The sight of hundreds of horses mashed into individual tiles, and creeping tides of twitching, meshed-together catapults, genuinely approached cosmic horror as an aesthetic. So difficult it was almost funny, in places.īut what makes me sort of love it, is that out of nowhere, the formerly fairly mid-scale battles of the original game could now include TEN THOUSAND units. What made it extreme? Well, it was gruesomely, near-unplayably hard, for a start. Crusader Kings 2, Crusader Kings III, Crusaders of Might and Magic. But it was a meaty old game in its own right, cranking up the RTS element of the Stronghold formula, moving the action to the Middle East, and cracking open a massive tin of campaign missions.Ĭrusader Extreme, by contrast, came out in 2008, and was somewhere between a remaster of Stronghold: Crusader, and a fever dream. Chambers of Devious Design, Champions Online, Championship Manager: Season 01-02. Because it was made in the same engine, and because Stronghold 2, actually the third game in the series, came out in 2005, it’s easy to mistake Crusader for an expansion pack at first glance. Stronghold: Crusader, of course, was the 2002 sequel to the original Stronghold. But other than the fact that “Crusader Extreme” sounds uncomfortably like some kind of fash energy drink, I’ve got a bit of a soft spot for it. It truly is the Sonic The Hedgehog of RTS/city builder hybrids, eh? For a lot of people, Stronghold: Crusader Extreme was the nadir of the franchise. Over the two decades and nine-ish games of the series, Stronghold has been on a right old rollercoaster, quality-wise. What with Stronghold: Warlords coming out the other week, I’ve been revisiting a few of the Stronghold games in my collection, and… crikey. One a day, every day, perhaps for all time. Have You Played? is an endless stream of game retrospectives.
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