Tackling the tumultuous years of the Roman Republic’s rise to power in a grand strategy game is no easy task, but Imperator: Rome proves Paradox is definitely up to it. This is a game built on columns of interesting internal politics, a fun and involved warfare system, and an enormous and detailed map stretching from Ireland to India with strategic elements that make previous Paradox games look downright archaic. I can’t give nearly as much praise to the interface or the mechanics for tribal nations, unfortunately, but Imperator still may set a new standard for historical grand strategy.
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Overall, Imperator gives you much more to manage than EU4 and far fewer tools to do it with. I was particularly frustrated at the lack of a ledger – a feature of most other Paradox games that gives you access to a lot of info about the world at a glance. Too much important stuff is buried deep in easy-to-miss menus, like the factors that determine whether or not the Senate will approve a declaration of war. Some info doesn’t seem to be visible at all, like the scaled effects of constructing a building in a specific city. When I reviewed EU4, the interface got some of my highest praise. In Imperator, it’s a weak point instead.
And this trip to the ancient past doesn’t seem especially interested in holding your hand as you learn the ropes, either. The in-game tutorial leaves out some key information, coming across kind of like a driver’s ed course that teaches you what all the pedals, knobs, and switches in the cab do but not how to parallel park or merge onto a highway. It also only covers playing as a republic, leaving you to your own devices when it comes to tribes and monarchies.
Imperator treats you to one of the most involved and interesting combat systems I’ve seen in the genre.
Once you do get up to speed, though, Imperator treats you to one of the most involved and interesting combat systems I’ve seen in a genre that’s usually dominated by crashing giant balls of infantry into each other with winning or losing based on who can bring the greatest numbers to bear. In addition to a plethora of troop types that ranges from infantry to chariots to mounted camels and elephants, each army has access to a set of stances that can counter or be countered by others. Their effectiveness is determined by the troop types in an army, so you can tell what tactics an opponent is most likely to use by scouting out how their forces are composed. If you see a lot of light infantry on the march, they’re probably not going to use shock tactics, and those Scythians and their horse archers are potent but predictable. It's tactically interesting and rewards observation and planning, rather than settling with a lame, guess-based rock-paper-scissors system.
The map also lends itself to interesting warfare, with a density of traversable terrain far above and beyond most other grand strategy games. Fighting across the Alps involves a frigid slog through narrow passes that’re just begging to be the scene of a brutal ambush or desperate last stand. Similarly, the Nile region is modeled as the ancients would have seen it: a narrow highway along the banks of the great river, surrounded on all sides by expansive desert where only death awaits. Some areas of the map will remain unconquered well into the late game for the same reasons they did in history: it’s simply not worth it to undertake such a major logistical nightmare for so little reward. This approach to keeping some regions balkanized adds to the immersiveness of the world without making you feel like you’re missing out on anything. The strategic and tactical depth makes it hard for me to go back to a game like EU4, and all of this map detail looks gorgeous whether you’re marching across the pastoral plains of Italy or over the rugged Himalayas.
I Am The Senate
Internal politics are also a highlight. In the Roman Republic, each Consul you take control of will have to gather support for war declarations, law changes, and other actions in the Senate by courting its five factions. That adds a really fun element of scheming and politicking to keep you busy when your legions aren’t on the march. Tribes are required to keep their clan chiefs happy, and monarchies are in a constant struggle to secure the succession against greedy pretenders. Any of these three governments can experience a thrilling civil war if they allow powerful rivals to get out of hand.
Politics and warfare tie together very nicely through the popularity and loyalty systems. In a republic, leaders are elected in part based on a popularity score that will go up or down over time from various events, but most notably from winning battles as the leader of an army. This means that you have to be careful when appointing a general because the candidate with the best military stats might be an incompetent governor – or worse, a rabble-rousing populist – who you don’t necessarily want coming home in triumph and riding a wave of victorious glory into the halls of power. (What could possibly go wrong?) In addition, I often found myself having to choose between highly talented but corrupt candidates to fill a command, or far less skilled ones who wouldn’t be skimming from the budget under the table. It’s a great driver of character interaction that models the administration of a bureaucratic empire far better than anything Crusader Kings 2 ever came up with.
You’re constantly presented with a challenging and historically authentic balancing act.
In addition, troops that serve under a given commander for a long time – particularly if that commander is charismatic or generous – will become loyal to their general over the state and refuse to leave their service. Once a certain percentage of your troops are loyal to such a commander (or group of commanders with similar grievances, like maybe a triumvirate), they may decide to start a civil war if their loyalty is low. Thus, you’re constantly presented with the challenging and historically authentic balancing act of giving your superstar leaders enough honor and victory to keep them happy, but never enough that their popularity captures enough hearts and minds to make them a threat to your regime. It’s particularly difficult for tribes, in which each clan chief can raise a retinue that will always be loyal to them no matter what. This is the kind of internal politicking that’s missing from a game like EU4, and Imperator is very much the better for it.
This is augmented by the tyranny mechanic, which allows you to act against the will of the nation at the expense of building up general distrust among your people. It can sometimes be worth it to push your demands through a hostile Senate in a time of crisis, but doing so too often will eventually lead to disloyalty and open revolt. Continued abuses may even put you in a position where your rivals give you the choice to back down or cross the Rubicon and fight a war to make your absolute authority official. This is a really clever and effective way to avoid tying your hands with complex government mechanics, but still forcing you to pay a price for ignoring them blatantly.
