
But on top of that, Three Kingdoms also features larger-than-life heroes capable of taking on dozens of “normal” soldiers.Īnd they can challenge opposing heroes in epic duels! Total War fans rightfully expect a realistic strategy game that demands smart tactics to win and Three Kingdoms doesn’t disappoint.

What sets Three Kingdoms apart is its perfect combination of realism and romance. Three Kingdom scored an impressive Metascore and received praise from Steam Users: Three Kingdoms Is the Best Total War Game in a Decade.Īnd critics and gamers all seem to agree. Higher end vid cards definitely help, but remember that the vid card largely needs the cpu to "tell it" what it has to render before it can render it.After so many Total War games released over the years, many thought they couldn’t be improved any further. Past that you are getting diminishing returns, as in spending like $200 more for no architectural advantage as far as Attila is concerned. So the "sweet spot" seems to be a later generation i5.

So people do best with Intel chips when running Attila, because the AMD FX series and such were designed around threading, and Intel was designed around what is on die and upper levels of cache.Įven the latest Pentiums, despite only being dual core, can run Attila well because they have 4 threads. This makes extra threading you may have on your cpu superfluous.

The game is going to need 4 threads, typical of games made around 2010 and prior. This also heavily impacts the cpu usage, because the game does not take full advantage of threading. The game is running on a 32 bit architecture.

If you check "Unlimited Video Memory" it will address extra RAM, but, it won't address it as efficiently as a game coded to access all of the on-card VRAM directly. Originally posted by BananaBob:do you guys know, if attila uses more than 3gb Vram? It does and it doesn't 😀
