Fallen Lords: Condemnation Review

Gameing now
3 min readMay 9, 2021
Fallen Lords: Condemnation Review

Angels, DeadSouls and Demons. Here is the case that these three races do not agree. We live in a world that is unpredictable, open to trouble and danger at any moment. Everyone is trying to dig each other’s well, and only those who are victorious from deadly battles live. Sometimes these wars get so big that even a village or a town can disappear. You, be you, prepare yourself for the difficult life of the side you want to support, because you won’t have a comfortable day.
Complicated battles
Fallen Lords:Condemnation is a third-person action with combat-themed missions. We choose one of the three races we mentioned above and fight through 10 scenarios. Each group has 10 unique and different scenarios, but they are all parts of the same story. If we have the Angels, and there is a race of Demons attacking from the left on this mission, when we choose the Demons, these creatures attacking from the left are under our control. Missions are usually protection, attack, and find someone. It’s not a more creative situation, and we do it all the time, and at the end of the episode, we come out of the collective war with a stream of our brow, and we move on to the next script, that’s all.

At the beginning, it’s an exercise. Thanks to the convenient control system, we will not have a problem with this. With the Mouse, we can make camera movement and zoom in or out with scroll. Graphically, the Fallen Lords don’t promise much. Character animations are quite problematic. They look very dry and there is no realism in the animations. The same goes for environmental details. There is not much vitality in modeling, and there are no elements that we can look at and appreciate with its visuals. Races have combat animals that they can use unique to themselves, and we can take command of our crowded Army in their missions, but such considered details remain in the classroom due to many technical errors. Artificial intelligence will be the most reliable example in this situation.

Both the characters we command and our enemy act extremely problematic. In big wars, they are unconsciously throwing swords, or when an artifact appears in front of them, they can get stuck in them. Instead of passing it and continuing on, they can go back and walk through strange places, which is interesting, but they can follow the wrong paths. They’re also extremely incapable of protecting themselves, and we have to look out for them all the time. Because if we don’t, and most of them die, we can be alone in the next large-scale war and have to make a shortcut to the other world.
No, no, no.
Although we initially hoped for music, we later realized that our hopes were wasted when the sounds came into play. Sounds are made up of the same effects that repeat themselves and do not change. When we consider it in general, Fallen Lords: Condemnation looks like a television that can’t deliver images due to technical glitches. Artificial intelligence and repetitive monotonous scenarios force us to keep game time short. As an action, The Fallen Lords does not give enough light to illuminate its surroundings, it cannot.

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