Tribal Troubles
Some governments seem to have gotten more of the designers’ attention than others, though. Tribes, in particular, have a lot of issues right now. Clan retinues, which are raised automatically by your clan chiefs, can’t be split up, and that caused some issues when I was playing as Tibet and they got so large that they were bleeding away men to environmental attrition even under ideal conditions. Because I couldn’t really do anything about this other than reforming out of a tribal society, I was constantly stuck with low or no manpower.
There’s also a mechanic that lets some tribes migrate across the map, but it doesn’t work particularly well yet and can lead to some of your non-migrant armies getting stuck hundreds of miles from your new homeland until you tediously negotiate military access treaties. I’m also unsure if the AI even know how to use these mechanics, as I never witnessed them taking advantage of migration myself. Knowing Paradox, these fringe societies will likely be fleshed out and tuned up with patches and DLC down the line. But for now, they’re an inferior experience to playing as Rome, Carthage, or any of the large Greek powers.
The one aspect of the tribal experience that does work well and make them exciting to play is a system of centralization and civilization that allows you to gradually transition into a settled republic or kingdom, replacing your egalitarian tribal population with a more stratified and specialized society that can compete with the great powers of the Mediterranean core. Every small, incremental step you take away from mud huts and toward marble temples presents some kind of interesting trade-off, and it really feels like your nation is evolving gradually instead of waiting to push a button that radically reforms everything overnight.
Regardless of which nation I chose, I was impressed by the amount of customization available in Imperator.
Regardless of which nation I chose, I was impressed by the amount of customization available in Imperator. Most of the tedious budget sliders from other grand strategy games have been replaced by more nuanced economic policies that offer clear trade-offs and get rid of needless, fiddly bean counting. Do you want a trade policy that focuses on income from commerce with other nations, or one that mostly benefits your domestic production power? And, once you get some trade going, it’s possible to use import and export routes to stack powerful bonuses on each of your provinces. Importing grain boosts your population growth. Getting access to iron allows you to build powerful heavy infantry. Having a surplus of leathers makes your light troops more effective in combat.
Since every province’s trade slots are limited, this feels like creating a talent build for each one. Augmented by appointing governors and selecting an overarching policy like cultural assimilation or maximizing taxes, each chunk of your empire can be highly specialized and develops a sort of personality of its own. Further demanding challenges can arise, though, if a governor you appoint becomes corrupt or cruel. An unhappy populous can lead to a local revolt, which is the other means besides character-led civil wars that Imperator uses to drive interesting internal tension.
And that’s without even touching the laws screen, where you can shape your society in further cool ways by setting rules for land ownership, the privileges of nobles, and the organization of the army. For Rome, these include some famous historical decisions like the Gracchan land reforms and the Marian army reforms, both of which contributed to the decline of the Republic and the rise of the Roman Empire. If you choose to undertake them, and you’re not careful, the same may happen to you. Choosing to go down that path presents an awesome, thematically-appropriate endgame, though, and I recommend you be as reckless as those ancient potentates to get to experience it.
Vox Populi
At the heart of all this scheming and strife is the robust pop system, in which the people of your society are modeled by units called pops that belong to a culture, religion, and social class. You’ll have to shepherd them carefully to guide your society in the right direction as they each have specific roles to play. Slaves produce most of your tax revenue and boost the output of trade goods, Freemen form the backbone of your armies and contribute to commerce, and Citizens research new technologies to keep your society ahead of the curve. Having too many or too few of any given pop type can cause major problems, but there’s a lot of wiggle room to change up the class distribution based on what you want your focus to be. Managing these social shifts can get pretty tedious though, as the primary way to, say, turn Freemen into Citizens is clicking a button that promotes them one by one. In a larger empire with hundreds or even thousands of pops, that becomes a nuisance quickly.
By the time you actually figure out where the real Spartacus is, you might have quite the daunting fight on your hands.
A lot of Imperator’s best storytelling comes from its pops, though. An event that gives you a chance to free some slaves sounds great, but it could significantly hinder your economy and upset local landowners. Refuse to emancipate them, however, and you can end up with a slave revolt that will even cross national borders to free other countries’ slaves and swell their numbers. By the time you actually figure out where the real Spartacus is, you might have quite the daunting fight on your hands.
Acquiring slaves can be a major driver of conflict too (as it was historically), since you can’t just decide to enslave free people under your own jurisdiction. If you need to grow your economy faster than your existing slave population can breed, warfare and sacking cities is the only way to do so. It’s not only possible but sometimes advisable to declare wars just for this purpose, even if you don’t have your eyes on your neighbors’ land. Generating realistic objectives for a classical conqueror organically, without simply giving you a mission, is a major strength of Imperator’s core systems.
Historically grounded factors can also put the brakes on your expansion, though. Especially once your empire spreads out, you may find that you’re relying on international trade to keep your balance sheet in the black. And since by that point most smaller nations will have organized into defensive leagues to oppose you, going to war with any one of them could mean calling in all of their friends and breaking several trade treaties, which may create a deficit. Since the AI nations don’t seem particularly skilled at coordinating to bring down a stronger foe, this is sometimes the main consideration in holding back on a declaration of war, which feels more authentic than other ways of keeping a behemoth in check.
The Verdict
The amount of detailed, strategic stuff crammed into Imperator: Rome is equal parts impressive and daunting. It can come across at some times as rich and rewarding, and other times as crowded and chaotic. I suspect I’ll still be discovering new things about it even a hundred hours in, but it’s a testament to the strong warfare and politics, and to the outstanding map, that I’m eager to play another hundred hours or more. I only wish I didn’t have to struggle with a subpar interface and undercooked tribal mechanics along the way.
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