

Among them are new overview menus for seeing everything at a glance: your empire, your agents, your armies. However, the Remaster does make some improvements in this area. More to the point, I remember how laborious managing an empire in this game can be, individually fiddling with taxes and build-queues, turn after turn. Yes, this is very satisfying! Take that, Gondegusulus! I could try hiding those Celts in the trees again but will the thrill be as strong a second time? Well let's see shall we? Yes, this is quite satisfying (if you excuse my dead dogs). There aren't many surprises left here for me there weren't that many to begin with, to be frank. "I've still got it!" It's a gentle and warm memory to spend time in again.īut the more I remember, the more I realise I know where it's all going, and the sunny sepia tone starts to fade. "Oh, yes, and this does this - I remember!" Lots of that. It makes playing Rome Remastered feel like sliding a familiar board game out from under a cupboard and being giddy with rediscovery for a weekend or two. It's much more likely Creative Assembly is apologising for Rome being a bit dumber than a modern Total War game.

They don't make them like this any more!" How I clucked with excitement when I read that! "Oh this is the proper stuff!" I snorted. But Rome Remastered: it even has a warning when you begin, saying sorry but it does some things differently to what you're used to now. And whenever I'm confronted with one of them, I wither. They've had years to get their audiences used to more features, more nuance, more depth. These kinds of games seem much more complicated today. It's really nice not to have to figure out the winning formula again. Total War Rome Remastered has finally arrived and as expected, many players are having the same share of issues such as crashing, game becoming unresponsive. But it's still unmistakably what it once was, that game I remember, and there's something so unbelievably comforting in going back.

Developer: Feral Interactive, Creative Assembly.
