Jason
chasing a bee
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<a href="http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/shogun-2-total-war-preview?page=1" target="_blank">Eurogamer</a> sports a new <a href="http://www.totalwar.com/shogun2" target="_blank"><strong>Shogun 2: Total War</strong></a> preview/interview.
<blockquote>"With a Japanese castle, they look around, find a big mountain or hill with a clear view of the landscape, and chop the top off it. Then they build low walls on top of that - but what we'd regard as the castle walls are really just the sides of a mountain."
As a result, siege weapons become pointless. Instead, those inside the castle can be starved out (boring, if effective) - or, if very confident, they may actually open the castle gates and allow their attackers to enter, hoping to turn each courtyard inside into a death trap for any unwary enough to try their luck.
"The Japanese idea is to open the gates and say, come on in if you're hard enough," says Simpson. "You end up with courtyard-by-courtyard gameplay with different routes through, different traps to fall into - and for the defenders, lots of different options to choose from, too."</blockquote><p>The fun continues with a <a href="http://blogs.sega.com/totalwar/2010/06/08/shogun-2-total-war-qa/" target="_blank">PR interview</a> at the official Total War Blog.</p><blockquote><p>Empire: Total War introduced naval warfare to the series. Is there a chance that the feature will return to make an impact on feudal Japan?
Of course – Japan is an island nation, and the sea is never far away. One thing to emphasise is that the way naval battles were fought in Japan during this period is very different from the bigger-is-better artillery-fests of the 18th century European contests we represented in Empire. Japanese ships of the era were full of samurai swordsmen and archers, so we’re focusing a lot on boarding systems and stone-scissors-paper interplay between different ship types. Another big addition is the inclusion of land masses at sea: this provides new terrain-based tactical play as well as helping orient the player. We think we can make naval battles in Shogun feel very fresh & new – and be more fun to play than ever before.
</p></blockquote><p>Spotted @ <a href="http://www.eurogamer.net/index.php">Eurogamer</a></p>
<a href="http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/shogun-2-total-war-preview?page=1" target="_blank">Eurogamer</a> sports a new <a href="http://www.totalwar.com/shogun2" target="_blank"><strong>Shogun 2: Total War</strong></a> preview/interview.
<blockquote>"With a Japanese castle, they look around, find a big mountain or hill with a clear view of the landscape, and chop the top off it. Then they build low walls on top of that - but what we'd regard as the castle walls are really just the sides of a mountain."
As a result, siege weapons become pointless. Instead, those inside the castle can be starved out (boring, if effective) - or, if very confident, they may actually open the castle gates and allow their attackers to enter, hoping to turn each courtyard inside into a death trap for any unwary enough to try their luck.
"The Japanese idea is to open the gates and say, come on in if you're hard enough," says Simpson. "You end up with courtyard-by-courtyard gameplay with different routes through, different traps to fall into - and for the defenders, lots of different options to choose from, too."</blockquote><p>The fun continues with a <a href="http://blogs.sega.com/totalwar/2010/06/08/shogun-2-total-war-qa/" target="_blank">PR interview</a> at the official Total War Blog.</p><blockquote><p>Empire: Total War introduced naval warfare to the series. Is there a chance that the feature will return to make an impact on feudal Japan?
Of course – Japan is an island nation, and the sea is never far away. One thing to emphasise is that the way naval battles were fought in Japan during this period is very different from the bigger-is-better artillery-fests of the 18th century European contests we represented in Empire. Japanese ships of the era were full of samurai swordsmen and archers, so we’re focusing a lot on boarding systems and stone-scissors-paper interplay between different ship types. Another big addition is the inclusion of land masses at sea: this provides new terrain-based tactical play as well as helping orient the player. We think we can make naval battles in Shogun feel very fresh & new – and be more fun to play than ever before.
</p></blockquote><p>Spotted @ <a href="http://www.eurogamer.net/index.php">Eurogamer</a></p>