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LOTR: War of the Ring Real-Time Strategy Game

DiZASTiX writes "Just saw this on Gamespot about LOTR: War of the Ring a Warcraft III like LOTR game: "The Lord of the Rings: War of the Ring has only been in development for around seven or eight months, but at a press event in Berlin this week we were lucky enough to catch a glimpse of the game in its current state. The map itself was relatively featureless at this stage of development but boasted some great grass textures and trees, which were occasionally shadowed by the suggestion of clouds passing overhead. More impressive still were the character models on display, which, although unfinished, bore more than a passing resemblance to the colorful, stylized units of Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos.""

12 of 159 comments (clear)

  1. Warcraft and LoTR? by That_Dan_Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What resources am I supposed to mine? Tolkien was about how awful industrialization and cutting down trees and mining stuff was. And here's a game that may end up glorifying it?

    1. Re:Warcraft and LoTR? by skinnydskitzo · · Score: 1, Insightful

      " What resources am I supposed to mine? Tolkien was about how awful industrialization and cutting down trees and mining stuff was. And here's a game that may end up glorifying it?" Tolkien wasn't really about anything. He tried to make his story's as socially irrelavant as possible. You could say his story was about the the threat of nazism, communism, nuclear bombs, industrialization, mining, cartoons, the slashdot effect, or whatever else. Who knows if he was for or against these things. His stories definitely weren't about any of them though.

  2. Re:Isn't there already an LoTR RTS game? by AlternateSyndicate · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Considering that approximately 500 LoTR-themed games have been made in the past 20 years, it's safe to assume that one is an RTS I'm sure.

  3. Interesting... by Skyshadow · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I've got to admit that your post read like flamebait at first, but...

    The way the Iraqi situation (and, in some ways, the larger west vs. Islam conflict) is being framed in simplistic good vs. evil terms by our leaders is disturbing because it takes complicated issues and reduces them to trite overgeneralizations. LoTR's overall commercial success can be viewed as an example of this.

    There's no doubt that war fantasy takes some account for this; forget Tolken for the moment and consider Tom Clancy -- noble, professional US soldiers go out and conquer this evil or that and are back in time for dinner. It, along with fast-and-easy wars like Gulf War I, create this fantasy that the US is completely unbeatible in all environments and an eagerness to go fight rather than exploring other options.

    Back to the point though, LoTR demonstrates the basis of this problem: people would rather view their complex world in terms of a neat, all-ends tied up, good vs. evil novel like LoTR. The characters are all very straightforward, and you never have to wonder if Gandalf has ulterier motives. It's a good story, but a dangerous way to view the world for those not sophisticated enough to look past it (not to be pessemistic, but let's face it, Survivor is in it's zillionth rendition).

    Anyhow, this is why it's important to push people through to more complex literative and stories where people aren't good or evil, but who work towards their own logical (or not) ends. Maybe this would help increase the sophistication of the general populace and generate an electorate which si less easily lied to, helping to preserve democracy against those who would coopt it.

    Or maybe I'm just off on a rant.

    --
    Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
  4. Patience? I dunno... by TopShelf · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I, for one, cannot wait - I haven't bought a PC game in a few years, but this is a guaranteed first-day purchase in my book. My brothers and I used to play a great War of the Ring boardgame long ago (mid-80s, can't remember the name). I always enjoyed running Saruman's forces out of Orthanc, who for my money is the real wildcard in the war.

    --
    Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
  5. disgusting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The make a commercial computer game of a book which is anti-modernist. How ironic.

  6. Anyone care to guess how long until a LOTR MMORPG? by SuperMario666 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm thinking two years max. I'm not sure what kind of scenario they'd set up, but it would be a blast to go on some "The Hobbit" style adventures with some online friends.

  7. The game of my dreams :) by Khalidz0r · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I am waiting for this game like I never waited for a game.

    Lord Of The Rings is a very interesting fantasy story, and I advice everybody who haven't read it yet to *read* it.

    Watching movies might be fun, but reading it is very great. It is one of the best peices of art I've been exposed to. Tolkien is a genius.

    This game might just be using the great story to sell a product that's not as good as the story itself, but I have high hopes in the game. A real time strategy game is just what fits this style of stories :).

    We want a game up to the level of LotR, please!

