Compara los precios de Total War: Attila - The Last Roman Campaign Pack (DLC) en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por CREATIVE ASSEMBLY. Publicado por SEGA. Lanzado el 17/2/2015. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Strategy. Puntuación Metacritic: 80/100.

Command Belisarius's tiny but elite Roman force against a crumbling Western Empire and relentless barbarian hordes. One of Total War's most brutal, rewarding campaign sandboxes.

The Last Roman Campaign Pack drops you into 533 AD with Flavius Belisarius leading a historically outnumbered Eastern Roman expedition to retake the Western Empire from barbarian successor kingdoms. That premise alone makes it one of the most mechanically interesting starting positions in the entire Total War series. You begin with a small, high-quality roster, almost no territory, and a political tether to Constantinople that imposes loyalty demands and resource constraints throughout the campaign. If the base Attila game is a slow bleed into darkness, this DLC is a controlled burn with a flashlight. The core campaign introduces a unique faction mechanic where Belisarius answers to Emperor Justinian. Maintaining that relationship while carving out enough independent power to actually win is a constant balancing act. Do you hoard military strength to please your emperor, or quietly build toward independence and risk being declared a traitor? That tension drives meaningful decisions at almost every turn, which is exactly what separates a good Total War campaign from a forgettable one. The AI factions surrounding you - Vandals, Ostrogoths, Visigoths, and others - apply genuine pressure rather than sitting idle, especially on higher difficulties. On the battlefield side, Belisarius's Late Roman roster is deliberately compact but cohesive. You get disciplined heavy infantry, capable cavalry, and solid ranged units rather than the overwhelming variety of larger factions. Learning to use what you have efficiently matters more here than in campaigns where you can simply outproduce the enemy. That constraint is a feature, not a limitation - it forces players to engage with unit positioning and army composition in ways that sloppy campaigns never demand. Veterans of the base game who have been coasting on numerical superiority will find this a useful reminder of what Total War's tactical layer can actually feel like. The DLC is not without friction. Settlement management in Attila remains fiddly and the province-level building chains can feel repetitive no matter which faction you run. The campaign map is geographically tighter than the main game's full scope, which some players find refreshing and others find claustrophobic. Performance on older hardware can also dip during large siege battles in the Mediterranean cities. None of these are deal-breakers, but they are inherited Attila problems rather than issues specific to this expansion. For newcomers asking whether to start here or with the base campaign, the honest answer is: base campaign first, this second. The Last Roman's difficulty curve assumes you already understand Attila's attrition system, public order mechanics, and army upkeep logic. That said, the campaign's focused geography and clear objective structure actually make it easier to parse than the chaotic opening turns of a full Attila run. If you have a friend who bounces off grand strategy because the map feels too big, this DLC's contained scope might be the better entry point than you'd expect. With 37,000-plus reviews sitting at 82 percent positive and a Metacritic score of 80, the consensus lines up with what you see in practice: a tight, challenging, historically grounded expansion that rewards players who want their grand strategy to push back. Diego, Scout Team

Total War: Attila - The Last Roman Campaign Pack (DLC)

Total War: Attila - The Last Roman Campaign Pack (DLC)

17 feb 2015CREATIVE ASSEMBLYSEGA
GamerScout opina

Command Belisarius's tiny but elite Roman force against a crumbling Western Empire and relentless barbarian hordes. One of Total War's most brutal, rewarding campaign sandboxes.

