![]() ![]() I often told myself I’d play for a few more turns only to find that hours had passed. What you’ll find with Civ Rev 2 is that it’s easy to pick up and play and hard to put down. It’s nice to see that the game includes a good amount of different scenarios to play through (including some exclusive to this Vita port) but I easily put 20 hours into the random map generator alone. To be completely honest, as with Civilization V on the PC, I spent most of my time using the random map generator rather than playing the in-game scenarios. Packed into this handheld instalment are three different game modes. These include a random map generator which allows you to easily start up a game with your chosen leader, a scenario mode that lets you play with specific guidelines, and a scenario editor where you can change factors such as the starting year, world climate, and the rate that barbarians spawn in the world. ![]() So I deploy riflemen and tanks to defend Rome, set production to produce even more infantry and hope that I can hold back the Indian forces until I have enough gold in my pocket. Sure, Civilization Revolution 2 Plus (from here on Civ Rev 2) may not offer the scale and strategy of the PC games but it does enough to capture the essence of what makes Civilization games fun. After all, the warmonger only needs to capture my capital city of Rome to win the game. The only obstacle that stands in my way is Gandhi and his eagerness to erase my civilization from the face of the Earth. After developing the economic production of the Roman empire for the last 4,000 years the conditions for an economic victory are almost complete. ![]()
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