and cheap units, along with certain fear-inspiring troops. No cavalry.
Mongol Empire- representing the Golden Horde - dark green and cream; Strongest cavalry in the game but bad infantry
Papal States - yellow and white (white dominant); Strong militia but terrible mobility, having little valuable cavalry
Timurids - black and red; Possesses the strongest (and most expensive) single regiments in the game, such as war elephants, elephant artillery, monster bombards, and rockets; lacking in infantry units. They are Also Known as "Persians" in the game and amongst players.
"Rebels" are also a faction, representing territories not governed by one of the other major factions. Their color is grey, and they wander the map, disrupting trade and ambushing the armies of the other factions. Rebels can appear if the people are disgruntled with their rulers or if the entire family line of a faction dies (the faction is eliminated from the game), but the cities/castles remain, ruled independently by whoever was the governor at the time of the death of the faction's last ruler.

In addition to the above, the Saxons (yellow and black), representing the Anglo-Saxon rulers of England prior to 1066, appear in the historical scenario depicting the Battle of Hastings.

Note - see the Komnenian army for more information on the Byzantine army of the crusading period.
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Imperator_Boru
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Imperator_Boru


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PostSubject: Critical responses of the game:   Total War Facts:101 EmptyMon Sep 10, 2007 7:59 am

Critical responses of the game:
The exclusive review was given to PC Gamer US, who gave it 90%. In its December 2006 issue, PC Gamer UK reviewed the game, hailing it as the "new king of war games". The graphics and depth of gameplay were highly praised and the game received a score of 94%. IGN gave the game 8.8/10, saying that the game was not as revolutionary as its predecessor, but still introduces some new ideas and builds on others from Rome: Total War, which would still be enough for anybody to buy it.[1] GameSpot also rated the game 8.8/10, noting its "epic, engrossing gameplay" whilst criticizing its "beefy system requirements"; fan reviews at GameSpot have it rated at 9.2/10.[2] The Australian magazine PC Powerplay gave the game a rarely awarded perfect score of 10/10 due to the sheer amount of content the game contained and the next generation graphics.

Although most reviews are positive,[2] some reviews have noted negative aspects of the game such as pathfinding bugs, [3] weak AI and some uninteresting new features (such as the merchant characters).[4] Creative Assembly developers stated on December 1, 2006 that they were working on a patch to solve reported bugs, specifically mentioning a major bug in how the game handles cavalry charges (the cavalry don't always use their lances when charging); the patch was released on December 15, 2006. A second patch was also released on May 4, 2007 solving many other problems not addressed in the first patch, though many of the pathfinding bugs in siege battles still remain.[5].

Another problem with the patch is that the game may become unplayable on some computers and may require re-installation of the game. For many people this issue is as yet unresolved, and the game, although playable, still contains many bugs and gameplay issues, as they cannot use the patch without reinstalling the game, and may be unwilling/unable to do so. At the time of writing there is no comment from CA or SEGA regarding fixing this issue, except to suggest that users experiencing problems applying the patch should re-install the game. Most, but not all issues relating to patch failure have been traced to the presence of third-party file modifications (user-installed Mods) or to user-modifications of certain game files.

Many people have also commented on the size of the download for the second patch, being approximately 613MB in size (compared with the English-language version of patch 1.1 at 39.46MB).
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Imperator_Boru
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PostSubject: Expansion:Kingdoms   Total War Facts:101 EmptyMon Sep 10, 2007 8:00 am

Expansion Pack:
On March 30, 2007, an expansion, Medieval II: Total War: Kingdoms, was announced. It was released on August 28, 2007 release in the US, August 31 for the UK and September 7 for Australia. It adds four new campaigns to the game:

America Campaign - 7 playable factions (Spain, The Aztecs, Mayans, Apachean Tribes, Chichimeca, Tlaxcalans and Tarascans) on a map of the New World from Honduras to Texas.
Britannia Campaign - 5 playable factions (England, Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Norway) on a map of the British Isles, the region of the modern United Kingdom and Ireland.
Crusades Campaign - 5 playable factions (Kingdom of Jerusalem, Principality of Antioch, Egypt, Turks, Byzantium) on a map of the Middle East from the region of Turkey east to modern Iraq and south to modern Egypt.
Teutonic Campaign - 6 playable factions (Teutonic Order,Lithuania, Denmark, Novgorod, Poland and the Holy Roman Empire) on a map of northeastern Europe from East Germany to Russia.
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Imperator_Boru
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PostSubject: Offical Links:   Total War Facts:101 EmptyMon Sep 10, 2007 8:01 am

The offical links:
Medieval II: Total War Official Site
Medieval II: Total War Official Forum
Medieval II: Total War Official Blog
Medieval II: Total War at Sega.com
Medieval II: Total War Official Expansion Information
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Imperator_Boru
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PostSubject: Fansites:   Total War Facts:101 EmptyMon Sep 10, 2007 8:02 am

These are offical fan sites:
The Guild aka the .Org
Total War Center
http://medieval2.heavengames.com/
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PostSubject: Multiplayer   Total War Facts:101 EmptyThu Jan 17, 2008 6:02 pm

Is intense. Play with caution.
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PostSubject: Re: Total War Facts:101   Total War Facts:101 EmptyThu Jan 17, 2008 7:30 pm

Gaming Experience May Change During Online Play
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PostSubject: Re: Total War Facts:101   Total War Facts:101 EmptyThu Jan 17, 2008 7:43 pm

you can't use regular swear words so hav to be inventive and use much inuendo when insulting your fellow gamers
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