Games Encyclopedia Top Games PC PS5 XSX PS4 PS3 Xbox One Xbox 360 Switch Android iOS Rankings Images Companies
Nemesis of the Roman Empire (PC cover
Game Box forNemesis of the Roman Empire (PC)

Nemesis of the Roman Empire PC

Imperivm II: Conquest of Hispania, Celtic Kings: The Punic Wars

The next edition of real time strategy with adventure elements and role-playing - Celtic Kings, which was developed by Bulgarian Haemimont Games studio.

Strategy | RTS | multiplayer | singleplayer | internet | LAN

Nemesis of the Roman Empire Release Date PC

17March2004

developer: Haemimont Games publisher: Enlight Software Official website

English language game language: English

Games similar to Nemesis of the Roman Empire

Tzar: The Burden of the Crown

Warcraft II: Tides of Darkness

StarCraft

In the height of its glory Carthage was the greatest power in the ancient world. With trade routes throughout the entire Mediterranean there the was no other nation to dispute its strength. Goods, gold and slaves poured in to the majestic city – the source of its might.

Countless mercenaries armies were constantly bought to ensure that all who threatened Carthage or its interest would be dealt with. However, another Empire was also on the rise. The city of Rome too had begun to gain strength. The Romans soon decided openly to challenge their Carthaginian rivals. The time of the Punic Wars had begun.

The Roman Campaign

Seeing the power and influence of Carthage the Senate of Rome decided that something should be done. An army was prepared and sent under a false pretext to Sicily. The First Punic war started during which Carthage lost its advantage and was forced to withdraw from Sicily, Corsica and Sardinia.

However, the Carthaginians were not prepared to lose their world dominance just like that. Its attention became focused on the Spanish peninsula. Seeing this, Rome responded and a territory grabbing began ultimately resulting in the Second Punic War. Yet at that time Rome had already achieved dominance in Europe and managed to claim victory once more. All Carthaginian remnants were swept away from the continent, though that did not calm the Senate of Rome. There were still feats that Carthage might rise and pose a threat once more.

In order to prevent the Third Punic war Roman legions were sent to Africa with orders to attack the rival city itself. Only a victory there would determine which of the two powers would remain.

The Carthaginian Campaign

For generations the city of Carthage was seen as the most powerful in the known world and its empire – far greater than anyone could imagine. Sadly that was soon to change. After losing the First Punic War to Rome, which resulted in a large sum being paid to the enemy. The Carthaginians also lost Sicily, Corsica and Sardinia, which forced them to search for another rich land to claim as their own. Their choice fell on Hispania. A large fleet set off for the Spanish peninsula to place it under Carthage’s control. Expanding their influence through conquest made the Carthaginian Empire rise once more to its former splendour.

However, this was not enough. Seeing this as an opportunity Carthage’s greatest general – Hannibal – decided to put Rome to its knees. With an army of mercenaries and war elephants he made his way through the Alps and steadily progressed towards the heart of Roman Empire itself – an event that would change history forever.

Gameplay

Large maps complete with neutral settlements and camps that present a threat to all players.

Player controlled heroes that command armies of up to 50 units on their own, providing them with an additional bonus in battle.

Settlements have their own resources they can spend locally or transport elsewhere.

Rituals performed in places of ancient worship that effect the entire world.

Military units have the ability to capture resource caravans, outposts and even entire cities and settlements.

Ships and shipyards providing for sea battles or transport of armies and resources from one shore to another.

Upgrades that increase the might of your armies and the power of your settlements.

A vast array of items that bring specific bonuses to the unit carrying them.

A number of special abilities that give different advantages to the various units.

Single Player

Integration of character development and major battles.

A single-player campaign featuring the campaign of Hannibal Barca (Sagunto battle, the crossing of the Alps, Cannas battle).

A single-player campaign featuring the development of the Roman Republic during the Punic wars (the invasion of Sicily, the conquest of Hispania, the destruction of Carthage).

Multiplayer

Four sides to play with – Roman, Gaul, Carthaginian and Iberians, complete with their own historical buildings and units.

LAN and Internet games with up to 8 players.

GameSpy Arcade support.

Random map generation.

In-game scenario/adventure editor.

Off-line ranking system.

Last updated on 10 December 2007

Game mode: single / multiplayer   Multiplayer mode: Internet  

Media type: 1 CD

User score: 8.5 / 10 based on 154 votes.

PEGI rating Nemesis of the Roman Empire

Age rating. The PEGI rating considers the age suitability of a game, not the level of difficulty. Game contains depictions of violence.

Nemesis of the Roman Empire System requirements

PC / Windows

PC / Windows

  • Recommended:
  • Pentium III 600 MHz
  • 196 MB RAM
  • graphic card 16 MB
  • Windows 98/ME/2000/XP
See/Add Comments