
One of the first things you’ll take on if playing the tutorial is combat. Intrigue, espionage and combat skills are their strength, plus the get a 20 boost in relations with other High Elves. The High Elves are the noblest of all the factions in the Vortex campaign, they’re the clean-cut good guys. Rise of Nations cheat codes Total War Warhammer II High Elves

Since I played with the tutorial on all for the factions all the campaigns started out basically the same, but this gave the opportunity to compare them on the same basis. I wanted to experience action with all four factions in the game so I played 10 to 12 turns as each faction with the tutorial enabled. There is literally very little downtime as the game goes on, there is almost something happening that you need to take care of. Since this takes 30 to 45 minutes to complete, you’ll need some uninterrupted game time for the tutorial. The tutorial will literally trap you into finishing the first turn, there is no option to save any progress although you can exit out of it without saving if you need to. Although it doesn’t say it’s a tutorial ticking the “Enable campaign introduction” box when selecting your faction will enable a detailed tutorial. Except for a few differences between factions the tutorials are almost identical, so if this is your first game you can be comfortable with starting out with your favorite faction, you really won’t miss anything. If you’re interested in a tutorial there are only four faction leaders who offer one, Tyrion of the High Elves, Lord Mazdamundi of the Lizardmen, Malekith of the Dark Elves and Queek Headtaker of the Skaven. I briefly played as the Dwarfs to get an idea of how that campaign works. If you also own Warhammer 1 you can play the Mortal Empires campaign, which lets you play factions from both games.

I played several turns as each of the four factions in the Vortex campaign, which are the High Elves, the Dark Elves, the Lizardmen, and the Skaven.

It has a tutorial that will get you off to a great start, lots of action with little time for boredom to set in and four playable factions with ten leaders to choose from and if you own Warhammer 1 you have a total of nine factions with twenty-eight leaders to choose from. Total War Warhammer II is definitely worth getting. This is a game of exploration, expansion, and conquest. Combat is conducted in real-time that can be paused for issuing orders and assessing your tactical situation. Total War Warhammer II is a fantasy game where you manage your faction’s day-to-day affairs, like diplomacy and movement, on a turn-by-turn basis.
