Pc pharaoh game




















Time spent constructing these aesthetically pleasing monuments isn't wasted, though. Throw up a temple to the God Of War and you'll be supplied with troops to protect your borders they'll happily build defensive walls and guard towers to protect your citizens ; bestow a temple or two on the Sun God and the deity will ensure that the Nile holds its banks for another year meaning that crops are assured and more rime can be allocated to building work.

Given gentle encouragement, you'll soon find your society spreading along the banks of the Nile and becoming reasonably self-sufficient, allowing time to tackle any one of 30 available scenarios. These 'task-specific' missions give you the opportunity to play on your strengths. If economic management appeals, you can preside over housing issues, organise civil and local government, monitor tax collection and maintain educational facilities.

In time, fiscal emergencies will arise and some hard decisions may mean robbing Peteus to pay Paulus - after all, your lavish banqueting and entertainment budget which includes in-house dancers and jugglers comes before the need to run a decent health service. If balancing the budget of a growing populace doesn't excite, or you're worried that the feedback from the natives isn't too encouraging, you'll no doubt warm to the newly included sea-based combat options, which allow the building of warships equipped with deadly ramming gear with which to protect your transport vessels.

In general, both land and sea-based combat is automated, but if the enemy brings the fight to your doorstep, you will be able to ram an invading ship with your galley, or mow down enemy soldiers with your chariot Sen Hur-style , depending on the circumstances. Game mechanics aside, the graphics have improved dramatically and the pop-up information screens that had little narrative impact in the Caesar series have been replaced with dynamic animation at plot-critical points.

The familiar point-and-click interface returns, but is now reduced to 5 per cent of the play area that's the sort of groundbreaking attention to detail that Caesar fans expect, and it will no doubt be 'borrowed' by other developers. Impressions have added idiot-proof map and scenario editors which will, no doubt, spawn a healthy Internet-led swapping community and extend the shelf life of the game , and they've included a city construction kit for those who simply want to build an idyllic paradise secluded from the real world.

Obviously aware that this may all be slightly daunting for Caesar virgins, Impressions have improved the AI of your tactical adviser: instead of just telling you there's a problem, he'll now suggest a series of often daunting solutions a bit like being married. The difficulty has been finish and understand the tutorial missions, your city should run like clockwork. With work on Pharaoh continuing a lot faster than the actual ancient Egyptians built the pyramids, it's reassuring to note that while the chronology of the series has gone backwards, the gameplay appears to be coming forwards in leaps and bounds.

The excellent Caesar III proved to be one of the creeper hits of last year, reducing at least one member of the ZONE team to a husk, and racking up an impressive , sales in the process. In the current climate, the obvious thing to do next would be to change a couple of typefaces, redesign the box and call it Caesar IV.

However, veteran developers Impressions have decided not to go down that route not yet, anyway , and have spent the interim period slaving away on the forthcoming Pharaoh, pictures of which adorn this page for your visual stimulation. Have you had a look? What sort of game do you think it is, then? A first-person-shooter? A future sport simulation? Of course not. Impressions make real-time strategy games, and Pharaoh should slot comfortably into their highly successful city-building series.

Set in ancient Egypt as you might have guessed during the period when the great pyramids were built, this city simulation game enables you to create majestic Egyptian cities, build large monuments, and farm at the mercy of the Nile River.

Set in Old, Middle and New Kingdom Egypt, the game spans the period from to BC, and the campaigns correspond roughly to the historical ages. Building pyramids clearly plays a big part, as does harnessing the power of the Nile, with seasonal flooding adversely affecting the daily routines of the local inhabitants.

Those inhabitants include dancers, jugglers, papyrus makers, hunters and embalmers, all adding to the rich tapestry of Egyptian life, and all at your mercy. Primitive villages can be built into thriving metropolises, or your poorly managed city can be pillaged or burnt to the ground. Manage it well and ultimately the greatest Egyptian structures will be built in your honour.

Which is nice. Pharaoh claims to include many features never seen before in a citybuilding series game, including a farming model based on the flooding of the Nile, naval warfare, giant monuments that are assembled over time, and a unique dynastic progression.

It looks great, but if all they've done is throw a few sphinxes into the Caesar III engine then there'll be uproar among the masses, or at least some embittered grumbling by a clutch of angry loners. Impressions are not known for cocking things up though, so for now we'll give them the benefit of the doubt. Is this game relevant to you? Sign In or Open in Steam.

Languages :. Publisher: Activision. Share Embed. Add to Cart. Bundle info. Add to Account. View Community Hub. Govern all aspects of the exotic Egyptian, culture from religion to trading with distant cities. Cultivate vast farms in the Nile valley and discover the important role this river, with its unpredictable floods, played in the life of the Egyptians.

Stone by stone, erect giant monuments - from the Sphinx, to the lighthouse and library of Alexandria. Manage your city poorly and you shall watch it burn, be pillaged or collapse in economic ruin. Manage it well and ultimately the greatest Egyptian structures will be built in your honor. Your rule will span generations, until your dynasty, your royal bloodline produces a Pharaoh! Pharaoh includes many features never before seen in a city building game, such as a farming model based on the flooding of the Nile, naval warfare, giant monuments that are assembled over time, unique dynastic progression, and variable difficulty levels.

This a massively addictive, huge, but most importantly fun game that is a great choice for anyone looking for a solid city builder title, or an intellectual challenge. A city-builder gem, made by the creators of the award-winning Caesar III. Extensive help section not only does an excellent job at explaining the game mechanics, but also contains many interesting facts and trivia about life in Ancient Egypt.

Destroy enemies on land and sea, or simply build the perfect Egyptian city of your liking with the City Construction Kit. See all. Customer reviews. The game was released for PCs Windows. The game's action is set in ancient Egypt. You play the leader of a settlement dynasty , gradually gaining more and more honorable positions in the hierarchy, and at the end of the game playing as a pharaoh.

At some moments, you can choose the city where the game will be played. One of the conditions but not always of completing the stage is the appropriate number of houses and residents. Pharaoh, is a game similar to the Caesar III illusion - nothing strange - both games are based on the same engine.

If you played in Ceasar, Pharaoh is a game you should play in. Important Information: Abandonwaregames. To the best of our knowledge, these games are no longer available on the market and are not supported by publishers. If you know otherwise, write to us.

Developer Impression Games.



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