The Battle For | Middle-earth Ii: The Rise Of The...

The "War of the Ring" mode also saw a massive overhaul. For the first time, units persisted between battles, and the living world map gained a functioning economy—turning the mode into a true "Risk-style" grand strategy experience. A Legacy That Won't Fade Angmar Campaign | The Wiki for Middle-Earth | Fandom

: Players witness the destruction of Amon Sûl (Weathertop) and the eventual collapse of the fortress of Fornost. The Battle for Middle-earth II: The Rise of the...

: The expansion introduced the Angmar faction, bringing the total playable races to seven. The "War of the Ring" mode also saw a massive overhaul

Released in 2006 as the official expansion to The Battle for Middle-earth II , didn't just add new units; it expanded the soul of the franchise, diving deep into the Appendices of The Return of the King to tell a story rarely seen on screen. A Campaign of Corruption : The expansion introduced the Angmar faction, bringing

For those who prefer skirmishes and multiplayer, every existing faction received reinforcements. From the who can swap between swords and bows, to Mordor’s Haradrim Lancers filling a vital cavalry gap, the balance of power was shifted across the board.

Unlike its predecessor, which split time between Good and Evil, this expansion’s core campaign is a single, unrelenting march of darkness. You command the Witch-king from the foundation of his realm in Angmar through half a millennium of war against the Dúnedain.