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Glory Field 2: Medieval Review

Glory Field 2: Medieval Review

need to know

What is it? Grid-based medieval battle simulation.
Expect to pay 30 USD
Developer Byzantine games
Publisher Slytherin ltd.
Review date AMD FX-8350, Nvidia GeForce GTX 1070 Ti, 32GB RAM
multiplayer game? Asynchronous 1v1 competition
Associate Official website

Here comes the cavalry, you guys! In fact, the cavalry has always been there. We start with the cavalry. This is not the glory domain game of the ancient times. The Legion Legion and the hordes of barbarians are gone forever, replaced by a thunderous charge of spearmen and knights, their armors are enough to make the toaster blush. Glory Battlefield 2: The Middle Ages provides a real desktop mini war chess game experience, but just like historical war chess deduction, whether you like this experience will depend on whether you like the rules.

This is a war game. There is no good music. The graphics are barebones. The user interface is very basic. You will want to remember the hotkey. This could have appeared in 2010, and no one would blink. There are more than 50 hours of historical scenes and activities. The famous battle provides you with a pre-arranged battlefield, allowing you to choose a side, and then make some customizations to it. Historical battles provide you with a good background on a fixed route, while still allowing you to make flexible decisions about the composition and evolution of the army.

Multiplayer games are handled in the same way as previous Field of Glory games, and if you want to complete a game in one go, it will be disappointing and frustrating. If you can only sit and play for 15 minutes at a time, its function is sufficient. Very unremarkable and impressive.

(Image source: Slitherine)

FOG 2: Medieval battles focus on historical simulations rather than clever or puzzle-like tactical scenarios. It offers spades, and history buffs salivate for that kind of battle. They are dynamic and unpredictable, and will force you into surprising scenes when troops run away accidentally or enemies suddenly flood in. You can use these rules to learn about a dazzling series of historical factions through the scene.

The randomly generated battles and campaigns are good, simple, and very customizable-you can ask yourself questions like “What happens if the Mongols arrive in France?” or “What if Sweden invades the UK?” Customize Battles don’t have much strategic depth, but they do get you from one battle to the next. If you like the idea of ​​connecting scenarios that you didn’t plan yourself, they are also great: ambushes, defender actions, etc. are usually not situations where you deliberately let yourself in. Some longer ones will take you several hours.

The battle takes a long time, because they are medieval meat grinders. The troops will lock each other in a melee, but sometimes they will shrink or escape from the melee because of low morale or the outcome of the battle-once the fight begins, neither of these situations is particularly within your control. Your job is usually to choose a favorable position and match for your troops. You are trying to deploy your spearmen to restrain the enemy’s knights, your light troops in difficult terrain, and your cavalry, they have a place to break through the enemy’s defenses.

(Image source: Slitherine)

It’s satisfying to fight these battles well. Discovering and exploiting the enemy’s weaknesses is the only way to prevent the battle from turning into a stalemate determined by randomness. However, if your tactics and strategies do not meet the requirements, the battlefield will feel very static, as the units lock into each other and stay there for the rest of the battle. Once the enemy starts to shake and flee the morale around them, their morale will plummet, and an escape unit will prompt its neighbors to flee, then their neighbors, and so on.

The battle takes a long time to play, because they are medieval meat grinders

This is where the prime unit of that era really shines. The armored knights riding on horses are fierce and dangerous assault cavalry, who will soon smash a row of unarmored unrided men into a rout. However, well-armed feet can block their way, so you must be careful of your elite troops. Once the enemy starts to flee, as in the Middle Ages, your knights are likely to chase them to the edge of the battlefield—sometimes even further. It can lead to lively unexpected situations, usually a kind of fun: Controlling a group of violent, noisy nobles is the fate of generals in the Middle Ages, and “FOG2: Middle Ages” did exactly that.

In addition, some games feel not suitable for the Middle Ages. The time period began in 1040 and lasted until 1270, just before the grand finale of armored knights, longbows, and mercenary crossbowmen in the 14th century. The rule set’s emphasis on flanking maneuvering rather than quantitative superiority made sense in ancient times, but it feels silly when three elite infantry units cannot make a group of recruits escape in one simultaneous attack.

(Image source: Slitherine)

In the end, battles tend to stay in one place for too long. This is most obvious in scenes like Hastings. The battlefield should be a very dynamic place. One or the other broke the formation to pursue the defeated enemy, but was involved in the counterattack. In the “Glorious Battlefield 2” model, the escaped troops rarely assemble back to fight, and you cannot set a fake retreat to lure the AI ​​out of position.

These shortcomings did not diminish the pleasure of victory, nor did they affect the satisfaction of the realization of a smart plan. In the tense moments of the Middle Ages and the unknown results of the chaotic melee, the intensity of the battle is no less than that of the previous “Battlefield of Honor” games. There are a lot of ancient wargames on the PC, and it’s great to see some turn-based love in the Middle Ages.

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Bart Thompson
Bart is esports.com.tn's List Writer . He is from Houston, Texas, and is currently pursuing a bachelor's degree in creative writing, majoring in non-fiction writing. He likes to play The Elder Scrolls Online and learn everything about The Elder Scrolls series.