Does anyone know why Attila Total War did such rubbish?

Updated on military 2024-03-12
12 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Do you really not understand or fake do not understand. By the time of Attila, the Western Roman Empire was already in decline, and there were strong barbarians on the outside and corruption on the inside, and history was like this. Also garbage. Do you really know how to play?

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    You're not hacked to the point, Attila is a pretty rubbish game, but not garbage because Western Rome is hard to play.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    You can't play, and what you don't turn well is rubbish, right?

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Because it's cheap, it's naturally much better to be expensive.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    That's because the people who play are rubbish. Why don't I feel like you when I play Ciro?

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    It's really good, a game that separates the normal from the mentally retarded.

  7. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Hahahahaha

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    Attila, a barbarian conqueror who came from Asia, has been legendarily preserved for this reason.

    In medieval cultures, rulers often boasted that their ancestors were some of the most powerful conquerors. Attila, a barbarian conqueror from Asia, has been legendarily preserved for this reason, and his bloodline has been passed down through the ages.

    While in Rome, Attila received a good education at the court, where he learned about the traditions and customs of the Romans, as well as their lavish lifestyle. The Romans hoped that this would enable him to spread the Roman culture back to the Huns, so as to increase Roman influence over the surrounding peoples.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    I can burn the ground, the version is unique, I like it.

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    In 420, as long as you are not playing Western Rome, you can get the Huns through diplomacy and drag it out until Attila dies before going to war.

    The method of establishing diplomatic relations with the Huns, attack or plunder against Western Rome at the beginning, and play a few rounds with the relationship with the Huns, even if you start with the Huns are in a state of war, you can also stop fighting, if Western Rome is destroyed, you will find other Hun enemies, anyway, there are many Hun enemies, and it is easy to find two or three. )

    If you play Western Rome, you can basically only resist the Huns, with the Afrigian Carthage region as a base, just put a full team (spearmen and crossbowmen throwing stones) in a small town on the edge of the desert, and he can resist as many people as he comes.

    Pay attention, put a pair of navies on the sea, lest he come back directly across the sea, the navy does not need to be sophisticated, as long as the Huns are launched, they are not the opponents of the professional navy at all, and they will be destroyed if they fight casually.

    In addition, before the Huns came, you had to clean up the rear, conquer the few forces in the desert, and collect them as vassal states to help you deal with the Huns, and fight in the desert area, these guys are still quite strong, because with you and the desert as a barrier, it is difficult for the Huns to eliminate them, which is very useful as a boost.

    If you don't want to be stationed in the desert, or if you don't want to deal with the Huns diplomatically, then you can also choose to go to Northern Europe or England.

    Northern Europe relied on snow and forests to fight the Huns, and England was naturally a navy.

    However, these areas are not very rich, and winter will also have a bad effect on your troops, and the forces are complex, so it is not as easy to play as in the desert area.

    If you play Sassanid Persia, it's even simpler, and when the Huns come to fight you, it is estimated that you will have stabilized a large area long ago, and you can just drown the Huns with the troops of the peasant Bobohai and many little brothers.

  11. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    Roman Empire and Sassanid Empire. According to playing the game "Attila's Total War", it can be seen that in the later stages of the game, the Roman Empire and the Sassanid Empire, as the strongest forces in the later stage, have a lot of ** and resources. Attila:

    Total War is a strategy game published by the Sega Paister, which should be part of the Total War series. Dust potatoes.

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    420 years of starting, triggered.

    Bai Attila ascends the throne plot du

    Then there will be a lot of high-quality Zhi Huns full of formation, DAO is all high-level soldiers, and there are also heavy catapults.

    Attila herself will also take the answer to the world to burn.

    The burning city will also be full.

    In the end, the whole world was full of Huns.

    Of course, the number will decrease with the difficulty, and the two provinces of normal difficulty will also feed an elite full formation, which can't stop Attila.

    Because as long as there are Huns on your land, your legion will stop replenishing, and 3 full wheel battles can grind you to death.

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