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Waterloo: Napoleon's Last Battle

Waterloo: Napoleon's Last Battle

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From: Strategy First
Category: Video Games

Buy New: $2.84



New (9) Used (3) from $2.78

Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 24 reviews
Sales Rank: 9848

Format: Cd-rom
Platforms: Windows 98, Windows 2000, Windows Me, Windows 95
Genre: military_and_historical_strategy_games
ESRB: Everyone
Media: CD-ROM
Age: 5 - 20 years
Operating System: Windows 2000
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 9.5 x 7.8 x 1.5

Model: 04-22428
UPC: 627006202322
EAN: 0627006202322
ASIN: B00005A9VX

Release Date: April 5, 2001
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Accessories:

  • PC Gamer (1-year)

Similar Items:

  • Sid Meier's Civil War Collection
  • WATERLOO - by Sergei Bondarchuk (Import)
  • Europa Universalis III
  • The Last Valley
  • Waterloo (1971) with Rod Steiger

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Product Description
Waterloo captures the excitement of the early 19th-century battle with all the color, pomp, and pageantry of the Napoleonic era. Take command ofNapoleon's troops or Wellington's army and change history in this epic gamebased on Sid Meier's Gettysburg engine. There are over 30 historical andspeculative scenarios depicting all phases of the battle. The game alsoallows you to design your own battles: pick your own forces and battleobjectives for unlimited play.

The multiplayer mode allows up to eight players over LAN, the Internet, or on GameSpy Arcade. There are over 60 historical uniforms, including French Light Infantry, the Old Guard, the King's German Legion, Polish Lancers, and the Scots Greys. The dozens of historical landmarks include the all-important Chateau Hougoumont, La Haye Sainte, and Plancenoit Church. The game also features an exhaustively researched historical account ofNapoleon's return to the throne in 1815, and his ultimate defeat at thebattle of Waterloo.


Customer Reviews:   Read 19 more reviews...

2 out of 5 stars My first bad review...   March 13, 2007
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

I was in love with gettysburg and antietam, and waterloo came out and eagerly baought it.

The game is very good but there are several problems with it that are so big, I have to badly rate the game.

The first is cavalry iss WAY too powerful. i know at the time cavalry was powerful but a group 80 cavalrymen making a brigade go into square automaticly over and over again whilst you click line is no way accurate. its just annoying.

When you have infantry in line and 80 cavalry men make you 2000 man brigade go into square and then while you away tending to another part of the battle and you return to see enemy infantry has torn apart your infantry stuk in square, its very annoying.

The second is, sometimes infantry just dosnt fire. Your regiment just stands there, aiming the gun at the enemy but not firing or reloading while the enemy is firing at you. So, if you send a regiment behind to enemy to flank them, it wont fire and you lose. Wether this is a bug or not I dont know, it certainly wasnt in gettysburg.

There is a sequal and maybe that is different but for some reason, its not being published. but, those two above reasons are reason enough for me to not play this game again and to give it 2 stars, as it could be a great game without those 2 fundamental flaws.



5 out of 5 stars Waterloo: An Excellent Game   June 6, 2004
 10 out of 10 found this review helpful

Having found my copy of Gettysburg (The best PC game of all time) out of order, several years ago I turned to Waterloo as a substitute. I have no stopped playing it since (Even when Gettysburg worked again). The game is complex, realistic and beautifully detailed. It truly captures the spirit and style of Napoleanic warfare, a subject with which I am quite familiar. Anyone who enjoys studying Military History must buy this game, as much as a tool for learning as a fun program. One never runs out of new experiences in it, and each battle is completely unique and challanging. The well-researched units and orders of battle are superb, and make for a smooth and historically acurate gameplay. I really, truly can't stress enough how great it is. Although, to be fair, only people who like Napoleanic warfare will get into it.


