![]() ![]() The most interractive one was vampiric corruption and even the look of that has far been improved in the latest game.Īll this becomes rather moot, however, when you take into consideration what's ON the map. The world visually changes and twists as your daemonic armies tighten their grip on it in a far more living sense than it ever did in WH2 with any corruption. How a Tzeentch corrupted Cathay has the broken statues impaled by crystals, or the southern dwarven holds where the water turns to blood when Khorne's corruption takes root. You'd be able to tell is what I'm saying.Īs for detail? Just look to how corruption visually alters the landscape now rather than being the same scattered patches of warpstone or brimstone cracks on scorched earth(undivided corruption is the single most boring one ingame, sue me). If I make a joke, it's bound to be a god awful pun. Yes, if you liked TWW1, 2 AND Troy, 3K, you're happy. If you change it too much, it's no more the"next episode". This is the map campaign, it's really important for the "base playerpool". The probleme is the intensity of the change.That's what I don't understand. I can hear the "believe in change " argument. ![]() I can hear a lot of you appreciate the new one but such a difference for what whay supposed to be the end of the trilogy. The pixels are much less visible on the second image as well.įor me, the second one looks like Alice in Wonderlands.Too "stylisised". Generally speaking, stylized video games age better than video games going for a hardcore realistic look. The painted look works well for the game, seeing as it's based off of painted miniatures on painted sets. and that is a seriously major backwards step from something that once had some realism to it. It looks like a watercolour with moving things on it. What you call "visually cluttered" I call lovingly detailed.īut better than that, you talked about a "painting like quality". You just beautifully illustrated my point. The second image feels smooth and alive, it almost has a painting-like quality to it and the details sing. The trees in the first image look like they're made of paper and the ground looks visually cluttered and hard on the eyes. That might be the worst possible comparison you could have picked. It's like a classic car with the chrome stripped off it and the paint sanded down. This is a small corner of the WH2 map, Albion, which I recently captured. It is a massive step backwards from the visual style of WH2 especially. So yes, when I say it looks cheap and washed out and half baked and cartoonish I mean it looks like you're looking at a lesser game. There is no richness to this one, no ground detail, no real sense that it's an overview of an actual place. It looks like a real place, alive with richness. Someone else called the WH2 map "cluttered" on another thread. It might be "falling back on a trope" as someone said on this thread to call it cartoonish, but I'll tell you what show me the intricacy, show me the detail, show me where it really sings. Zoom in on it and you can see how much care and attention went into making it. There is so much to look at and see on it, so many jaw dropping things. The WH2 campaign map is visually stunning. ![]() Where is the texture? The whole thing looks washed out. The level of detail, of care, attention that went into the WH2 map is astounding. You've barely noticed the difference? Is that a joke? 2K A Total War Saga: Thrones of Britannia.846 A Total War Saga: Fall of the Samurai.This is a map of my current game as The Netherlands for an example. I also redrew all of the borders so that they're only 1 pixel thick. If anyone has any ideas please share it and I could maybe fix it up.Įdit: I forgot to colour Dagestan, here is an updated version. Sorry for the somewhat low resolution, I couldn't figure out an easy way around that. I really just made this for myself, but it ended up taking over four hours so I figured I'd share it. I made sure that everything is solid white and had to redraw a few boundaries so that each region would be filled with just one click. If you open the picture in Paint or whatever you choose to use, you can just paint fill each region to the appropriate colour. I basically just print screened the mini-map a bunch of times and pieced it all together into one big map. I was extremely tired of the campaign maps for Empire and had a hard imagining what my empire looked like on the world scale. ![]()
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