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Buy Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars PC

This content requires the base game: Field of Glory II: Medieval

Where can you buy cheapest Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars PC Steam key? Check and compare prices from 8 stores to locate the best and the cheapest option for you among 8 offers featured on XD.deals. Now the lowest Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars PC price on keyshops can be obtained on A$3.49 (85% off) and on official stores can be obtained on 85 (A$13.17 off).

Release: 23 Sept 2021
Publisher: Slitherine Ltd.
Developer: Byzantine Games
Steam:
Overwhelmingly Negative (4)
Buy in Official Store:
-40%
A$13.17
Buy in Keyshops:
-85%
A$3.49
See price history

Official Stores (3)

DRM:
Steam
Steam
Green Man Gaming
Field of Glory II: Medieval – Swords and Scimitars
Windows
1w ago
DRM:
Steam
Green Man Gaming
A$21.95 A$13.17
-40%
Steam
Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars
Windows
50w ago
DRM:
Steam
Steam
A$21.95 A$15.36
-30%
GamersGate
Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars
Windows
5d ago
DRM:
Steam
GamersGate
A$21.95

Keyshops (5)

DRM:
Steam
Steam
Kinguin
Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars DLC PC Steam CD Key
Windows
9h ago
DRM:
Steam
Kinguin
A$24.52 A$3.49
Historical Low Deal
Historical low
-85%
-8% with XD8DEALScopy
-8% with XD8DEALScopy
Eneba
Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars (DLC) (PC) Steam Key GLOBAL
Windows
9h ago
DRM:
Steam
Eneba
A$24.52 A$4.19
-82%
-10% with XDD10copy
-10% with XDD10copy
Yuplay
Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars
Windows
23h ago
Yuplay
A$21.07 A$6.47
-69%
Yuplay
Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars
Windows
1d ago
Yuplay
A$21.07 A$6.47
-69%
GameBoost
Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars (Steam)
Windows
21h ago
DRM:
Steam
GameBoost
A$21.07 A$10.33
-50%

About Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars

Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars - about the game



The Byzantine Empire began the 11th century in a strong position - they had pushed their frontier eastwards against the fragmented Muslim emirates, and had completely destroyed the Bulgars in the Balkans. All that was to change in 1071, when they suffered a catastrophic defeat at the hands of the Seljuq Turks at the Battle of Manzikert. These nomadic conquerors had recently converted to Islam, and had swiftly established a Sultanate ruling from Afghanistan to Palestine. Following Manzikert they took nearly all of Anatolia from the Byzantines.

As the Byzantine Emperor Alexios Komnenos struggled to stem the Seljuq advances, he appealed to the West for mercenaries. This request was seized upon by Pope Urban II, who possibly saw it as an opportunity to further his own aims. At the Council of Clermont in 1095 he called for a Crusade to save the eastern churches and recover the Holy Land from the Muslims.

The timing was fortuitously right, as the mighty Seljuq Empire had begun to fragment, the Sultanate of Rûm in Anatolia (modern Asiatic Turkey) having seceded from the Great Seljuk Empire in 1077, and the local Syrian atabegs being in practice semi-independent and disunited. The First Crusade eventually captured Jerusalem in 1099, and established a number of Crusader states in Palestine and Syria. In doing so they created bitter resentment between Muslims, Western Christians and the Byzantines that would lead to two centuries of conflict.

Several major Crusades were to follow the First, as the Crusader states fought for their existence against a succession of resurgent Islamic states: the Fatimids, Zangids, Ayyubids, and finally the Mamluks, who extinguished the last Crusader stronghold of Acre in 1291.

Meanwhile, further East, a far greater threat to Islamic civilisation was emerging. The rapidly expanding Mongols had destroyed the Khwarazmian Shahdom by 1231, the Christian kingdom of Georgia fell in 1239, and the Seljuqs were defeated and forced into vassaldom in 1243. By 1258 the Assassins of Alamut, and the vestigial remains of the once great Abbasid Caliphate, had also been conquered. Only the Mamluks of Egypt were able to finally bring the Mongol advance to an end, with their victory at Ain Jalut in 1260.