3 out of 5 stars Flexibility is Not an Option   March 22, 2003
Based upon the successful Gettysburg engine this game shares many of the same faults, but does have a few benefits. The good news is that Cavalry is back in. Gettysburg had miserable cavalry which dismounted to attack and basically fought as infantry. Waterloo gives back the elan of the cavalry charge and livens up an otherwise static battle line. Unless you intervene, units attacked by cavalry will form into squares and happily stay that way when infantry move in to blast them to pieces , and that's were the attention to minutiae come into play.When the AI attacks you simultaneously in two places at once you're basically going to sacrifice one or the other as the AI doesn't adequately defend your troops with the same panache it does its own. Unfortunately the vast scope of the game (at least in the Grand Campaign modes as opposed to the bland scenarios)requires the same degree of micro-management. If you don't babysit units they will be quickly overrun or annihilated. The game map doesn't help in this regard as the terrain is basically linear and quite narrow in depth. The strategic aspect of the game involves controlling SITES which give a morale boost to your army. Unfortunately this will lead to a fragmenting of your forces and require that you constantly shuffle between them. There is not much you can do about this as when the game commences the computer pre-positions your forces for you tying you to a strategy not of your liking. The British seem spread out far too thinly across the map defending useless terrain with woefully inadequate troops. Unless you consolidate them in a more cohesive fashion each sector of the line can be singled out and quickly put to peril. Once again, I don't like having strategy forced upon me I'd prefer to choose my own ground. The game does have the expected thrills although the voice overs could be more elaborate (Hoorah!For old Nosey!...)and the addition of musical themes would enhance the atmosphere greatly (a bit of fife and drum, bagpipe and the Marseillaise would set the tone quite nicely). If you liked Gettysburg you'll love this one but only those not easily unnerved will keep coming back for more.


1 out of 5 stars Bore terloo!   September 3, 2002
 7 out of 26 found this review helpful

What a waste of money! If you are thinking of getting this game then wait until the price drops to about a quarter or what it is because that's all it's worth!
The good points are: There is a flashy title page with a nice little tune. There is a really nice historical account of the battle (although the writer does need to learn a little more grammar!)
Well, that's it. There are the good points! Now for the bad points...
The training scenarios are incredibly irritating. Every move you make it stopped by the "trainer" while a banner appears with information about how to move units etc. and the game automatically pauses which you have to undo manually each and every time. What a pain! In addition, at the end of each instruction you read you are told that to exit the game press the escape key. I wish it told me what to do to get my hard-earned money back!!
When you have mastered the training with lots of swearing at the computer and the notion that you have paid 40 bucks for the game so why not see it through, you get onto the battle action. What a joke! There are, I am told, 60 different uniforms in the programme. Pity we can't actually see them!
I tried to dowload screenshots from a site on the net but each time I couldn't get to see them for some technical reason. Hardly surprising having seen the game! "Is this IT?", I though when I first saw it. Terrible!
Gameplay is no fun either. I give commands only to@see that the unit hsn't moved, and if you want to move several units, sometimes you cannot find the brigade commander the units belong to.
Do I even need to mention the jumpy scrolling?
Maybe a real aficionado of the old table wargames who has never seen a computer game before might get excited over this, but for the rest of you I would recommend you to stay well clear of this.



5 out of 5 stars Difficulty is a good thing   April 27, 2002
 13 out of 14 found this review helpful

Someone who'd never played any of the games of this type (like Gettysburg, etc.) will find it very difficult to figure out which troops you're controlling at any time. The mass of little flags on the map are difficult to control, and if you're not used to 18 C army structure you might find it difficult to keep units near their commanders, which is a key to the game. Also, the game takes a lot of patience to play. It takes considerable time for pre-mechanized armies to develop and then execute your battle plans. So, in short, you might not like the game if you're someone who wouldn't like ANY of the games in the series because of the aforementioned difficulties that are par for the course.

As a big fan of Gettysburg, my opinion is that this is a worthy descendant. Get the 2nd patch and some of the problems notes in earlier reviews will go away. Before widespread rifle use, cavalry played a huge role in battles and are accurately represented in the game. If you're used to Gettysburg, you fast learn that you can't leave your soldiers in line formation for the duration once the battle starts. Once you learn to use cavalry, though, you quickly can torment the other side the same as they do to you.

One small problem: the background is set a little bit too dark, probably accurate for Belgium after a heavy rainfall, but I liked the terrain colors better in Gettysburg.

So: if you liked Gettysburg and want what I think is a better game (perhaps a pro-Napoleonic era bias coming through) get this. If you're new to this kind of game entirely, download the demo and see whether you like it. But note that the real game runs better, has infinitely more variety, and comes with a tutorial to allow practicing movement, formations, and use of artillery and cavalry.

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