Rome: Total War Gold Edition From:Sega Of America, Inc. , Sega of America, Inc. ,
|  See larger picture. | | Amazon Sales Rank:# 341 User Rating: Customer Reviews List Price:$19.99 Amazon.com's Price:$10.99 Prices subject to change. You Save:$9.00 (45.02%) Availability:Usually ships in 24 hours |
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Amazon Maximum Age: 240 months Amazon Minimum Age: 144 months Batteries Included: 0 Binding: CD-ROM Brand: Sega Of America, Inc. EAN: 0010086851663 ESRB Age Rating: Teen Format: CD-ROM Is Autographed: 0 Is Memorabilia: 0 Weight: 100 hundredths-pounds Label: Sega of America, Inc. Legal Disclaimer: Warranty does not cover misuse of product. Manufacturer: Sega of America, Inc. Model: ROMETOTALWRGOLD Packaged Height: 110 hundredths-inches Packaged Length: 770 hundredths-inches Packaged Weight: 60 hundredths-pounds Packaged Width: 540 hundredths-inches Platform: Windows Me Platform: Windows 98 Platform: Windows XP Platform: Windows 2000 Publisher: Sega of America, Inc. Release Date: 2006-02-01 Studio: Sega of America, Inc.
Feature:
- 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
Product Description:
Rome: Total War Gold puts you in command of the ancient world's greatest armies. Storm clouds will gather over Europe, Asia and North Africa as you lay siege to civilizations using powerful war engines. Prepare your army and develop strategies for victory, then enjoy wealth and power unlike any who came before you. Gold Edition features the original Rome: Total War and its expansions, The Barbarian Invasions.
Customer Reviews:
Incredible Games, 2008-10-01 As a 61 year old gamer and historian who started with Avalon Hill games as a teen, I find RTW and Barbarian Invasion to be supremely satisfying. You haven't lived yet until you have fought three separate Hun armies between turns and win with just your one Roman army. Especially intriguing when two of their armies attack simultaneously and you have to defeat one quickly and wheel your army about to face the second coming from your rear. Yes, horses were terrified at the sight and smell of elephants as attested to by the writings of Ammianus Marcellinus, the late 4th Century Roman chronicler and soldier who fought against Persian elephants.
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