PC
Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Gold
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Acerca de Total War: Attila - The Last Roman Campaign Pack (DLC)

The Last Roman Campaign Pack drops you into 533 AD with Flavius Belisarius leading a historically outnumbered Eastern Roman expedition to retake the Western Empire from barbarian successor kingdoms. That premise alone makes it one of the most mechanically interesting starting positions in the entire Total War series. You begin with a small, high-quality roster, almost no territory, and a political tether to Constantinople that imposes loyalty demands and resource constraints throughout the campaign. If the base Attila game is a slow bleed into darkness, this DLC is a controlled burn with a flashlight. The core campaign introduces a unique faction mechanic where Belisarius answers to Emperor Justinian. Maintaining that relationship while carving out enough independent power to actually win is a constant balancing act. Do you hoard military strength to please your emperor, or quietly build toward independence and risk being declared a traitor? That tension drives meaningful decisions at almost every turn, which is exactly what separates a good Total War campaign from a forgettable one. The AI factions surrounding you - Vandals, Ostrogoths, Visigoths, and others - apply genuine pressure rather than sitting idle, especially on higher difficulties. On the battlefield side, Belisarius's Late Roman roster is deliberately compact but cohesive. You get disciplined heavy infantry, capable cavalry, and solid ranged units rather than the overwhelming variety of larger factions. Learning to use what you have efficiently matters more here than in campaigns where you can simply outproduce the enemy. That constraint is a feature, not a limitation - it forces players to engage with unit positioning and army composition in ways that sloppy campaigns never demand. Veterans of the base game who have been coasting on numerical superiority will find this a useful reminder of what Total War's tactical layer can actually feel like. The DLC is not without friction. Settlement management in Attila remains fiddly and the province-level building chains can feel repetitive no matter which faction you run. The campaign map is geographically tighter than the main game's full scope, which some players find refreshing and others find claustrophobic. Performance on older hardware can also dip during large siege battles in the Mediterranean cities. None of these are deal-breakers, but they are inherited Attila problems rather than issues specific to this expansion. For newcomers asking whether to start here or with the base campaign, the honest answer is: base campaign first, this second. The Last Roman's difficulty curve assumes you already understand Attila's attrition system, public order mechanics, and army upkeep logic. That said, the campaign's focused geography and clear objective structure actually make it easier to parse than the chaotic opening turns of a full Attila run. If you have a friend who bounces off grand strategy because the map feels too big, this DLC's contained scope might be the better entry point than you'd expect. With 37,000-plus reviews sitting at 82 percent positive and a Metacritic score of 80, the consensus lines up with what you see in practice: a tight, challenging, historically grounded expansion that rewards players who want their grand strategy to push back.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Etiquetas

steamHistorical Grand StrategyCampaign DLCHigh DifficultyPolitical Loyalty MechanicsLate AntiquityTight Roster GameplaySiege WarfareSingle Playthrough Depth

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

Processor
Intel Core 2 Duo 3 GHz
Memory
3 GB RAM
Graphics
512 MB NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GT, AMD Radeon HD 2900 XT or Intel HD 4000
DirectX
Version 10
Storage
35 GB available space A…

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Processor
2nd Generation Intel Core i5
Memory
4 GB RAM
Graphics
2 GB NVIDIA GeForce GTX 560 Ti or AMD Radeon HD 5870
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
35 GB available space Additional N…

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Reseñas y valoraciones

Metacritic
80
Steam
82%(37,235)

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
CREATIVE ASSEMBLY
Distribuidora
SEGA
Fecha de lanzamiento
17 feb 2015

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Total War: Attila - The Last Roman Campaign Pack (DLC)?

Total War: Attila - The Last Roman Campaign Pack (DLC) está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Total War: Attila - The Last Roman Campaign Pack (DLC)?

Total War: Attila - The Last Roman Campaign Pack (DLC) se lanzó el 17 de febrero de 2015.

¿Quién desarrolló Total War: Attila - The Last Roman Campaign Pack (DLC)?

Total War: Attila - The Last Roman Campaign Pack (DLC) fue desarrollado por CREATIVE ASSEMBLY y publicado por SEGA.

¿Merece la pena comprar Total War: Attila - The Last Roman Campaign Pack (DLC)?

Total War: Attila - The Last Roman Campaign Pack (DLC) tiene una puntuación Metacritic de 80/100, lo que lo convierte en uno de los títulos destacados de Strategy. Mira las reseñas completas, las valoraciones y los tiempos de duración en esta página para decidir.