Compare Stronghold Legends (Steam Edition) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Firefly Studios. Published by FireFly Studios. Released on 9/15/2016. Available on PC. Genres: Simulation, Strategy.

Castle-building RTS meets mythology: command King Arthur, Dracula, or Siegfried across campaign and skirmish modes in this cult Firefly classic.

Stronghold Legends is a real-time strategy and castle-building game that splits its identity right down the middle. Half of it is the familiar Stronghold loop of raising walls, posting archers on towers, and managing a fragile medieval economy. The other half is pure fantasy spectacle, handing you three distinct factions rooted in myth: the Arthurian knights of Camelot, the dark Gothic horror of Dracula's forces, and the Germanic saga of Siegfried. Each faction plays differently enough to matter. Arthur leans on a tight honour-driven economy and powerful unique units like the Ice Queen. Dracula's faction abandons conventional food production almost entirely in favour of blood and fear mechanics. Siegfried sits somewhere between the two, with dwarven engineers and a more grounded build order. The three-campaign structure gives you roughly fifteen to twenty hours of guided play before skirmish and multiplayer open up. For newcomers to the Stronghold series this is a reasonable entry point, despite its age. The economy layer is simpler than Stronghold 2 and far less punishing than Crusader. You place granaries, woodcutters, and weapon workshops, then watch a supply chain tick along while you wall up your keep. The tutorial covers the basics honestly, though it won't prepare you for the AI's tendency to mass siege equipment the moment you relax your outer defences. Difficulty spikes are real in the back half of each campaign, so expect to rebuild your wall layout several times before things click. The good news is that the clicking-things-into-place feeling is genuinely satisfying here, especially once you start pre-planning kill zones with boiling oil and moats. The strategy depth sits comfortably at mid-tier. You are not making the layered diplomatic or economic decisions you would in a Paradox title, but there is enough build-order discipline required, especially on harder skirmish maps, to reward players who think ahead. Legendary units like the Lady of the Lake or the actual Dracula character function as hero units that can swing engagements dramatically, so protecting them or targeting the enemy's equivalent becomes a genuine tactical consideration. The AI on higher difficulty settings is aggressive and reasonably varied, though it does occasionally funnel units into the same choke point repeatedly, which experienced players will exploit without much guilt. The Steam Edition includes the base game with no major additions beyond compatibility updates, so the mod ecosystem is thin compared to something like Crusader HD. The multiplayer portion is functional but the player population is small, meaning you will rely on finding opponents through community Discord servers rather than any in-game matchmaking. For a primarily single-player audience that is fine. The graphics are dated in a way that is charming rather than painful if you played RTS games in the mid-2000s, and jarring if you have not. Frame rates are stable and the Steam version runs cleanly on modern Windows. The bottom line for a strategy-focused player is this: Stronghold Legends delivers a compact, well-structured RTS with enough faction asymmetry to justify multiple playthroughs. It is not breaking new ground by any measure, but the fantasy mythology angle gives it a personality that the more grounded entries in the series lack. If you want spreadsheet-depth grand strategy this is not that game. If you want to watch a trebuchet knock down a wall you spent twenty minutes perfecting while a vampire lord charges through the gap, the value proposition is very clear. Diego, Scout Team

Stronghold Legends (Steam Edition)
SimulationStrategy

Stronghold Legends (Steam Edition)

Sep 15, 2016Firefly StudiosFireFly Studios
GamerScout Says

Castle-building RTS meets mythology: command King Arthur, Dracula, or Siegfried across campaign and skirmish modes in this cult Firefly classic.

PC
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Stronghold Legends (Steam Edition)

Stronghold Legends is a real-time strategy and castle-building game that splits its identity right down the middle. Half of it is the familiar Stronghold loop of raising walls, posting archers on towers, and managing a fragile medieval economy. The other half is pure fantasy spectacle, handing you three distinct factions rooted in myth: the Arthurian knights of Camelot, the dark Gothic horror of Dracula's forces, and the Germanic saga of Siegfried. Each faction plays differently enough to matter. Arthur leans on a tight honour-driven economy and powerful unique units like the Ice Queen. Dracula's faction abandons conventional food production almost entirely in favour of blood and fear mechanics. Siegfried sits somewhere between the two, with dwarven engineers and a more grounded build order. The three-campaign structure gives you roughly fifteen to twenty hours of guided play before skirmish and multiplayer open up. For newcomers to the Stronghold series this is a reasonable entry point, despite its age. The economy layer is simpler than Stronghold 2 and far less punishing than Crusader. You place granaries, woodcutters, and weapon workshops, then watch a supply chain tick along while you wall up your keep. The tutorial covers the basics honestly, though it won't prepare you for the AI's tendency to mass siege equipment the moment you relax your outer defences. Difficulty spikes are real in the back half of each campaign, so expect to rebuild your wall layout several times before things click. The good news is that the clicking-things-into-place feeling is genuinely satisfying here, especially once you start pre-planning kill zones with boiling oil and moats. The strategy depth sits comfortably at mid-tier. You are not making the layered diplomatic or economic decisions you would in a Paradox title, but there is enough build-order discipline required, especially on harder skirmish maps, to reward players who think ahead. Legendary units like the Lady of the Lake or the actual Dracula character function as hero units that can swing engagements dramatically, so protecting them or targeting the enemy's equivalent becomes a genuine tactical consideration. The AI on higher difficulty settings is aggressive and reasonably varied, though it does occasionally funnel units into the same choke point repeatedly, which experienced players will exploit without much guilt. The Steam Edition includes the base game with no major additions beyond compatibility updates, so the mod ecosystem is thin compared to something like Crusader HD. The multiplayer portion is functional but the player population is small, meaning you will rely on finding opponents through community Discord servers rather than any in-game matchmaking. For a primarily single-player audience that is fine. The graphics are dated in a way that is charming rather than painful if you played RTS games in the mid-2000s, and jarring if you have not. Frame rates are stable and the Steam version runs cleanly on modern Windows. The bottom line for a strategy-focused player is this: Stronghold Legends delivers a compact, well-structured RTS with enough faction asymmetry to justify multiple playthroughs. It is not breaking new ground by any measure, but the fantasy mythology angle gives it a personality that the more grounded entries in the series lack. If you want spreadsheet-depth grand strategy this is not that game. If you want to watch a trebuchet knock down a wall you spent twenty minutes perfecting while a vampire lord charges through the gap, the value proposition is very clear. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

steamCastle BuildingFaction AsymmetryHero UnitsSkirmish ModeMedieval FantasySiege MechanicsCampaign RTSEconomy Management

System Requirements

System requirements for Stronghold Legends (Steam Edition) aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

Reviews & Ratings

Steam
88%(2,655)

Game Info

Developer
Firefly Studios
Publisher
FireFly Studios
Release Date
Sep 15, 2016

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

More from Firefly Studios