Dark Ages in the British Isles were a fascinating, dismal time of constant wars, in which people fought for survival. A dark age with a deep blend of cultures. The 6th and 7th centuries were a time when invaders (Saxons, Angles and Jutes) tried hard to forge their destiny in a new world with the steel of their swords, shields and spears. The ancient peoples tried to resist, while they saw their kingdoms defeated and conquered by the “barbarians”, and sorrowfully saw how their beloved world slowly disappeared off the face of the earth. But other people must not be left unmentioned, like the Picts, who have always inspired great interest. Or to the west, another island as complex as Britain: Ireland in which many people were fighting for a piece of land, their clans, livestock and supremacy. In short, it is a world we know little about, yet a magnet for history lovers: a time of war and great deeds, where few kings (almost none) died in their beds.

DaggerClassStudio says

4/10 - Agree (2) Disagree (10)

I personally found this mod a little of a disappointment. The idea was very good and the added scenario's, places and people were definitely exciting and this game could keep you entertained for hours in adventure... however I found that this game had some bugs and some settlements had buildings floating in the air above you and other bugs both minor and large in the game. Also some of the qualities of the game I feel were rushed such as skins, detailing and actual path lines of story telling with multiple technical issues and bugs that I detected throughout the game. And although historically acuarate it lacks many key historical elements still and can quickly become annoying and that is where the fun goes due to technical and story game play issues.

Graphics (8/10)
Gameplay (7/10)
Narrative Story Telling: (1/10)
Maps: (7/10)
Skins (6/10)
Entertainment (6/10)
Modder's Efforts (8/10)
Technical (2/10)
Historical Accuracy: (7/10)

Overall result: 4.9/10 = 49% on DaggerClassStudio's Game Mod Rating
= A Poor Mod Game

~Christopher Carlisle James