Compare Total War: Rome II (Spartan Edition) key prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Creative Assembly. Published by SEGA. Released on 9/3/2013. Available on PC. Genres: Single Player, Multiplayer, Co-op, First Person, Bird View, Strategy, RPG.

A grand strategy classic that puts you in command of ancient armies and sprawling empires, bundled with Greek-focused DLC including the full Wrath of Sparta campaign and the Imperator Augustus power struggle.

Total War: Rome II is the hybrid grand strategy game that keeps strategy veterans coming back for hundred-hour campaigns. The core loop splits your time between a vast turn-based campaign map, where you manage provinces, recruit armies, broker alliances, and climb a tech tree, and real-time battles where you personally direct legions of Roman heavy infantry, Macedonian phalanxes, Egyptian war elephants, and everything in between. The Spartan Edition bundles the fully patched base game (the Emperor Edition build, which overhauled politics, building chains, and battle balance after a rocky launch), the Imperator Augustus campaign set during the bloody chaos following Caesar's murder, the Wrath of Sparta campaign transporting you to 432 BC and the Peloponnesian Wars, the Greek States Culture Pack, and the Daughters of Mars unit pack. That is a serious amount of content in one key. The main campaign opens in 272 BC across a map stretching from Britannia to Syria, with eight playable factions at the start, Rome among them, plus six additional free factions including Pontus, Seleucid, and Baktria. Commanding a Roman legion of heavy infantry and velites plays nothing like leading a Spartan hoplite phalanx or unleashing Carthaginian war elephants, so faction variety drives meaningful replay. Generals are persistent characters who accumulate traits and become genuine resources worth protecting, which gives even mid-campaign losses a personal sting. The political system, built around senate influence, ambition, and gravitas, has a reputation for opacity. The interactions between those stats never become fully legible, even deep into a run, and you can mostly ignore the system without being punished, which is a missed opportunity in a setting so soaked in political drama. Wrath of Sparta is the crown jewel of this edition's DLC. The campaign map covers 22 provinces across 78 regions of ancient Greece with each turn representing a single month, giving the whole thing a tighter, more urgent feel than the sprawling main campaign. You pick from Athens, Sparta, Corinth, or Boiotia, each with distinct unit rosters and starting challenges. The hoplite phalanx is the backbone of every Greek force, but over 50 new land and naval units add tactical wrinkle. Spartan Hoplites, Skiritai light infantry, and Immortal Spearmen are all here. Naval warfare leans hard on ramming and boarding with Dieres and Trieres hull types, and historical figures including Lysander and Sokrates appear as campaign characters. It is a focused, atmospheric slice of history that holds up well as a standalone reason to pick up this edition. A few honest caveats. The AI has never been Rome II's strong suit, showing erratic decision-making on the campaign map and occasionally bizarre tactical behaviour in battle. Performance can be demanding even on hardware that has no business struggling with a 2013 game, though years of patches have made a meaningful dent there. The building upgrade system, streamlined to speed up turns, can feel thin if you come from deeper 4X titles. And if you are hoping for the kind of narrative payoff that rewards a second or third playthrough, Rome II does not offer it. The writing is flavour text, not dialogue worth re-reading. What it offers instead is the emergent storytelling of a general you grew attached to dying in a siege you fumbled, or a civil war igniting precisely when a foreign power decides to test your eastern flank. That is where the real hook lives, and for a certain kind of strategy player, it never really lets go. Monika, Scout Team

Total War: Rome II  (Spartan Edition) key
Single PlayerMultiplayerCo-opFirst PersonBird ViewStrategyRPG

Total War: Rome II (Spartan Edition) key

Sep 3, 2013Creative AssemblySEGA
GamerScout Says

A grand strategy classic that puts you in command of ancient armies and sprawling empires, bundled with Greek-focused DLC including the full Wrath of Sparta campaign and the Imperator Augustus power struggle.

PC
Best Price Available
€0.00
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Historical low: €4.76

GamerScout Verdict

Best for strategy fans who want deep ancient-world empire management and two full campaign expansions without buying DLC piecemeal.

