Testseek.com have collected 23 expert reviews of the The Lord of the Rings: Conquest and the average rating is 56%. Scroll down and see all reviews for The Lord of the Rings: Conquest.
(56%)
23 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Abstract: By now EA Games came up with quite a lot of Lord Of The Rings games. Mostly games which come after a good movie arent able to meet the high excpectations and are therefore going to be a flop. Meanwhile you can find titles like Lord Of The Rings Online...
Abstract: Having had some success with this franchise, EA has now released a third-person LOTR battle game that is less like a full-on Conquest and more like a skirmish in a Hobbit home, despite the attraction of massacring the good guys. Electronic Arts - Lord...
It noticeably reduces the LOTR mythology to a boots-first brawler. 5.5/10Print this pageUser reviews (0)Share this pageNoticed something wrong? Report error/mistake....
Abstract: The Lord of the Rings: Conquest is a battlefield fighting game set in the fantasy world of Middle Earth. It uses the same game engine as the Star Wars: Battlefront series, which provides third-person shooting and hacking action. Its a vision of Mid...
Abstract: August 5, 2008 - Tolkein's classic Lord of the Rings trilogy triggered a set of three movies and, as was apt to follow, three video games. The action games based off the three entries in the trilogy (The Fellowship of the Ring, The Two Towers, and The Ret...
Abstract: The Lord of the Rings is a fantasy that has more video game potential than most gamers can handle in a lifetime. Games branding themselves under this banner range across all genres of gaming and, most recently, EA and Pandemic Studios teamed up to bring u...
Abstract: Lord of the Rings: Conquest is a solid release from Pandemic Studios and EA that will delight fans of the novels and films as well as gamers who crave lots of action and options in their games. The game allows players to decide to play for the path of...
Twin campaigns of good and evil; playable versions of the series biggest heroes and villains.
Awkward combat mechanics; cheap AI tactics; bland graphics; game modes arent very inspiring.
Remember that scene in "The Two Towers," where Legolas and Gimli were competing for kills, calling out their current tally? Lord of the Rings: Conquest is the videogame iteration on that concept. Take the beloved characters from Tolkiens rich fantasy ...