In the Balkans the Byzantine Empire remained strong until 1204, when Constantinople fell to the Fourth Crusade. Thereafter much of the old empire was taken over by the Western Crusaders and the Venetians, who had masterminded the whole sordid enterprise. The Byzantines held out in four fragments: the Empires of Trebizond and Nicaea, and the Despotates of Rhodes and Epirus. Eventually the Empire of Nicaea retook Constantinople in 1261, but the power of the Byzantines had been broken forever and they were now only a minor state.




  • 20 more nations and factions covering South Eastern Europe and the Middle East from 1040 AD to 1270 AD. These include Arabs (Syria/Iraq), Armenians (Cilician), Bulgarians, Byzantines (Main Empire, also Nikaia, Epiros and Trebizond), Crusaders, Cypriots (Lusignan Kingdom), Dailami, Fatimid Egyptians, Georgians, Ghaznavids, Ghurids, Indians (Rajput, other Hindu, Muslim), Khwarazmians, Latin States in Greece, Mamluk Egyptians, Mongols (Ilkhanids), Pechenegs, Seljuq Turks, Serbians and Syrian States. Each of these has their own historically accurate banner.

  • 35 more units (11 brand new, 24 new to Medieval), allowing the troops of all of the new factions to be accurately represented.

  • 41 more army lists allowing historically realistic armies for each of the above factions and their allies at different dates during the period, and bringing the total number of Medieval army lists to 146. In addition armies can include contingents from historical allies. This gives around one hundred thousand permutations. You will never run out of new matchups to try.

  • 8 more historical scenarios covering key engagements of the period on an epic scale. These include Manzikert 1071, Dorylaeum 1097, Ascalon 1099, Sirmium 1167, Arsuf 1191, La Forbie 1244, Homs 1281 and Kili 1299.

  • 53 more historical matchups added to Quick Battle mode, increasing the total to 150, playable from either side.

  • 4 more historically-based campaigns covering major leaders and conflicts of the era: Alexios Komnenos, The First Crusade, Manuel Komnenos, Saladin.

  • Sandbox campaign expanded to include all the new army lists, allowing you to lead any nation (and their historical allies) against any other nation (and their allies) – giving over twenty thousand permutations.

  • Time Warp custom battles modules expanded to include all the new army lists.
Steam:
Overwhelmingly Negative (4)

Price history

Historical low
Keyshops
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Official Stores
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FAQ

8 questions

Before you start looking for a cheap Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars CD Key, take a moment to check the essentials. Developed by Byzantine Games. Published by Slitherine Ltd.. PC released date: 23 Sept 2021. Genres: Strategy, Simulation. Categories: Multi-player, PvP, Online PvP, Family Sharing, Single-player, Downloadable Content.

Q Can I play Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars on Steam Deck?

No, not right now. Valve marks Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars as Steam Deck Unsupported , so it won't launch via Proton at this time. Keep an eye on XD.deals - we track Proton breakthroughs and community fixes, and we'll flag it the moment there's a working way to play Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars on Steam Deck.

Yes. A Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars Steam version exists. Pick any offer tagged Steam Key on XD.deals, redeem it in the desktop client, and play Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars on Steam PC.

Yes. Once your Steam key is redeemed, you can launch Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars in Offline Mode via Steam. Your save files will sync the next time you go online.

Yes, you can buy a Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars Steam Key directly on the Steam Store. At XD.deals, we aggregate all available Steam DRM offers so you can compare cheap Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars steam deals in one place.

You'll find every live sale & discount for Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars right here on XD.deals. Our price tracker currently lists 3 official-store offers and 5 keyshop deals. Check the table above for the lowest price, compare against the game's historical low, and set a price alert so you never miss the next drop.

With XD.deals, PC gamers can instantly see where to buy a cheap Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars PC Steam key. Our real-time price-comparison engine and curated coupon database track every official store and trusted keyshop so you dont have to. Right now we detect this game in {1} live offers from stores and keyshops.

Yes. An official Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars Steam store page is live, so you can buy Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars on Steam or buy any Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars PC Steam Key on XD.deals and redeem it instantly.

No - XD.deals itself isn't a store. We're a price-comparison service that tracks the best offers for Field of Glory II: Medieval - Swords and Scimitars across official stores and verified keyshops. Click "Shop Now" next to the deal you want, and you'll be redirected to the retailer's website to complete your purchase and receive the key there.

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