I think the best RTS of all time was Age of Empires 2: Age of Kings with the Conquerors add on... 1.0c patch. L33T gaming. English (elite longbowman) and Goth (huskarl rush) FTW.
I think the best RTS of all time was Age of Empires 2: Age of Kings with the Conquerors add on... 1.0c patch. L33T gaming. English (elite longbowman) and Goth (huskarl rush) FTW.











I remember this game. I played it when I was 7 or something. My dad actually bought me the expansion and brought it to the hospital in which I was hospitalized. Cool stuff. My favourite part about AoE is how you could tremendously expand your city.
My favourite nation are the brits. The longbowman is their castle unit.
"It's such a fine line between stupid and clever."






i always picked my team random but as soon i got to the castle age I built a wall of castles and towers and walls ofcourse ;), and behind that wall i would train my immense army
good times... good times![]()
I see smiley's!











Lol yeah I got it when I was 6 or 7 and I like how many civs you have to choose, and they are also quite different in their own respect, which is what I expected of other rts games but to find like 3 or 4 civs felt like a let down.
When I was playing comp stomps I used to like Brits but I bet you like them just for the 6+6 range it's lameeeeeeee and fails because they're so slow.










still have the game but havent played in ages
great game
Byzantines with Allies as Spanish. Get more money from trade and also the Byzantines Calvary were the most powerful in the game.











I used to only play the Black Forest map so I had the advantage with the Brits, since the longbowmen could out shoot a treb from behind the dense trees. Now, my friend played as the Vikings and would stock every castle with as many Berzerks as possible, so when you destroyed one a ton would rush out at you! He would also build Longships all the time, even in tiny little lakes, completely useless and landlocked.










I liked the Tectonic Knights and the Mayans.
"Greatness is not what you have achieved, but what you have overcome."
- Eliyahu Jian