Cinematic historical and fantasy battles recreated in Total War series
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0:55 Did you mod use Rome: Total War instead of Medieval Total War II? warships seen here is very much off to me. sure you use Roman Freight Ship as a cog placeholder, and Roman Liburnia for any Medieval Galleys. and those ships look very different to each other.
Very interesting ! And don’t forget that before the romans create legions they fought in the Greek system of phalanx ! Legion is the evolution and every evolution brings result ! Legion could move really faster than the phalanx especially the Macedonian one which used sarisses ,spears of six meters even
It is noticeable that you take great care of the staging in tune with the soundtrack, in the presentation, middle and end of the battle, both in the narration and in the selection of combat scenes, all very well summarized without the need to lengthen the video, or selecting enough units on the battlefield without it being too chaotic. You did a very good job! What's more, having the spanish tercios advance while Empire's TW Warhammer soundtrack plays is simply brilliant, it looks very powerful, it adapts very well to the atmosphere of the mod.
I have a question, you've played a total war saga troy before right? When it comes to duels in troy, can you use a duel to win an entire war in the game just by challenging another hero to a duel and then defeating them?@@SandokanBattles
The Battle of Rocroi took place on May 19, 1643 during the Thirty Years' War. It pits the Army of Flanders, a Spanish army commanded by Francisco de Melo, which was besieging Rocroi, and the Army of Picardy, a French army led by Louis de Bourbon, Duke of Enghien (the future Grand Condé). It is an important French victory, which marks the end of the military supremacy of the Spanish tercios and the beginning of the reversal of the balance of forces in Europe.
As a fan of traditional music, I can tell this was written by posers who know nothing about what they're singing about. Lolol. It's hilarious. And the faux machismo is really entertaining. No confident man struts around all hyperbutch like that. What are ya compensating for, b'ys?
Soldiers in formation, getting knocked down by cannon balls like bowling pins, and the wounded lay in the field until the battle is over. It's so odd that no one thought of creating combat medics during this period.
Gotta remember that rank and file back then were thought of as easily replaceable. Lose a load of men in a battle, easy, hit up the next couple of towns promising adventure, glory and a salary much better than that possible in whatever town. Of course, fail to mention the possibility of death or grievous injury. There was also the press gang option of just rounding up a bunch of guys and pointing them in the direction of the enemy.