Medieval: Total War - Collection reviews

Translated by
Microsoft from Spain
Very good in his time but now it is very obsolete. Anyway, something in the version of steam that I find ridiculous... With a single Viking Huscarle you can defeat a whole troop of Lancers with shield and give them to the escape... The balance of power in the units is adjusted completely absurd and so with many others (a battle of 200 against 2000-and we are not talking about peasants-and defeat them in a few minutes) Had the retail version of the game with the expansion Viking Invasion and from Then I don't remember it that way... I have acquired by nostalgia on steam and I can not repent more... I delete it right now
Translated by
Microsoft from French
Completely unstable and bugged version. The most outrageous is to have to redeem another version because Sega and W10 are unable to recognize a CD game bought before the advent of this damn steam of ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ with its dematerialised games. So I had to buy it reluctantly, mistakenly thinking that the proposed product would be stable and clean of any defect. It's actually the reverse and almost 10 euros for a rotten emulation of an excellent game. I really hope that one day we will stop taking ourselves for milk cows because it is the same scenario every ten years at most, even my old versions of AOE no longer work when we are offered "compatibility mods" that do not work absolutely never. Death to steam!
Translated by
Microsoft from Spain
ATTENTION: My "NO RECOMMENDATION" of the game is not due to the quality of the game, which I will comment below, but to the compatibility problems. The message "UnSUPPORTed GRAPHICS CARD" appears When you install it. I Bought this game (which already possessed original) with the idea of installing it on an old laptop. This laptop, by the way, is newer than the laptop that I used to play with, so it meets the leftover requirements. I will Have to try the game on CD, to see if it goes (add the result as an addition to the analysis). As for the game itself: fully recommended, it follows the TW dynamic in a more primitive, but charming way. The map is divided into provinces, agents and armies are like pieces of chess, and the battle takes place if there are two enemy armies in the same province. You Have a great variety of units, buildings to produce them and you must be careful with taxes and public order: there may be rebellions and even "resurrections" of factions. I Do Not know the hours I spent playing this game, only surpassed by Medieval II (then raised the requirements too much and took me to have a PC where they could run the new titles of the series).