Stronghold
Legends Say good-bye to the historical
authenticity of Strongholds past and hello to one generic, seriously flawed
fantasy RTS.
Interesting
concept blends medieval history with fantasy.
It's
gotten to the point that you don't know what you're going to get when you open
the box of a new Stronghold game. The castle-building franchise from Hartford's
Firefly Studios has gone through some significant changes over the past two
years, but the latest version throws the whole formula out the window.
Stronghold Legends moves the series out of the history books and into
D&D-styled real-time strategy territory with mythical heroes, dragons, and
dwarves. Yet while this is admittedly a nifty idea, the switch from reality to
fantasy kills the historical authenticity that has long been a trademark of the
Stronghold line. Even worse, everything seems to have been crowbarred into the
aged Stronghold 2 engine, resulting in a generic RTS that has more than a few
serious technical and design issues.
The
actual gameplay in Stronghold has little to do with the earlier games in the
franchise. Here, instead of building a castle and getting knee-deep into the
nitty-gritty of what it was like to live during the Middle Ages, you sign up
for three campaigns out of medieval mythology. In the opener, you take on the
role of King Arthur, battling against the Saxons for control of Britain. In the
others, you play as Siegfried, the German dragon slayer and star of a Wagnerian
opera, and Vlad the Impaler, the Transylvanian Turk-killer best known today as
the bloody inspiration for Dracula.
But
nothing of interest has been done to develop these storylines or settings.
Buildings follow the RTS template and feature barracks, armories, granaries,
and so forth. Resource gathering goes beyond the usual food, wood, and stone,
but it does so by adding an annoying level of micromanagement to what should be
a straightforward grind of building armies and attacking the bad guys. A game
this simplistic probably shouldn't demand the collection and processing of any
resources, as mission objectives always involve straightforward building armies
and killing enemies.
All
of the soldiers featured in each faction are virtually identical. There is
little difference here whether you're fighting on behalf of the evil forces of
Dracula or the noble knights of King Arthur. Also, since the units themselves
are generic, the gee-whiz factor of getting to play Count Blah and his evil
minions in an RTS fades quickly. You get little aside from the same old
pikemen, archers, crossbowmen, and swordsmen. There is only so much that a
developer can do with a medieval setting, of course, but no effort was made to
provide significantly different troops to represent the nationalities and time
periods represented. A millennium passed between the King Arthur campaign of
the mid-400s and the Vlad campaign of the mid-15th century. You would think
that more than the color of the shirts would have changed during that time.
At
least the three sides vary quite a bit when it comes to the menageries of
mythological beasties that they can throw into battle. Heroes like Arthur,
Merlin, Siegfried, and Vlad have special powers that give them the ability to
pull off feats like casting spells, knocking down walls, and summoning magical
creatures. In the Arthur scenarios, you have access to heroic knights and
wizards straight out of Malory; in the Siegfried ones, you deal with figures
out of Norse legend such as frost giants; and in the Dracula missions, you get
to play with Halloween refugees like creepers and werewolves. All of the units
fit perfectly into their settings and make the game feel like a collection of
folktales come to life.
Yet
while these beasties add color to Stronghold Legends, and some cool moments
like giants stomping pesky soldiers with their feet and Merlin blasting archers
with lightning bolts, they don't do much for gameplay. For starters, most are
underpowered. Dragons, for instance, are second-rate compared to Tolkien's
Smaug and can be taken out by well-placed archers. Giants can be ganged up on
by regular infantry grunts like pikemen and felled quicker than you can say fee-fi-fo-fum.
And just breathing on the frail Merlin seems to kill him. More play testing was
also needed to root out some big problems with mission design and artificial
intelligence. Most missions are laid out in an extremely linear fashion. You
start at point A and kill everything until you reach point B, you defend a
fortress until the clock runs out, and so on. But lack of imagination is the
least of the game's issues. Enemy troops often continue patrolling mindlessly
and actually ignore huge columns of your soldiers even after you've just
smashed down or climbed a castle wall. They often don't react to crossbowmen or
archers firing away at them, either, and sometimes choose to walk away from
battles or abandon sieges. The narrator who provides tips on enemy attacks
frequently comes out with lines like, "Woodsmen have seen a band of enemy
troops heading this way!" right before they turn around and head back
home. The game was obviously shipped without a fully functioning AI.
