Mount & Blade Full Collection
Every Mount & Blade game and expansion in one pack: a medieval sandbox where you claw your way from nameless mercenary to ruler of Calradia, with horseback combat that still has few rivals.
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About Mount & Blade Full Collection
Mount & Blade Full Collection bundles the original Mount & Blade, the definitive standalone expansion Warband, the gunpowder-era spin-off With Fire & Sword, and the two Warband DLCs - Napoleonic Wars and Viking Conquest Reforged Edition - into a single package. That covers a serious stretch of history and a serious stretch of playtime. Think of it less as a traditional RPG with authored story beats and more as a medieval life simulator held together by one of the tightest directional combat systems ever designed. You pick a swing direction, you pick a block direction, and every fight punishes button-mashing while rewarding patience. On horseback it is genuinely spectacular, and it was doing that well before the genre caught up. Warband is the clear centrepiece. It expands the original by adding a sixth faction (the Sarranid Sultanate), a reworked overworld, proper political systems, and multiplayer for up to 64 players across modes including Deathmatch, Siege, Conquest, and Capture the Flag. The single-player loop revolves around four interlocking resources - Money, Renown, Honor, and Relationships - and the game is quietly ruthless about how it ties them together. Spend too long on one front and bandits swell, troop wages eat your treasury, and rival lords snap up fiefs while you dawdle. Character builds lean heavily into skills like Trade, Persuasion, Leadership, and Looting, which genuinely open different paths through the sandbox rather than just padding numbers. A merchant-diplomat and a cavalry shock-lord play very differently past hour 40, which is a bar a lot of bigger RPGs fail to clear. The weaknesses are real and you should know them upfront. The writing is thin. Quest variety is basically non-existent - most tasks amount to fetch, escort, or kill. The companion AI goes down fast if you do not micromanage their gear. Graphics were already dated at launch and have not aged into charm so much as historical artefact status. With Fire & Sword introduces muskets and pistols, which changes the tactical feel but comes with rougher edges than Warband. Viking Conquest Reforged Edition is more interesting: it transplants play into the British Isles and Scandinavia, adds a story mode where choices actually affect the outcome, and throws in Berserker units and a canine companion that, honestly, I did not expect to care about. Napoleonic Wars is multiplayer-only and built around faction warfare across five European powers with over 330 unique unit types - a wildly different experience from the rest of the collection. The modding scene is the collection's secret weapon. The base gameplay is deliberately open to modification, and the community has used that to build total conversions spanning everything from Warhammer Fantasy to ancient Rome. If the native content ever starts to feel thin - and around the 50-hour mark it can - a mod will extend your run by another hundred. The collection as a whole is not a narrative-first RPG and anyone coming from BG3 expecting authored arcs and meaningful dialogue will bounce off it hard. This is a sandbox for people who want to build armies, manage vassals, scheme for thrones, and occasionally take a lance to the face while galloping at full speed. For that, it remains genuinely hard to beat. Monika, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- Memory
- 1 GB
- Storage
- 4 GB
- Graphics
- GeForce 6600
- Processor
- Pentium IV 2.1 GHz
- Additional Notes
- Internet connection
- System requirements
- Windows 2000/ME/XP/Vista/7
Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- Tale of Tales
- Publisher
- TaleWorlds Entertainment
- Release Date
- Dec 12, 2014