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Attila was king of the Huns, a non-Christian people based on the Great Hungarian Plain in the fifth century A.D. At its height, the Hunnic Empire stretched across Central Europe. The Romans ...
When I revisited Attila's add-on campaign The Last Roman and tried out the Age of Charlemagne campaign, it felt like I'd fallen into a time-warp to 2003, when I played Medieval: Total War day and ...
For years, the unstoppable Attila sacked city after city until a Germanic-Roman alliance halted the Huns in A.D. 451. The victory underlined a hard truth for the tottering empire: The barbarian ...
Attila entertains–as imagined by a 19th- century artist. Feedloader (Clickability) He called himself flagellum Dei, the scourge of God, and even today, 1,500 years after his blood-drenched death ...
Attila’s empire did not extend east beyond the Caspian Sea, according to maps including that by cartographer and historian William Shepherd – thousands of miles from China.
Total War: Attila is, as I wrote in my preview, absolutely brutal. The game takes any chance it gets to juxtapose the titular Hun with Christian imagery of the apocalypse.
Attila is more of the same and a little bit extra, then, not as convincingly realized as the best Total Wars, but strong enough to keep you clicking until the inevitable patches and expansions ...