It
also wasn't shipped with a modern graphics engine. Stronghold Legends looks
like it was made with the same dated 3D technology that powered Stronghold 2,
which unfortunately means that it looks like it was released around 2002.
Visuals are drab and dingy overall, with blocky castles, dull building styles
with little in the way of convincing detail, and terribly animated units that
wobble back and forth when they run, like packs of chain-mail-clad Fat Alberts.
Because there is no collision detection, battles between human armies immediately
degenerate into undulating, colored blobs with no way to tell what's going on
or who's winning.
Audio
quality is a bit better, thanks to suitably cheesy voice acting during
scenarios and soldiers' shouts during charges that really get the blood moving.
Lines are repeated way too often, though, and frequently misstate what's
actually going on. Once per mission, you'll usually hear something completely
incongruous such as, "The enemy's ladders are on the walls!" even
though you're not actually defending any walls at the time.
Misty
morning, clouds in the sky. Without warning, a wizard walks by. And blasts a
bunch of Saxons to bits.
And
even though Firefly should know its way around this engine by now, there are
some serious bugs here. Crashes to the desktop are an infrequent occurrence,
but the big problem is that units rarely respond properly to commands. They run
by targeted enemies and often turn their backs on foes, giving them a free shot
or two at you while you slowly rotate around to attack. Mass attacks directed
at specific baddies always result in some units attacking and many others just
standing around cooling their heels. It's best not to attack directly at all,
as you're more likely to get everyone in on the action if you move close to the
enemy and let the AI take over from there. Installing the version 1.10 patch
didn't seem to rectify any of these issues, either.
There
are some appealing alternatives to the campaigns, although considering all the
gameplay problems and bugs, it's hard to contemplate why anyone would want to
bother with them. Still, the three Legends Trails sets of linked skirmish maps
is an intriguing idea that plays like a trio of solo ladders. Custom skirmishes
with up to four players can also be played, both online and off. There does
seem to be a fair number of people looking for matches online, too, so you can
find games pretty easily. And a map editor is also included for players who
want to roll their own skirmish scenarios.
The
developers were obviously going for a
you-got-your-chocolate-in-my-peanut-butter moment here by throwing D&D into
their medieval simulation series, but Stronghold Legends is just another
second-rate RTS. While incorporating giants and dragons into the mix may seem
like a natural fit these days, as any game with castle walls in it seems to
demand the addition of Tolkienesque beasties to knock them down, you've got to
do more than just toss such creatures in with generic armies and buggy
gameplay. This is an interesting concept that deserved more careful attention
than the designers gave it.
Minimum Configuration:
*** OS: Windows 2000/XP/Vista
*** CPU: 1.6 Ghz
*** RAM: 512 MB
*** Hard Drive Space: 2.5 Gb
*** Video: 64 Megabyte (GeForce3/Radeon 8500 upwards)
*** Soundcard: DirectX 7 compatible
Recommended Configuration:
*** OS: Windows 2000/XP/Vista
*** CPU: 2 Ghz
*** RAM: 512 MB
*** Hard Drive Space: 2.5 Gb
*** Video: 128 Megabyte w/ DirectX 8 support
*** Soundcard: DirectX 7 compatible
*** OS: Windows 2000/XP/Vista
*** CPU: 1.6 Ghz
*** RAM: 512 MB
*** Hard Drive Space: 2.5 Gb
*** Video: 64 Megabyte (GeForce3/Radeon 8500 upwards)
*** Soundcard: DirectX 7 compatible
Recommended Configuration:
*** OS: Windows 2000/XP/Vista
*** CPU: 2 Ghz
*** RAM: 512 MB
*** Hard Drive Space: 2.5 Gb
*** Video: 128 Megabyte w/ DirectX 8 support
*** Soundcard: DirectX 7 compatible