![]() The Spanish went conquering “for God, Spain and to get rich”. They succeeded, to a great degree, in all three aims. ![]() Spain is a staunchly Catholic country, and the Church and the fearsome Spanish Inquisition still have their hold over men’s hearts. This partly explains why, for all its wealth, Spain is economically backward: the Church sees usury (money lending) as sinful. This may be so, but this lack of credit does not help the merchant classes. Economic growth is also not helped when it is beneath the dignity of any hidalgo gentleman to earn money or work. But a gentleman’s honour is worth defending and a nation’s glory is worth winning, so courage is not in short supply. Indeed, Spain is blessed with courageous men on both land and sea. That Spain will need defending, and soon, is self-evident to many. Charles II, “El Hechizado” or “the Bewitched” is a feeble-minded and pathetic figure, a shadow of his Hapsburg ancestors, and childless. ![]() Spain has suffered from his weakness of mind and government, but Charles cannot live forever. When he dies, what forces will shape the destiny of the Empire? Will Spain once again face its Protestant rivals down? Will there be a new generation of conquistadores to plant the Spanish flag on distant shores? His successor will have much to ponder, but a brave nation to lead back to greatness!Ĭapture and hold 25 regions by the end of the year 1750, including the regions shown. Gibraltar, Texas, Lombardy, Austria, Netherlands, Flanders, Trinidad & Tobago, Naples, Spain, CuraqaoĬapture and hold 35 regions by the end of the year 1799, including the regions shown. Naples, Portugal, Austria, Flanders, Netherlands, Spain, Curaqao, Morocco, Lombardy, Gibraltar, Texas, Trinidad & TobagoĬapture and hold 25 regions by the end of the year 1799, including the regions shown. Gibraltar, Texas, Lombardy, Austria, Netherlands, Flanders, Trinidad & Tobago, Naples, Spain, Curaqaoīe the nation attaining the highest prestige raiting at the end of the year 1799.Ĭapture and hold 50 regions by the end of the year 1799, including the regions shown.The camera pans across a poised army as my boisterous general gives a fiery speech about honor and victory, and I'm transported back to the virtual battlefields of a time long past: 2004. Total War: Rome Remastered is a very faithful recreation of the series' first fully 3D expedition, originally known as Rome: Total War, with some modest but notable graphical and UI updates. But as astounding as it was at the time, the aging gameplay hasn’t gotten the same attention, and doesn't hold up all that well compared to its successors as a result. The most obvious upgrades in Total War: Rome Remastered are visual. In fact, Creative Assembly insists that the engine running underneath is essentially unchanged, so everything from spies on the campaign map to a unit of Triarii on the fields of Italy should behave more or less just as it would if you fished your old CD-ROMs out of whatever box they're wedged in. And no doubt, it's an impressive face lift – especially when it comes to lighting and terrain details. The units, though, don't quite hold up to the level of fidelity we're used to in modern Total War or even 2013's Total War: Rome 2, which is itself almost eight years old by now. “The UI is definitely much improved, especially in terms of readability. That's usually the part of older strategy games that drives me up a wall the fastest, since modern games have gotten so much better at it. But Rome: Remastered still doesn't offer up information as easily as its descendants. Getting more detail on how a specific building or unit ability works might be a pain or just impossible.
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