Napoleon I: The Campaigns 1805–1814 is a 1991 video game published by RAW Entertainment.
Napoleon I: The Campaigns 1805-1814 | |
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Developer(s) | Storm Computers Ltd. |
Publisher(s) | Internecine |
Platform(s) | |
Release | 1991 |
Genre(s) | Strategy |
Gameplay
editNapoleon I is a game in which players join the emperor Napoleon's campaign with the coalition allied against him.[1] The game has three campaigns based on historical scenarios: the Grande Armee against the forces of Austria and Russia (1805), two campaigns involving Napoleon's forces in France and surrounding countries (1806, 1809), and the French against multiple countries (1813-1814).[2] Players can play against the computer or a human opponent, and give orders to their troops, and maintain supply lines.[3]
Reception
editPublication | Score |
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Amiga Action | 68%[2] |
Amiga Power | 39%[3] |
Wyatt Lee reviewed the game for Computer Gaming World, and stated that "What Napoleon I: The Campaigns 1805–1814 happens to be is a fast-playing, versatile campaign game that fills a void in the genre of computer games based on the Napoleonic era."[1]
The reviewer for Amiga Power praised the game's historical accuracy, but said that "when it comes to playing the game you keep going to make a cup of tea just to get a little excitement."[3]
Jonathan Davies for Amiga Action found that the game would have no appeal to novice players, calling it "a tough, uncompromising, workmanlike simulation".[2]
Reviews
edit- Computer Gaming World – June 1993