Cool, i've been playing it for some long time since mobile but now its on PC. Let's see if works
Age of Conquest is a turn based grand strategy wargame. Command your armies in one of the many ancient and medieval countries including the Roman Empire, the Inca, France, Russia, Japan or the Chinese Dynasties. From Rome to Asian nations, you create your own warring experience. Wage colossal wars solo, against the AI, or take on your gaming friends in cross-platform multiplayer games. Form alliances and fight co-op style with the AI and other players for ultimate victory.
As opposed to other turn-based strategy game, Age of Conquest tries to focus on both, a fun single player and a thrilling multiplayer experience. The game strives to be easy to learn with a streamlined user interface. Single player comes with skirmish matches against the AI as well as a hotseat functionality for local play. Multiplayer can be played cross-platform and includes a ranking and rating system.
Cool, i've been playing it for some long time since mobile but now its on PC. Let's see if works
What is inconvenient - if the opponent occupied the territory you've sent your troops to, your troops just waste this turn and you have no chances to use them in some other way, that is really annoying,
The visuals and sound are good though
It's simultaneous turn-based, so game-play differs in that sense. You could declare war or set the game to have all the countries at war when the game starts. That way you contest all the provinces right away.
The advantage is that in multiplayer, e.g. 100 players could play the same map without you having to wait for the other 99 players to enter their turn first (e.g. the world map has 100+ factions).
I thought it would be a half-assed bootleg of civilization, but whilst it's a poor man's civilization, it's nifty. Why is it number 4 tho, there's no sequel, trequel not even a first game because this IS the first game.
It's the 4. version since the 1. version came out in ~2000. I made a blog post:
https://www.noblemaster.com/blog/post/2016/03/30/history-of-age-of-conquest