Total Annihilation: Kingdoms

aka: TAK
Moby ID: 1953
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Description official descriptions

Total Annihilation: Kingdoms is the fantasy spin-off title to the 1997 real-time strategy game Total Annihilation. There are four distinct factions: Aramon, Taros, Veruna, and Zhon, and each is spearheaded by their monarch unit (respectively Elsin, Lokken, Kirenna, and Thirsha) which replaces the commanders from the original Total Annihilation. In the game's storyline, these monarchs are siblings who are at each other's throats fighting for supremacy over the land of Darien after the disappearance of their father Garacaius.

Monarchs are the main construction unit in the game, but they are mostly not capable of building objects from the entire tech tree. Aramon, Taros, and Veruna rely on other construction units to do so, and the tech tree is effectively split to 3 tiers, one with each factory-type structure assigned to it. Conversely, Zhon has few structures available to them, as they rely more on units. There is only one resource, mana, which is gathered from sacred stones by structures known as lodestones. Building units and structures, as well as monarchs' special attacks, drain mana, and its input/output values are shown in the bottom right corner of the screen. Finally, monarchs have special abilities: Elsin can raise the dead and build ark ships, Lokken can become invisible and build all three Taros factory structures, Kirenna can swim (by doing so, she replaces her legs with fins), and Thirsha can fly and build a tier 2 Zhon defensive structure; they also have three attack types.

As units and structures are being summoned, they are formed as silhouettes which gradually materialize. While this is going on, they are immobile and vulnerable to attacks. Also, if the structure or construction unit responsible for the summoning is moved to a different task or destroyed, the silhouette will gradually lose health until it vanishes, but in the case of structures and Zhon units, summoning can be resumed in that small time window.

The game features 48 missions in its singleplayer campaign, which are played in succession and give player control over different factions in different points of the storyline. As was the case with the original Total Annihilation, the developers released new freely downloadable units on the official website after release.

Spellings

  • Total Annihilation: Право на трон - Russian spelling
  • 横扫千军:王国风云 - Simplified Chinese spelling

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Credits (Windows version)

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Reviews

Critics

Average score: 76% (based on 32 ratings)

Players

Average score: 3.3 out of 5 (based on 25 ratings with 3 reviews)

Didn't get enough respect

The Good
Re-played some 4 years after it first came out, this game holds up surprisingly well when viewed in comparison to more recent offerings. Anybody who likes Warcraft III or Age of Mythology will still find plently to enjoy with this game, and it's somewhat amusing to contemplate how original this was when it came out, but was not recognized as groundbreaking, yet so many follow in its footsteps and are praised. It also caught a lot of criticism when first released because frame rates suffered unless details were dialed down, whereas today almost any computer still in service will allow full detail in the graphics which are obviously dated, but still look pretty good.

The Bad
The 'top-down' view is almost literally straight down, and a little more angle would improve the realism. Micromanagement of the details is slightly fiddly at times, but this is true of many games in the genre and is part of managing your strategy and staying actively on top of things.

The Bottom Line
As much a spiritual predecessor of Warcraft III as was Warcraft II. Underappreciated in its day, there is still a lot to like in playing this amusing Real Time Strategy game in a Fantasy setting.

Windows · by Dan Spencer (6) · 2003

Great medieval real-time stategy game

The Good
Cavedog didn't make a really good plot in total annihilation so they brought us TA Kingdoms. This game has it all cool 3D units lots of them and plus you can download more on the internet the game has a great story line cause of the four unique civilazations, each with there own story. The minimum requirment is 233mhz and 32mb ram and if you got a 3D card the game is just amazing.

The Bad
The game took maybe to much time to load but it's worth it. Multiplayer mode needs a way better system then the requirments they asked for.

The Bottom Line
If you like a good story line strategie game and cool 3D units in one game this one's for you.

Windows · by Djinn (11) · 2000

Total Annihilation, with a story and *different* units

The Good
It had a really good story. This isn't what I expected from the TA line of games, and it certainly wasn't why I bought the game. I just enjoy all things Medieval, so I figured, great, TA with Medieval units. The story was detailed, made sense, and was actually pretty good.

The units, while similar, were different in looks and abilities, yet still very balanced. One of the groups didn't even have towers, but instead had huge, boulder-throwing...somethings. I called them "mobile towers" because they basically were. If it had a line of sight on an enemy unit, it usually walloped it in one or two throws (imagine eight mobile towers, and you have quite a fortress without walls). But beware, you have zero walls, and are prone to rush attacks.

Each group was set up to take advantage of the story, and had abilities that coincided with their history. One was earth-based, and had what you would expect in earth-based units (like mobile, boulder-throwing towers). Another was mostly sea-based. There are more, but I'll spare you the details and leave some surprise.

I don't do on-line gaming, but this game does have it.

TAK also has a good deal of replay value, but not with the story. The only replay goes with the random maps and random fights. It should keep you going for quite some time (as if the story didn't by itself).

Graphics and sound are both as you would expect for this era of game. The better your machine, the better those really high resolutions will look.

The Bad
Load times are long even on a 1.2 Ghz (relatively). Grab the patch for this game to help fix that.

Control was a bit odd at times, but that was possibly just me. I don't really care for single-click interfaces. I prefer to use click to move, and right-click to attack. Loading units in transports was really odd, too. The way you do it is click on the transport, then mysteriously teleport units to your ship. I fumbled with this for awhile, trying to walk my units to a transport like WC2.

The Bottom Line
If you liked Total Annihilation, you won't likely be disappointed with this game. If you like Medieval things in general, you'll probably like this game, too. Ditto for stories.

If TA got old, you'll enjoy this game for awhile (particularly if you like well-told stories), but it may get old after a few days or hours.

It doesn't have quite the classic little quirks that WarCraft 2 had, but it has some really fun units.

Windows · by Cyric (50) · 2001

Trivia

April Fool's Day Joke

The game was part of an April Fool's Day joke by Cavedog Entertainment, that on April 1, 1999 published a press release stating that due to legal problems with the U.S. Patent Office, the company and all its trademarks had to be renamed. Cavedog Entertainment became Frozen Yak Entertainment, Total Annihilation was renamed Really Cool Wargame, and Total Annihilation: Kingdoms was supposedly called Really Cool Wargame with Trolls.

Awards

In the German gaming magazine GameStar (issue 03/2000) Total Annihilation: Kingdoms received a special award as "Biggest Disappointment in 1999".

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  • MobyGames ID: 1953
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Contributors to this Entry

Game added by MAT.

Additional contributors: Andrew Hartnett, Maw, Klaster_1, CaesarZX, MachTen, Patrick Bregger.

Game added July 14, 2000. Last modified March 6, 2024.