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Cossacks European Wars |
$9.95 |
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(Win95/98/Me/XP Only!) (DVD Case) (COSSACKSPR) |
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Publisher: Strategy
First
Blood and Violence
Ratings:
9.0 from
threshed.com
The Beginning of a New
Era
Cossacks is a real time strategy game based on historical
events that took place during the 16th-18th centuries in Europe. It
concentrates on a time when nations and states were created and demolished,
gold was turned into vast armies and the never-ending stream of wars shed
oceans of blood. Now's your chance to take charge of huge armies of up to 8,000
units and engage in battles that will truly test your skills as a Master
Strategist. If you get into trouble, don't panic, mercenary Cossacks are just a
few gold coins away.
Game Features:
Graphics: The game utilizes sprite graphics that allows
obtaining beautiful and high detailed pictures, while common drawbacks of
sprite graphics (unit animation jitter and lifeless landscape) were overcome
due to the new graphics compression algorithm. This algorithm allows using
numerous animated movements for each unit pre-rendered in up to 64 orientations
(in 256 orientations for vessels), so this provides very smooth movements and
turns. Background elements are animated, too: flags flutter at the buildings,
wheat rolls in the wind, windmills' fans revolve, waves go over water surfaces,
and tides wash the coasts.
Nations: Algeria, Austria, England, France,
Netherlands, Piemonte, Poland, Portugal, Prussia, Russia, Saxony, Spain,
Sweden, Turkey, Ukraine, Venice. You can also face other communities in single
player games; for instance, in campaign for England one should sweep off pirate
republics. Each country has its original graphics, economic and technical
development peculiarities, military advantages and drawbacks, and unique units
and technologies.
Military Forces:
The following military forces are represented in the game: infantry, cavalry,
artillery, and navy. Nations use their unique units along with units similar to
other states. Thus, within each nation a player has all military forces needed
to wage land or sea war. At the same time each nation's forces are unique as
for their features, abilities, and equipment. Units can be arranged into
military formations: column, rank, or square. A formation includes an officer
and a drummer, and units' abilities increase in a formation.
Technology Tree: The game inventions' tree numbers more
than 300 upgrades divided in two time periods - XVI-XVII centuries and XVIII
century. Upgrades allow turning quantitative categories to qualitative, and
also obtaining some new unique possibilities, units, and buildings. Science
development allows increasing resource extraction efficiency, improving units,
increasing artillery power and range of fire, improving towers' rate of fire
and buildings' durability. Also upgrades allow building battleships,
multi-barreled cannons, etc. A sort of uncommon invention is aeronautics.
Having invented that, one can launch balloons and reveal the whole map.
Economy: Economy depends on six resources: food, wood,
stone, gold, iron, and coal. Gold, iron, and coal are infinite at their
deposits, and extraction is proportionate to mine workers number. The main
peculiarity of game economy is that all units consume resources, and artillery
and handgun shots spend iron and coal.
Historical
Battleground: Represented are more than 85 large-scale wars and battles of
XVI-XVIII centuries for single game and multiplayer. The most noteworthy are:
Thirty Years War (1618-1648), the English revolution, the English and Dutch
wars, the War for Spanish Succession, the Northern war, the War for Austrian
Succession, the Seven Years War, the Ukrainian independence war (1648-1657),
sea wars against pirates, etc. Plus a random map generator.
Military Operations: The game provides an unlimited
variety of tactical and strategic methods of land or sea war against enemies.
Thus, one can create defense in depth, carry out lingering city sieges, wage
guerilla wars, deploy landing forces on enemy shores, shell an enemy with
cannonballs, arrange ambushes, stake on a crowds of cheap units or create elite
teams of trained soldiers with high-tech weapons, and so on. The game landscape
is full 3D, so it is an important strategic element: capturing commanding
heights provides with great advantages and often wins a battle; also one can
arrange ambushes in canyons.
Game World Physics: Real physics introduces many
interesting issues into the game. Thus, units climb hills slower, and they
shoot farther at a height. A cannonball explosion becomes much stronger at a
rocky landscape because of rebounds, while at a swamp it is damped. Artillery
and firearms possess shot dispersion and a probability to hit the enemy by the
first shot, etc. The fog of war closes after a unit in some time. introduces
many interesting issues in the game. Thus, units climb hills slower, and they
see and shoot farther at a height. Artillery and handguns possess shot
dispersion and expectancy of hitting the enemy by the first shot; cannonball
explosions become much stronger in a rocky landscape because of rebounds, while
in a swamp they are damped. Waves rage on the sea, and there are traces in
water behind moving vessels.
Multiplayer Game:
Multiplayer game supports up to 8 players via modem, local network, or
Internet, and comprises Random Map and Historical Battles modes. In the Random
Map mode, players are able to choose map parameters, resources, etc. Also we
have developed a random map generator, that (along with vast game variety of 16
rivaling nations with their advantages and drawbacks, and a huge technology
tree of 300 upgrades) will make the network game of a long-lasting interest.
Historical battles are precise reconstruction of real ones. They are
reconstructed up to trivial details, such as real historical landscape and map;
enemy troops disposition, stuff, structure and even number punctually coincide
with historical facts. In this game mode a player is expected to lead any party
he chooses, to carry out the battle, and to confirm or disprove its
historically recorded outcome. The historical battles' maps were created by
processing real topographical data.
A detailed and comprehensive 200 page manual
Requirements:
Windows 95/98/2000/Me/XP: Pentium 200 MHz / AMD K6-2
(Pentium II 233 / AMD Athlon or better recommended), 32MB RAM (64 MB RAM), 1 MB
Video RAM (4 MB Video RAM recommended), 200 MB Hard drive space, 8x CD-ROM
drive (12x CD-ROM drive recommended), Sound Card, DirectX 7, Multiplayer
Connection 28 kbps.
Reviews:
threshed.com by Matt "Rewind"
Cobb
"There is very little that can prepare you for the
experience of Cossacks. The sheer size of the battles is mind boggling! In most
RTS games (with the C&C series being the only exception that comes to mind)
you only need around 20 workers. Not the case with Cossacks. In one of this
behemoth's typical matches you will need around 200 resource gathering units.
That's right, around 200 little peasants running around chopping timber,
gathering stone, and mining gold, iron, and coal. This would put you near or
over the unit limit of AOE, but in Cossacks you have a unit limit of 8000 so it
shouldn't be a problem. Almost every aspect of EW is of massive size. Their are
16 different playable nations, 6 different resources, 300 upgrades spanning two
time periods, and of course the before mentioned 8000 unit battles. All of the
16 different nations have not only special units on their side, but they also
have completely different buildings!
"You would think that the mammoth size of this game would
make it a micromanagement nightmare, not so. The game is very well structured
so as to minimize micromanagement. The peasants, once assigned a task, rarely
if ever need additional orders. When grouped with some of the games variety of
drummers and officers your men will remain in formation and won't be captured
(EWs equivalent to AOE's conversion). Farms automatically renew themselves
without player intervention and the games mines and forest provide an almost
limitless supply of resources at or near the players base. All these things
help fuel the 8000 man battles."
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