Compare Napoleon: Total War key prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by The Creative Assembly, Feral Interactive (Mac). Published by SEGA. Released on 6/22/2010. Available on PC. Genres: Strategy.

Lead Napoleon's campaigns across Europe or play as the coalition trying to stop him. Focused grand strategy meets real-time battlefield command in one of the tighter Total War packages.

Napoleon: Total War is a turn-based grand strategy game layered over real-time tactical battles, sitting in the long-running Total War franchise developed by The Creative Assembly. Where Empire: Total War sprawled across the entire globe, Napoleon deliberately narrows the scope to the Napoleonic Wars, letting you either command Bonaparte's Grande Armee through campaigns in Italy, Egypt, and across Europe, or step into the boots of the coalition powers trying to grind him down. That tighter focus pays off in a more coherent experience where every campaign feels purposeful rather than like a sandbox that forgot to add a win condition. The two-layer structure is the real selling point here. On the strategic map you manage supply lines, diplomacy, and army composition across a turn-based system that rewards planning several moves ahead. Then, when armies meet, the game drops you into real-time command of thousands of infantry squares, cavalry flanks, and artillery batteries on historically inspired terrain. Getting cavalry around a ridge to hit a thinned line in the flank still produces a satisfying chain reaction that no amount of auto-resolving can replicate. Unit variety is solid: line infantry, grenadiers, light skirmishers, hussars, lancers, and multiple artillery classes all fill distinct tactical roles and punish you for ignoring combined arms. The AI in field battles is serviceable rather than brilliant, and veteran Total War players will find ways to exploit it, but for anyone still learning to read a battlefield it gives enough resistance to teach the fundamentals. For newcomers to grand strategy or Total War specifically, Napoleon is actually a reasonable entry point despite its age. The campaign lengths are shorter than something like a full Rome 2 or Three Kingdoms run, which means you can finish a playthrough without committing to a 150-hour semester. The tutorial covers core concepts without being condescending, and the condensed European theater means you are not paralyzed by a world map of infinite options on turn one. If you finish the Napoleon campaign and want more, the Coalition side flips your perspective and changes the diplomatic calculus entirely, extending replayability without requiring new mechanics to learn. The weaknesses are real, though. This is a 2010 release and it shows in the diplomacy system, which is shallow even by the standards of the era. AI factions make alliance decisions that range from puzzling to outright bizarre, and you will occasionally find yourself at war with an ally for reasons the game never explains cleanly. The naval component exists and matters for certain campaign phases but is not deep enough to stand on its own. Multiplayer was a feature at launch and remains listed, though finding active lobbies in the current moment takes effort. The mod ecosystem is smaller than older Total War titles with more established communities, so do not expect the volume of content that Rome 1 or Medieval 2 still produce. Napoleon: Total War holds up as a focused, historically grounded strategy game that respects the period it covers. It is not the most mechanically modern entry in the series, and players arriving from later titles will notice the missing quality-of-life features immediately. But for anyone who wants a tighter, more narrative Total War experience set in one of history's most dramatic military eras, it delivers consistent strategic and tactical depth across its campaign structure. If you have never played a Total War game, the bounded scope here makes it a lower-risk starting point than the franchise's larger sandboxes. Diego, Scout Team

Napoleon: Total War key

Napoleon: Total War key

Jun 22, 2010The Creative Assembly, Feral Interactive (Mac)SEGA
GamerScout Says

Lead Napoleon's campaigns across Europe or play as the coalition trying to stop him. Focused grand strategy meets real-time battlefield command in one of the tighter Total War packages.

PC
Best Price Available
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Historical low: €4.20

GamerScout Verdict

Best for strategy players wanting a focused historical Total War experience shorter and tighter than the franchise's open-ended sandboxes.

