1 December 2006 0:00 GMT / By Chris Hall
Stronghold Legends is the latest instalment in the popular series of RTS games, and in this incarnation is centred around three hero characters King Arthur and his Knights of the Round Table, Count Vlad Dracul, and the Dietrich von Hildebrand sagas.The basic premise of the game works on the age old classic that was so popularly adopted by the Command & Conquer series. You have to build up your armies and defend your castle and your supporting industry.
The tutorial is short and sweet, it essentially teaches you how to suck eggs, then launches you off into the game proper, where you will probably find yourself without a Scooby as to what you are supposed to do. It is only after playing the first level a few times, and failing, that you get a grasp of how the whole thing works.
As you progress, you get more options open up to you – new units, new buildings and so on. These are revealed to you in the manual (as if anyone uses those) and in the “Tutorial” tab in the level briefing. There is also a range of hints, which don’t reveal much but can be useful none the less.
In the game itself, the graphics are so so - but this is RTS and the demands for graphics are lesser than FPS – so you can run this without the need for a super computer. That said, the graphics don’t obscure anything and the relative detail and zoom is pretty good.
The AI is ok, although your troops may get themselves slaughtered or let the enemy run past if they are in the wrong mode – attack seems to be the better form of defence, unless they are plugging a hole in a defensive line ... it seems that good officers are lacking these days. There are a range of units to use and numerous enemies including mystical creatures such as giants and dragons.
The sound track perhaps raises a few more issues, as after a while, the drone of the briefing becomes a little tiresome and the adherence to the mystical age of heroes theme wears a bit thin. The mission, to a certain extent suffer from the same problem. Sometimes you just want to wage bloody war, but instead you are on some mundane task in pursuit of a storyline, that essentially, is not very engaging.
Verdict
Stronghold built its reputation on the building of castles and the detail that went into it. Much of this seems to be missing from Legends, which plays out as a combat strategy, rather than a castle builder. Fans of the series may not be too impressed with this. As an RTS it doesn’t give as much as even the now vintage C&C Tiberian Sun and in the fantasy genre it has tougher competition.
Gamers are advised to seek out the demo before parting with their cash – because you might not be getting the castle building sim you expect.
Score
Review Recap
- Made by
- THQ
- Price as reviewed
- £29.99
- The good
- Lower spec machines fair ok, needs some tactical play
- The bad
- Can get a little cheesy, soundtrack gets tiresome, plot not engaging
- Quick verdict
- Gamers are advised to seek out the demo before parting with their cash – because you might not be getting the castle building sim you expect
- Score
-
Recommended articles
Gaming, PC games, RTS, THQ




Acer CloudMobile Ice Cream Sandwich smartphone set for MWC launch 4.3-inch award winner
Best iPhone utilities apps Resistance is futilities?
BlackBerry Porsche Design P'9981 For the fast lane
iPad 3 leaked pictures suggest improved battery and better camera Case images aplenty
Best iPhone productivity apps Speedy
Samsung Galaxy S III: Review of rumours, features, pictures and specs Thinner, faster, better
New HTC Ice Cream Sandwich device pictures leak Another one for the rumour pile...
LG Miracle picture and details leak Update: More pictures from the wild
iPad 3 launch event first week of March According to AllThingsD
Nokia 700 Sleek and desirable Nokia
HTC dates Ice Cream Sandwich update, Sensation models get it first End of March
Google home entertainment device detailed WSJ solves device mystery
Google Drive coming to take on Dropbox and iCloud G-Drive set to land
Tesla Model X SUV goes back to the future DeLorean lookalike announced
Samsung O table is for the kitchen of the future Flexible hob
Panasonic Lumix GX1 review
The one?
Sony PlayStation Vita review
Curriculum Vita
Nokia Lumia 710 review
WP7 on a budget
GoPro HD Hero2 review
Amazing things come in small packages
HTC Explorer review
A phone for people who make calls
BlackBerry Torch 9810 review
Middle of the road
Sony Alpha A65 review
Affordable SLT. But is it a DSLR-beater?
Fiat 500 TwinAir Plus review
Two-cylinder beast
BlackBerry Bold 9790 review
To boldly go where we've already been before
Motorola MotoACTV review
Just add exercise
Motorola Xoom 2 Media Edition review
Mini Xoom
Sennheiser IE80 review
Tune that bass
BlackBerry Porsche Design P'9981 review
For the fast lane
Kingston Wi-Drive review
Expand your storage
Huawei Ideos X3 review
Cheap but imperfect