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Warlords 3 (Jewel Case) | Discount Price: $4.48

| Platform: Windows 98, Windows Me, Windows 95 Brand: Red Orb Entertainment Binding: CD-ROM Release Date: 2002-02-12 ESRB Age Rating: Everyone
best game ever [Posted on 2003-10-24] This is th best game ever.
One of the Best [Posted on 2003-12-02] Civilization, Age of Empires, Heroes of Might and Magic. These are some of the games that have earned their place in game history. I think Warlords should be among them too. What makes Warlords special is that it focuses mainly on strategy. There are about 100 possible units in this game, but each player only gets to have 16 varieties of these units. Because different units have different characteristics, such as speed, scouting range, strength and stack bonuses, you'll have to adopt different strategies based on what units you have available. Unlike Heroes of Might and Magic, Warlords focuses more on battles and less on character building. To gain resources, you have to spread out quickly and take control of various forts. But if you spread out too fast, your existing forts become vulnerable. To effectively defend your forts, good placement of troops is essential. The computer opponents start out the same way as you do. And just like you, they have to gradually consolidate their territories and build up their armies. You feel like plotting strategic moves against some other players, instead of an RPG game, where you build up your troops to go against the final boss. Overall, this game is very simple, yet very deep. You have virtually limitless options, yet these options won't bog you down with complex logic like chess does. It satisfies my craving for pure strategy.
Warlords III Darklords Rising [Posted on 2005-03-20] Do not buy this game if you are running windows XP. The game does not support it and crashes all the time. Fun game just can not keep it running.
The gold standard [Posted on 2005-07-19] Take a system of relatively few parts, add a large but finite number of variables for the parts, a simple goal, fairly straightforward subgoals, a setting that single handedly embodies every cliche' of the stock "high fantasy" setting, a gnarly AI, and what you get is this frighteningly addictive morass of lost hours and jeopardized marriages. In the warlords series you can still see the template for almost every turn-based game that followed. Sure they added some frills and window dressing to the mix, but this one is absolutely the best. This is one of those lifetime games that you can come back to again and again. Its infinitely replayable and infinitely enjoyable.
Deserving of Makeover [Posted on 2006-04-23] This is perhaps the best turn-based game ever made. The problem today is that it runs only in 256 colors (yet it has amazingly great graphics despite this), and of course it runs only on the Windows 9x series.
If only Broderbund would reclaim this game and update its limitations--without of course changing the game (as it did with the inferior Battlecry).
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