Total War: ROME II – Empire Divided
PLEASE NOTE: This content requires the base game Total War™: ROME II to play.
A new grand-scale Campaign Pack for Total War: ROME II
Plunges players into the crisis of the third century, a critical turning-point for Rome
Play as one of ten different factions across five cultural groups
New Heroic Factions with elaborate victory conditions, famous leaders and crafted event-chains
New period-specific events, dilemmas and missions
New Campaign feat...
Lees meer
This DLC requires the base game Total War: Rome II Emperor Edition
PLEASE NOTE: This content requires the base game Total War: ROME II to play.
A new grand-scale Campaign Pack for Total War: ROME II
Plunges players into the crisis of the third century, a critical turning-point for Rome
Play as one of ten different factions across five cultural groups
New Heroic Factions with elaborate victory conditions, famous leaders and crafted event-chains
New period-specific events, dilemmas and missions
New Campaign features: Plagues, Cults and Banditry
Restructured technologies and unique new buildings
The year is 270 AD. A string of inept emperors and usurpers vying for power has led the Roman Empire into near-total economic collapse. This is its gravest crisis yet.
Eager to capitalise on Rome’s instability, barbarian tribes gather like a storm on the borders, to plunder the riches of civilisation.
To the east, the Sassanids set out on a grand conquest that culminates with an assault against Roman lands. They are held back only by a staunch defence led by Palmyra. Queen Zenobia holds fast – but for how long?
The once-glorious legions are forced to assume a defensive posture as their strength wanes; time is not on Rome’s side. However, there is yet hope. Aurelian stands ready to take the reins in Rome, though the task he faces seems insurmountable…
Will you unite an Empire Divided, and return Rome to its former glory? Or will you become the arbiter of its final downfall?
Head over to the Total War academy page to learn what’s new in both Total War: ROME II and Empire Divided.
Playable Factions
Culture: The Divided Roman Empire
Cultural traits:
Defenders of Civilisation: +15℅ morale for all units in own or allied territory
True Rome: Roman factions share a major diplomatic penalty with other Roman factions
Rome
Faction leader: Aurelian
Faction traits:
Iron Fist: -50℅ resistance to foreign occupation
Marching Orders: +15℅ movement range for all armies
Gallic Rome
Faction leader: Gaius Tetricus
Faction traits:
Romanisation: Public order bonus (max +6) from presence of Latin culture
Administrators: -20℅ political action costs
Steppe Dominance: Moderate diplomatic bonus with all nomadic barbarian tribes
Culture: Britannic Celts
Cultural traits:
Heroic culture: +20℅ charge bonus for all units
Sacred springs: +6 sanitation (all provinces)
Caledones
Faction leader: Segovax
Faction traits:
Fierce independence: +20℅ melee attack in own or allied provinces
Cultural aspirations: Moderate diplomatic bonus with all non-barbarian tribes
New campaign features
Heroic Factions
Five of the ten playable factions in Empire Divided are classed as Heroic factions. These are Rome, Gallic Rome, Palmyra, the Sassanids and the Gothi. Heroic factions have grander and more elaborate victory conditions, and unique named faction leaders who cannot die in battle.
Heroic factions also have their own flavourful and bespoke event-chains, representing the tales of these characters’ lives, which bring bonuses to their abilities and enable the player to make meaningful choices regarding their development and that of their faction.
New events, dilemmas and missions
Empire Divided brings a host of new events, dilemmas and missions, both general and faction-specific, to introduce new challenges, benefits and period flavour to your campaigns.
Banditry
This period of reduced governmental authority fosters the spread of Banditry. Each province now has a variable Banditry level which increases with the size of your domain and the presence of certain local buildings. Banditry can be reduced with the presence of armies, generals and special buildings. As Banditry grows, food levels fall, threatening faction-wide shortages. High provincial Banditry can also trigger special Bandit events to occur.
