That's not all, though you also have a small array of agents to call upon.
And as a ruler of a medieval kingdom, this means you have to rely on knights, men-at-arms, archers, catapults, cannons, and everything else you'd expect out of a movie such as Braveheart or Kingdom of Heaven. Like in most strategy games, your goal in Medieval 2 is to try to conquer the known world. Medieval 2 offers a deep strategic layer that lets you manage the military, economy, and religion of a medieval kingdom. With its huge scale, deep gameplay, and beautiful graphics, this is perhaps the most seductive game about the Middle Ages yet, but it's admittedly quite a handful to take in. In a nutshell, that summarizes what is both awesome and somewhat daunting about the latest game in the popular Total War strategy series. And this is the "short" campaign in Medieval 2: Total War.
Still, armies and navies were committed to battle as quickly as they were raised spies, assassins, priests, diplomats, and merchants scrambled around the map and did their thing sieges were laid and cities sacked and battle followed bloody battle. About 150 turns later, we found ourselves bogged down in a three-front war against France, Denmark, and a late-to-the-party Spain, though at least those tenacious Scots were finally put down after a lengthy, hard-fought campaign in the north. In our version of the Hundred Years' War, England was well on its way to spanking France in record time when those dastardly Danes betrayed our alliance and ruined the fun.