Armageddon Empires
Posted: January 24th, 2008, 22:16
I've been playing the demo of this hex-based turn-based card-based strategy after it got the highest score this month in PCG at a mighty 81%. A poor month then. Still, I'm glad I found this.
It's an odd little strategy number set 300 years after two alien civilisations lay waste to the earth while fighting each other. They move on and leave the remains of humanity to fight for survival with the abandoned remnants of the two warring factions, and some mutants.
Hex based: Yeah, a bit old but I like these things. It's on quite a large scale, and the qhole thing is a big nuclear desert, but there's enough Fallout-style variations to make it interesting. Also, some hexes contain goodies, or bad guys, or zombies, or goodies and zombies, or... well, you get the picture.
Turn based: So you move your armes around on the hexes. They fight, they explore, they gather resources (of which there's four), they find zombies and half buried submarine wrecks. It's not too slow, and there's a nice dice based initiative system that adds a little bit of tactics to your resource generation.
Card based: This is the weird bit - you build units, special characters and buildings by drawing cards like in Magic the Gathering. You then place them on the map and move them and fight like in a traditional TBS. Sounds odd, but it works quite nicely. No tank rushes for you my boy.
Strategy: It's the bastard child of so many different things. It could have inherited all of the bad points of its parents, but we've ended up with one of those pretty multi-nationality types. The units are rather nice, the combat system works well once you understand it. Problem is, there's no tutorial. And it's a bastard to learn because the UI isn't the best. Even without knowing what was going on I was enjoying myself though, looking at my nice units then getting killed by hordes of cannibals.
I'm going to have a look at the tutorial and see how the research and tactics card systems work, but for about $20 I think, and only a 70mb download I'll probably buy this even if it's just for my laptop. No multiplayer unfortunately, but I expect only Joose might be interested out of you lot so no big deal there.
The final thing that sold me was something I saw in a screenshot. A unit that the Machines get. It's a zombie launcher.
A fucking zombie launcher!
It would have probably sold itself on that alone.
Strategy:
It's an odd little strategy number set 300 years after two alien civilisations lay waste to the earth while fighting each other. They move on and leave the remains of humanity to fight for survival with the abandoned remnants of the two warring factions, and some mutants.
Hex based: Yeah, a bit old but I like these things. It's on quite a large scale, and the qhole thing is a big nuclear desert, but there's enough Fallout-style variations to make it interesting. Also, some hexes contain goodies, or bad guys, or zombies, or goodies and zombies, or... well, you get the picture.
Turn based: So you move your armes around on the hexes. They fight, they explore, they gather resources (of which there's four), they find zombies and half buried submarine wrecks. It's not too slow, and there's a nice dice based initiative system that adds a little bit of tactics to your resource generation.
Card based: This is the weird bit - you build units, special characters and buildings by drawing cards like in Magic the Gathering. You then place them on the map and move them and fight like in a traditional TBS. Sounds odd, but it works quite nicely. No tank rushes for you my boy.
Strategy: It's the bastard child of so many different things. It could have inherited all of the bad points of its parents, but we've ended up with one of those pretty multi-nationality types. The units are rather nice, the combat system works well once you understand it. Problem is, there's no tutorial. And it's a bastard to learn because the UI isn't the best. Even without knowing what was going on I was enjoying myself though, looking at my nice units then getting killed by hordes of cannibals.
I'm going to have a look at the tutorial and see how the research and tactics card systems work, but for about $20 I think, and only a 70mb download I'll probably buy this even if it's just for my laptop. No multiplayer unfortunately, but I expect only Joose might be interested out of you lot so no big deal there.
The final thing that sold me was something I saw in a screenshot. A unit that the Machines get. It's a zombie launcher.
A fucking zombie launcher!
It would have probably sold itself on that alone.
Strategy: