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The game makes no bones about what it's attempting to do - it's a clone of Warcraft III, presented with a nicer graphics engine (albeit arguably missing the colourful charm of Blizzard's art style) and great production values. What's striking about Armies of Exigo is that not only does it take these basics of game design and play from Warcraft, it also goes one step further and lifts the premise of the plot, the presentation of the game, and even the layout of the HUD directly from Blizzard's opus. The latter race is essentially directly ripped off from StarCraft's Zerg (and not dissimilar to Warcraft III's Scourge), as you might imagine the former two aren't directly copied from anywhere, as such, but knights with swords, elves with bow and arrows, and ogres with great big clubs don't exactly tax the boundaries of creative fantasy. There are three sides to the conflict, as mentioned - Empire (humans and elves and so on), Beast (ogres and what have you), and Fallen (evil alien things that just love the colour purple). Like many other RTS games, Armies of Exigo copies the basics of the Warcraft formula - tireless peasants mine for gold and gems, chop down trees, build buildings to advance through the tech tree and construct farms to allow you to create a larger army, while a fairly predictable range of fantasy units are constructed and run off to do battle or complete a set of objectives.
#ARMIES OF EXIGO PLAY ONLINE SERIES#
Sincerest form of flattery?īlizzard, of course, is quite used to people stealing ideas from its best-selling series of strategy games, but we can't remember ever seeing anyone so brazenly lift wholesale from another strategy title before now. The problem is, we weren't describing Warcraft III a moment ago we were describing Armies of Exigo, a game which wants so desperately to be Warcraft III that it actually gets quite embarrassing at times, like an excessively self-delusional Elvis impersonator who insists that he really is the King, despite the fact that he's actually a 47 year-old bricklayer from Bedford. If you're looking confused right now, we can only assume that you haven't played Blizzard's Warcraft III - a seminal excursion into the real-time strategy genre which followed pretty much precisely the plotline we just described, albeit with quite a wonderful twist. The two forces rush headlong into an almighty barney, but it turns out that the real enemy is set to emerge from the shadows, with an evil force from beyond the stars seeking to take over the world, albeit somewhat handicapped by the peculiar refusal to build anything on ground that isn't covered in purple muck - presumably because it would clash terribly with the curtains, or something.
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#ARMIES OF EXIGO PLAY ONLINE FULL#
In a fantasy world made up largely of quaint little villages full of people who don't object to being dragged from their farms and forced to mine gold or hack down the local forests all day long, the Men and the Elves have an alliance which holds back the beast hordes - ogres, trolls, that sort of thing.