Plagues
Devastating diseases were commonplace in the 3rd century. When a plague hits a settlement it hampers growth, impacts public order and reduces income. Diseases can move between neighbouring territories, spreading with army movement and along trade routes. Sanitation buildings can prevent plagues from erupting and spreading, and key technologies can improve sanitation factionwide.
Cults
Alongside the more established religions, many cults sprang up in the 3rd century. These are represented by special building chains that can be constructed by any faction in any settlement. Three different cults are available in the game: Christianity, Mithraism and Manichaeism.
A cult building may be built for no cost, as its construction represents your empire permitting disciples to settle within your territory. This makes cult bonuses relatively easy to obtain, though cults spread foreign culture, bringing disorder into your provinces. In order to remove a cult building, a significant expenditure is required and a public order penalty is incurred required as this is considered persecution. Careful consideration of a cult’s benefits and disadvantages is required but, if used correctly, they can become a powerful tool.
New General Skills
Generals’ skill have been overhauled, and now allow the player to customise and specialise their characters in the disciplines of Recruitment, Combat, Strategy, Governance and Maritime Proficiency.
New Narrative Technologies
All technology trees have been restructured and redesigned to reflect the time-period and each of the game’s culture groups. Moreover, technologies in Empire Divided don’t represent scientific or technological breakthroughs; rather they represent the measures taken by rulers to deal with specific problems facing their empires. In this way, they help to tell the story of each faction’s journey through the period. This is especially true for the Heroic factions:
Aurelian’s technologies chart the journey of an emperor who must reform the military, then unify and defend his empire.
Zenobia’s technologies tell the story of her rise to power.
Tetricus’ technologies reveal his Republican political views in an age of fractured empire.
Hormizd’s technologies portray him as a ruler living up to the image of his predecessors, the great kings of the past.
Cannonades’ technologies tell a tale of Gothic bloodlust, and the many challenges his people must overcome in order to unify and persevere.
Updated building chains
Rome features a new Administration building, which deals with tax collection, agent improvement and countering banditry
Naval Training buildings can now be constructed in the capital of a coastal province providing bonuses to ship recruitment
Palmyra gains a new religious building chain that is dedicated to the gods Baalshamin, Aglibol, Yarhibol, Malakbel and Nabu
Armenia gains a new religious building chain that is dedicated to Christianity
Several new unique buildings are available to selected factions. These are Rome (the Grand Temple of Sol Invictus), Palmyra (the Great Colonnade, the El Kanat irrigation system and the Grand Temple of Baal), Sassanids (the Grand Statue of Shapur I) and Armenia (the Etchmiadzin cathedral - historically, the world’s first Christian cathedral)
New Units
Alongside the existing unit rosters from ROME II, Empire Divided introduces a number of unique and signature units for every faction. Each faction features its own variant style and unique take on the classic Roman look and feel, with Aurelian’s Roman forces bearing the closest resemblance to the classic template. Unique Roman units are:
Rome
Legionaries
Heavy infantry units – Praetorians, Jovianii, Herulianii
Equites Dalmatarum – famous light cavalry
Clibanarii and Cataphractarii – very heavy cavalry, precursors to medieval knights
Gallic Rome
Taifali Cavalry – famous associated barbarian cavalry (distinguishing shield designs)
Gallic Legionaries – distinctive from Roman Legionaries
Gallic Axemen and Longswords
Palmyrene Rome
Palmyrene Legionaries – distinctive armour and a preference for spears
Hamian Archers – famous middle-eastern foot soldiers
Palmyrene Cataphracts – eastern-looking heavy cavalry
We store and/or access information on a device, such as unique IDs in cookies to process personal data. You may accept or manage your choices by clicking below, including your right to object where legitimate interest is used, or at any time in the privacy policy page. These choices will be signaled to our partners and will not affect browsing data.
Analytical Cookies
Analytical cookies allow us to monitor and analyze visits from various traffic sources, which helps us improve the overall performance of the site.
Marketing Cookies
Marketing cookies, in most cases, are installed by our advertising partners throughout our site. Our partners may use web cookies to create relevant advertisements when you visit other sites.