Medieval 2 Total War Spisok Yunitov Na Anglijskom

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Medieval II: Total War is a turn-based strategy and real-time tactics video game, the sequel to 2002's Medieval: Total War and the fourth game in the Total War series by Creative Assembly. It was released on 10 November 2006 for Windows.

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Spamming of seige equipment prioritized over regular infantry/archer/cavalry units mid-game. OP cavalry in most every case, especially against spears and pikes (a personal nuisance, seeing as even a maxed-out armored spear levy unit will still be devastated by a direct charge from a general's bodyguard unit) 3. The pope hating the guts of virtually everything you do, and mercifully forgiving every other faction for doing the same (this is a world domination game, after all).

The impossibility factor that the idea of enduring alliances and mutual friendships carries in this game. The mysterious ability for all AI factions to spawn full-stack armies in any FOW area available to them, A) especially with units that they cannot possibly create in the amount of time they have against my advancing armies, B) that cannot be created using the settlements or amount of money they own (bankrupted factions), and C) are somehow are the most experienced men that the enemy have had throughout my entire campaign against them. Several other notable examples of false difficulty involving money and units. Rebel factions are little challenge, and take no actions regarding self-preservation.

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Rebellions kicking players out of settlements form them into an inactive rebel faction settlement rather than a living enemy threat. Not even major factions may revive themselves later-on. They are merely 'destroyed' after elimination from the campaign map. Squalor, squalor, and once again: squalor.

I cannot stress this enough. Oh, also the fact that settlements with high enough populations cannot be tamed, and will inevitably rebel. Add into the mix that farms, which you may or may not rely on for your faction's turn-based income, only make this problem worse over time. The relative uselessness of assassins in the game, excepting, of course, the fact that they give your king dread traits upon recruitment. Escape chances for spies, too, are grim- even success chance is enough to make one question their use.

Merchant competition is questionable, even though admittedly useful, as their traits are aquired mainly through recruitment and aquisition- and aquisition is the other half of why they possess such traits, so there is no way to 'train' them, so to speak, outside of recruiting them in the right settlement. Diplomats also mainly gain their skills over time (usually by taking them far away from your capital and letting them sit for many years), and AI factions are virtually broken when diplomacy comes into question anyway to care enough about them. Take that last fact that all failed actions that these agents survive will likely give them negative traits, and the recruitment of such agents becomes something of an absurdity for all except merchants. After all, at least merchants have the potential to earn one's faction money.