    Thanks for reading,

    Khalid

    --
    "What you 'seek' is what you get!"
  8. This game will be a truly monumental achievement by voodoo1man · · Score: 2, Insightful
    But first, let me comment on this quote:
    More impressive still were the character models on display, which, although unfinished, bore more than a passing resemblance to the colorful, stylized units of Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos.
    Ignoring the startingly strange opinion that half-done art with an "inspired" style (if you don't have lawyers, this is called "copyright theft") is "impressive," I as a fan of LOTR must take objection to to the "colorful, stylized" part. There are other, much more subtle ways to differentiate small units in a strategy game.

    Now, to my original thought:

    [WOTR] isn't being designed as a hard-core real-time strategy game, but ... as an RTS that will be accessible and fun ... fans of [LOTR] who might never have played a strategy game before ... Liquid Entertainment hopes to incorporate a variable difficulty level .. in which the strength of the enemy will be automatically determined by how well you are doing ... how quickly you are managing to build units.
    I think it is a monumental task to dumb down what today constitutes an RTS, but Liquid Entertainment is trying. God help us all - this game can't help but sell well, and whatever features it has are sure to be copied by future RTS clones. There go the last elements of strategy - don't worry if you can't even amass a tank rush, the game dumbs itself down! Of course, you have to consider that this thinking is implying that 'tank rushes' constitute strategy and are difficult to do. This is the reason why I switched to turn-based after Myth II.
    --

    In the great CONS chain of life, you can either be the CAR or be in the CDR.

  9. Re:Warcraft 3 is so similar by Stonehand · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Well, no kidding. Axe-carrying dwarves, woods-dwelling elves, elderly staff-bearing wizards, and foul orcs were brought to the masses in LOTR.

    Plenty of subsequent fantasy books, games and movies probably draw upon that, the same way many draw upon fantasy-medieval-European themes -- it saves work, and makes the material more accessible to readers who are already familiar with the rehashed ideas.

    --
    Only the dead have seen the end of war.
  10. LOTR Icon! by bacontaco · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why can't we have an icon specially for Lord of the Rings? C'mon, we have a Star Wars icon, and now we want one for LOTR!

  11. Sorry, doesn't look that good to me by Obiwan+Kenobi · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And I'll tell you why:

    " According to Marcus Lindblom, the game's producer, War of the Ring isn't being designed as a hard-core real-time strategy game, but rather more as an RTS that will be accessible and fun for both strategy fans and fans of The Lord of the Rings who might never have played a strategy game before"

    You know what? I want to play a game based on Lord of the Rings, the first of its kind, to be for strategy fans. I want it to be for those of us with a lot of experience, who are looking for something new and innovative, yet at the same time incorporating all that has come before.

    I want to see the orcs crawling over the mountains in the distance, covering them like bugs as they advance. I want to see the classic over-the-horizon shot as an army of uru'khai come to wage war. I want a Risk-like map available showing me where I can move my troops in position, and then be able to switch to a warcraft-3 like view to see the ensuing battles.

    I want the slow buildup of supplies and buildings, and long sessions with cabinet members on how best to defend my kingdom. If this is real time strategy, it doesn't have to go at Warcraft 3's pace. I don't need another Warcraft 3 mod that has Lord of the Rings characters and a "Warcraft 3-esque" storyline. You know why? Becuase people have modded Warcraft 3 enough already that there are maps that replay the adventures in The Fellowship of the Ring (playable w/ 8 of your friends) and The Battle of Helms Deep. I don't want a few more units, some new models and a screwed up story. If you're going to go, do it right!

    This is one of the single biggest opportunities that a game designer could have and they are screwing it up so they can get sales. I'm sure they'll try to put this out on all platforms (probably not GBA, but hell, in some marketing meeting they might throw out the possibility for laughs), on all systems, so they can make tons of cash and have the Click Button Repeatedly To Win syndrome that is so common nowadays. You ever played The Two Towers on PS2 or PC? Same concept. Oh sure, there are "combos", but really, you're just mashing the same buttons over and over.

    Think of a combination of Medieval: Total War (and for that matter Shogun: Total War) and Warcraft 3 and Master of Orion. You could have commanders that report to you, building guilds who construct defense structures, a cabinet to help advise you, and then, when the battle heats up, you can go there and watch it happen.

    Are we really so void of time and in such a hurry that a half-way thinking man's LOTR RTS is impossible?

    I'd like to think not.