
Additionally there are optional main quests and even optional side quests (some of which keep occurring). There are generally multiple paths you can take in each acts quest tree and some quests are initially hidden waiting on a certain situation / precondition to occur. Quests are in my opinion one of the main reasons the game shines as it gives the game a sense of progression / depth. The game is divided into multiple acts and each act has multiple quests you have to finish to progress. Each one of these takes up two slots instead of one. Note: There are also hero units (knights) that are a knight with a small set of elite soldiers there can be multiple of these in one army. Recruiting new armies / replenishing your troops costs quite a bit of time, so ideally you do that during the winter. You can have multiple armies, each of which can have up to 16 units in them. When it’s not winter you move your armies around to do quests, conquer cities and fight other armies in tactical real-time battles (with a pause option). You can also pass laws (another tree) and you can build structures that give bonuses in any of the strongholds that you own. During the winter you can’t move your armies, but you can do research (there’s a whole research tree). Part of the grand strategy part of the game is managing your provinces economically, building your armies and assigning governors. One province has one or more towns in it and has other buildings (i.e. That map is divided into different provinces, each of which you can conquer. You play as King Arthur on a giant map of Britannia.



Where legends normally end, King Arthur II begins on its own gruesome tale. Our story begins long after young Arthur pulled the enchanted sword out of the stone, united the war-torn land of Britannia, gathered the Knights of the Round Table and secured peace in Camelot aided by the might of the Holy Grail.

Now the Fantasy/Roleplaying RTS returns in a sequel set to push the boundaries of the genre even further. Critically praised by reviewers and gamers alike, King Arthur was received as one of the biggest surprises to emerge on the gaming scene in 2010.
