![]() ![]() To confuse things, some subsets of the first game's factions are playable in the second game's Eye of the Vortex campaign with the right DLC. ![]() Tomb kings and the vampire coast-a new faction of vampirates and seafaring undead cooked up for the videogame-are paid DLC.Īt the back you can see this army's lord, the ghost of a drowned opera singer who rides a giant crab. The second game has skaven, lizardmen, high elves, and dark elves as stock armies. Chaos Warriors, beastmen, wood elves, and Norsca are all paid DLC. ![]() The first game comes with the Empire, dwarfs, greenskins, and vampire counts as standard, plus Bretonnia as a free download. In this case, the answer to "where should I start?" is "with whatever has your favorite army in it." (You can press K to get rid of the UI and zoom in for close-ups, and with the Better Camera mod you can get right in there to check out all the detail on a goblin's face.) If you've ever collected and painted an army of Citadel miniatures, seeing them represented in digital form is a delight. What to play if you love tabletop Warhammer If you're coming from the tabletop game Of course that's more expensive than some horses or whatever. ![]() You'll be able to play as the skaven, high elves, dark elves, or lizardmen-all good choices for beginners, though the lizardmen do have a tricky economy to make up for the fact their units are such beasts. Though Total War: Warhammer 2 itself is all you need to get going, you should also grab the various free DLCs from Steam and Total War Access because free stuff is good. ![]()
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