![]() When a battle actually takes place, you're given the option of fighting the battle in exciting 3D-RTS-o-Vision. Mostly it's a Risk-style strategy map of Europe where you manage your affairs, construct armies, conquer provinces and perform research. This places you in charge of one of five period empires. This means that while there are historical battles, multiplayer and skirmishes, the core of the game is an elaborate campaign mode. The high concept is simple: It's Creative Assembly's Total War series, but applied to the Napoleonic era. But at least it doesn't mix its metaphors. Such is the case with Imperial Glory, which does a lot of things right and a handful of things wrong and ends up being disqualified from our affections by a few own goals. And that means you have plenty of time to follow the endgame on Reddit, or start at the beginning with the Battle Royale archives.It doesn't take much to pass from courting disaster to marrying her. Each civilization commands so many cities and military units that each turn now takes a staggering ten hours to process, so that each weekly installment in the community’s coverage of the match only covers about fifteen turns. Still, it’s going to be a few months before a victor is crowned. The battle for ultimate victory will likely be contested between Brazil, who now control all of South America as well as Africa and the Middle East, and the Inuit, who control all of North America and much of Siberia. After over 1,000 turns, only twelve of the original 61 civilizations survive, and several of those cling to life. ![]() Now, rebooted as the Battle Royale Mark 2.1, the game looks like it will run its course without another major crash.Īnd the conclusion may not be far off. ![]() Though the game initially appeared dead in the water, members of the community stepped in and spent months rebuilding the save file from scratch. The community’s passion even helped keep the Battle Royale alive after it encountered a seemingly fatal bug after more than a year of operation. Some followers have even go so far as to write a novel about the game or make it the focus of a sociology paper. Their enthusiasm for the game has resulted in some remarkable creativity: they ascribe personalities and invent lore for the otherwise faceless civilizations, swap memes, create original art. It’s the strength of this community that has kept the Battle Royale running for nearly three years. The game has its own Reddit community, where over 11,000 diehard followers eagerly anticipate the weekly album updating the state of the game, cheering on their favorite civilizations and booing their enemies. Within a year of its launch, the Battle Royale found its way into the Guinness Book of World Records as the “Most followed battle in a strategy game”, drawing tens of thousands of unique viewers every month. Factions rise and fall in bizarre, fictional ways: the Polynesians colonizing Baja California, Buccaneer pirates briefly conquering Portugal, Japan spending in-game centuries under Australian control.Ī substantial community has formed to watch the unpredictable twists and turns. It’s a world of constant war, with nations building colossal, continent-spanning armies and recklessly raining nuclear bombs on each other. These run the gamut from global powers like China to indigenous civilizations like the Blackfoot to forgotten states like the short-lived Republic of Texas-all starting on the map at their historical point of origin, tasked with expanding their territory, defeating their neighbors, and ultimately conquering the world. This leaves 61 factions, all controlled only by the AI, duking it out amongst themselves to be the last one standing. One of these is still controlled by a human, but is sequestered in an unreachable corner of the map, so that its only impact on the game is in clicking the “Next Turn” button. The concept is simple: the game is modded to allow for 62 unique civilizations to compete on one huge map of the Earth, up from the base game’s limit of twelve. ![]() That form is the Civ Battle Royale Mark II, a huge, ongoing game of Civ 5 played entirely by the computer against itself. It is one of the most popular and played strategy games of its time, yet right now it might be most popular in a form nobody can play. It can eat up hundreds of hours of your life, and yet there exist speedruns of it that last less than half a second. ![]()
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