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About Total War: Rome II (Spartan Edition) key

Total War: Rome II is the hybrid grand strategy game that keeps strategy veterans coming back for hundred-hour campaigns. The core loop splits your time between a vast turn-based campaign map, where you manage provinces, recruit armies, broker alliances, and climb a tech tree, and real-time battles where you personally direct legions of Roman heavy infantry, Macedonian phalanxes, Egyptian war elephants, and everything in between. The Spartan Edition bundles the fully patched base game (the Emperor Edition build, which overhauled politics, building chains, and battle balance after a rocky launch), the Imperator Augustus campaign set during the bloody chaos following Caesar's murder, the Wrath of Sparta campaign transporting you to 432 BC and the Peloponnesian Wars, the Greek States Culture Pack, and the Daughters of Mars unit pack. That is a serious amount of content in one key. The main campaign opens in 272 BC across a map stretching from Britannia to Syria, with eight playable factions at the start, Rome among them, plus six additional free factions including Pontus, Seleucid, and Baktria. Commanding a Roman legion of heavy infantry and velites plays nothing like leading a Spartan hoplite phalanx or unleashing Carthaginian war elephants, so faction variety drives meaningful replay. Generals are persistent characters who accumulate traits and become genuine resources worth protecting, which gives even mid-campaign losses a personal sting. The political system, built around senate influence, ambition, and gravitas, has a reputation for opacity. The interactions between those stats never become fully legible, even deep into a run, and you can mostly ignore the system without being punished, which is a missed opportunity in a setting so soaked in political drama. Wrath of Sparta is the crown jewel of this edition's DLC. The campaign map covers 22 provinces across 78 regions of ancient Greece with each turn representing a single month, giving the whole thing a tighter, more urgent feel than the sprawling main campaign. You pick from Athens, Sparta, Corinth, or Boiotia, each with distinct unit rosters and starting challenges. The hoplite phalanx is the backbone of every Greek force, but over 50 new land and naval units add tactical wrinkle. Spartan Hoplites, Skiritai light infantry, and Immortal Spearmen are all here. Naval warfare leans hard on ramming and boarding with Dieres and Trieres hull types, and historical figures including Lysander and Sokrates appear as campaign characters. It is a focused, atmospheric slice of history that holds up well as a standalone reason to pick up this edition. A few honest caveats. The AI has never been Rome II's strong suit, showing erratic decision-making on the campaign map and occasionally bizarre tactical behaviour in battle. Performance can be demanding even on hardware that has no business struggling with a 2013 game, though years of patches have made a meaningful dent there. The building upgrade system, streamlined to speed up turns, can feel thin if you come from deeper 4X titles. And if you are hoping for the kind of narrative payoff that rewards a second or third playthrough, Rome II does not offer it. The writing is flavour text, not dialogue worth re-reading. What it offers instead is the emergent storytelling of a general you grew attached to dying in a siege you fumbled, or a civil war igniting precisely when a foreign power decides to test your eastern flank. That is where the real hook lives, and for a certain kind of strategy player, it never really lets go.

Monika
Monika · Scout Team

RPGs

Tags

steamGrand StrategyHistorical BattlesTurn-Based CampaignReal-Time TacticsFaction VarietyHoplite WarfarePolitical SimulationAncient RomeDLC BundleModdable

System Requirements

Minimum

Memory
2 GB RAM
Storage
35 GB
Graphics
512 MB VRAM
Processor
2 GHz Intel Dual Core / 2.6 GHz Intel Single Core
System requirements
Windows XP / Vista / Windows 7 / Windows 8

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Game Info

Developer
Creative Assembly
Publisher
SEGA
Release Date
Sep 3, 2013

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Total War: Rome II (Spartan Edition) key is available on PC.

When was Total War: Rome II (Spartan Edition) key released?

Total War: Rome II (Spartan Edition) key was released on 3 September 2013.

Who developed Total War: Rome II (Spartan Edition) key?

Total War: Rome II (Spartan Edition) key was developed by Creative Assembly and published by SEGA.