Total War devs Creative Assembly have mentioned their pre-order and DLC technique for Total War: Warhammer II. Headline information is that the reworked race from the unique recreation, which might be playable for pre-orders and “early adopters,” is because of be revealed this week.
Here’s everything we know about Total War: Warhammer 2 thus far.
We know from previous announcements that this might be a “completely reworked faction” from the unique Total War: Warhammer, together with distinctive new monsters and two new Legendary Lords with distinctive begin positions. In different phrases, it’ll be “more along the lines of the content in Bretonnia than Chaos Warriors,” based on Total War model director Rob Bartholomew.
CA’s preliminary plan for the Chaos Warriors was to supply them free with pre-orders of the unique recreation after which cost for them as post-release DLC. This drew vociferous cries of lower content material – which “it by no means is”, says Bartholomew – and CA have been pressured to supply them free for a one-week ‘early adopter’ interval post-release.
The reworked race might be supplied on precisely the identical foundation, and never solely will they be much less necessary to the sequel’s marketing campaign than Chaos have been to the unique’s, they will not even be in the identical recreation. This is why Bartholomew says “we think we’ve got the balance better this time,” although in case you pre-order the sequel with out proudly owning the unique, it sounds such as you get nothing.
As for Warhammer II’s DLC plan, count on extra of the identical, with Bartholomew promising “a programme of paid-for and free content.” Work on lords packs is underway, and the primary large enlargement will add a complete new race – my guess is Tomb Kings, since their homeland of Nehekhara is fairly near the Southlands, one of many confirmed new continents.
Whomever they change into, it appears like they’ll get their full tabletop roster as a substitute of a mini-campaign: “We called these big DLCs ‘Campaign Packs’ in the past, with Call of the Beastmen and Realm of the Wood Elves, but we’ve heard the feedback that players would prefer larger rosters instead of the mini campaigns that came with these,” says Bartholomew.
That’s welcome information to me – all three of the launch rosters revealed thus far have holes in comparison with the tabletop military books, a few of which are pretty conspicuous. Expect these to be plugged by way of DLC, some free, some not.
You can learn Bartholomew’s ideas in full on the Total War blog.
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