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About Napoleon: Total War key

Napoleon: Total War is a turn-based grand strategy game layered over real-time tactical battles, sitting in the long-running Total War franchise developed by The Creative Assembly. Where Empire: Total War sprawled across the entire globe, Napoleon deliberately narrows the scope to the Napoleonic Wars, letting you either command Bonaparte's Grande Armee through campaigns in Italy, Egypt, and across Europe, or step into the boots of the coalition powers trying to grind him down. That tighter focus pays off in a more coherent experience where every campaign feels purposeful rather than like a sandbox that forgot to add a win condition. The two-layer structure is the real selling point here. On the strategic map you manage supply lines, diplomacy, and army composition across a turn-based system that rewards planning several moves ahead. Then, when armies meet, the game drops you into real-time command of thousands of infantry squares, cavalry flanks, and artillery batteries on historically inspired terrain. Getting cavalry around a ridge to hit a thinned line in the flank still produces a satisfying chain reaction that no amount of auto-resolving can replicate. Unit variety is solid: line infantry, grenadiers, light skirmishers, hussars, lancers, and multiple artillery classes all fill distinct tactical roles and punish you for ignoring combined arms. The AI in field battles is serviceable rather than brilliant, and veteran Total War players will find ways to exploit it, but for anyone still learning to read a battlefield it gives enough resistance to teach the fundamentals. For newcomers to grand strategy or Total War specifically, Napoleon is actually a reasonable entry point despite its age. The campaign lengths are shorter than something like a full Rome 2 or Three Kingdoms run, which means you can finish a playthrough without committing to a 150-hour semester. The tutorial covers core concepts without being condescending, and the condensed European theater means you are not paralyzed by a world map of infinite options on turn one. If you finish the Napoleon campaign and want more, the Coalition side flips your perspective and changes the diplomatic calculus entirely, extending replayability without requiring new mechanics to learn. The weaknesses are real, though. This is a 2010 release and it shows in the diplomacy system, which is shallow even by the standards of the era. AI factions make alliance decisions that range from puzzling to outright bizarre, and you will occasionally find yourself at war with an ally for reasons the game never explains cleanly. The naval component exists and matters for certain campaign phases but is not deep enough to stand on its own. Multiplayer was a feature at launch and remains listed, though finding active lobbies in the current moment takes effort. The mod ecosystem is smaller than older Total War titles with more established communities, so do not expect the volume of content that Rome 1 or Medieval 2 still produce. Napoleon: Total War holds up as a focused, historically grounded strategy game that respects the period it covers. It is not the most mechanically modern entry in the series, and players arriving from later titles will notice the missing quality-of-life features immediately. But for anyone who wants a tighter, more narrative Total War experience set in one of history's most dramatic military eras, it delivers consistent strategic and tactical depth across its campaign structure. If you have never played a Total War game, the bounded scope here makes it a lower-risk starting point than the franchise's larger sandboxes.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Tags

steamGrand StrategyReal-Time TacticsHistoricalCombined ArmsCampaign ReplayabilityNapoleonic EraTurn-Based Strategy LayerCoalition PlayHistorical StrategyTurn-Based CampaignLine Infantry CombatArmy ManagementSingle-Player CampaignTactical Battles

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
2.3 GHz CPU with SSE2
Memory
1 GB RAM (XP), 2 GB RAM (Vista®/Windows® 7)
Graphics
256 MB DirectX® 9.0c shader model 2b compatible GPU DirectX®…

Recommended

Processor
2.6 GHz Dual Core CPU
Memory
2 GB RAM (XP), 4 GB RAM (Vista®/Windows® 7)
Graphics
256 MB DirectX® 9.0c shader model 3 compatible GPU Dire…

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Game Info

Developer
The Creative Assembly, Feral Interactive (Mac)
Publisher
SEGA
Release Date
Jun 22, 2010

Features

Single-playerMultiplayerDownloadable ContentFamily Sharing

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Napoleon: Total War key is available on PC.

When was Napoleon: Total War key released?

Napoleon: Total War key was released on 22 June 2010.

Who developed Napoleon: Total War key?

Napoleon: Total War key was developed by The Creative Assembly, Feral Interactive (Mac) and published by SEGA.