Siege

It is a great shame that the objective based multiplayer modes in M&B: Warband are so unpopular but the reason is not difficult to fathom. The maps are not balanced and it makes modes like Siege a bit of a nightmare. The basic idea is to take it in turns to Attack and then Defend a castle. The attacking force has a time limit to seize the castle and in general it is a little too easy for the defenders. It is tactically quite a fun mode. The ability to either raise ladders or rush the gate to lower the enemy flag is also great.

Conquest

In this mode you generally have a more open battlefield and the objective is to capture and hold a number of points marked by flags that you must raise. If you manage to capture them all, then the enemy can’t spawn in and you’ve won the round. Each team starts with points and when they hit zero they’ve lost. The scattered capture points don’t make for the best gameplay and this is probably my least favourite mode.

Capture the Flag

As you’d expect this is a team based mode where the objective is to capture your opponent’s flag. The teams have a base with a flag each and you have to capture the enemy flag and carry it back to your base to score. The problem with this is balancing again and often one of the positions is easier to defend than the other which gives one team an advantage. If you get killed while carrying the flag the enemy only has to touch it and it will return to their base. For obvious reasons you can’t capture the flag while on horseback.

Fight & Destroy

This is an odd multiplayer mode where one team defends a couple of pieces of siege equipment (catapult and trebuchet) and the other team tries to smash them up. It takes ages to smash them up by hacking away and it isn’t a great deal of fun. You get a point for smashing something up and the defenders get a point for anything that survives. You can also win by just killing all the opponents because there is no respawning in this mode.

Battle

This is my favourite mode and it quite simply pitches two opposing forces against each other in a bloody battle to the death. What makes it more fun and more exciting than the other modes is the fact that you don’t respawn. If you are felled during battle then you are relegated to spectator. This is like a medieval version of Counter Strike and with good players it is action packed and addictive. The game can only be won by exterminating the enemy force completely.

Team Deathmatch

If you don’t like to sit out any of the action then you might prefer this mode to Battle. It is a fight between two opposing forces but this time if you die you will respawn (the respawn time is a server setting). The winning team is the one with the most points (kills) when the time runs out or the first team to reach a point target. How to determine .net version powershell.

Deathmatch

Mount And Blade 2 Bannerlord Coop

The simplest of all the multiplayer modes is a chaotic free for all in which you must kill everyone else. If the map is too open or you spawn out in the field then you’ll be at the mercy of cavalry and archer units. This mode is too messy to be much fun and perhaps partly for that reason many servers have introduced their own rules about duelling. This reduces Deathmatch to a series of one on one duels where you introduce yourself by doing an overhead block and if the opponent accepts the challenge you fight to the death. There’s always a risk you’ll get stabbed in the back though and even though players will get kicked for breaking rules it can’t really be stopped from happening in the first place.

That’s it for the multiplayer guide. If you have any questions or comments post away.

This post is part of the series: Mount & Blade: Warband Guide

A five part guide to the new Mount & Blade: Warband.
Mount & Blade
Developer(s)TaleWorlds Entertainment
Publisher(s)Paradox Interactive
Designer(s)Armağan Yavuz
Steve Negus
Cem Çimenbiçer
Composer(s)Jesse Hopkins
SeriesMount & Blade
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows, Linux, MacOS
Release
  • NA: September 16, 2008 (online)
  • EU: September 19, 2008
  • NA: September 30, 2008
Genre(s)Action role-playing game
Mode(s)Single-player
Mount & Blade is a medieval action role-playing game for Microsoft Windows, developed by the Turkish company TaleWorlds, and published by the Swedish company Paradox Interactive.
Mount & Blade initially received a mixed critical reception overall. Reviewers praised the game for its innovative combat mechanics, complex character skill system, and large modding community,[1][2][3][4][5] but also criticized it for its repetitive quests, dialogues, and locations, as well as low graphics quality.[1][2][4][5][6]
A standalone expansion, Mount & Blade: Warband, was released in March 2010, and a spin-off stand-alone expansion, Mount & Blade: With Fire & Sword, based on the historical novel With Fire and Sword, was released in May 2011. As of 2015, the series sold over 6million units.[7] A sequel, Mount & Blade II: Bannerlord, is currently in production.
Mordhau

Gameplay[edit]

Mount & Blade is a single-player, action-oriented role-playing game without any fantasy elements, which takes place in a medieval land named Calradia. The game features a sandbox gameplay style, in which there is no storyline present. The player is able to join one of the five battling factions, fight as a mercenary, assume the role of an outlaw, or take a neutral side.[1][2][8]
An enemy caravan running away from the player. The numbers by the party indicate the combatants, plus the prisoners, respectively.
At the start of the game, the player is offered a set of options to customize the character. The player answers a series of multiple-choice questions about the character's past, including gender, which generate the character's initial attributes. Then the player has the option to sculpt their character's facial features.[8][9][10]
Traveling to other locations, or interacting with other parties is done by point and clicking the desired destination. Upon encountering enemy parties, the player can try to avoid a conflict, or can engage in a battle with them.[1][10] In Mount & Blade each battle is attributed a renown value, according to the number and power of the members of each party. The player gains the renown if he or she wins the battle. With increased renown, the player achieves higher standing in the game and may be offered vassalage by the leaders of one of the five factions. By becoming a vassal, the player is given control over a certain fief, which he or she can manage and collect taxes from.[2][8] By solving quests or defeating opponents the player is awarded experience points, which can be used to improve attributes, skills, and weapon proficiencies to further develop the character.[9] Weapon proficiencies can also be improved over time by inflicting damage on other opponents.[11]

Combat[edit]

There are four main areas where battles take place: on the open map when two or more hostile parties meet, in tournaments organized in town arenas, in siege combat where the player is either defending or attacking a fortification, or in settlements after a triggering event (e.g. a village is infested by bandits, guards catch the player sneaking into a hostile settlement, the player is ambushed, villagers rebel while the player is collecting taxes, or the player plunders a village).[12] The number of soldiers each party can hold is limited by the 'leadership' skill and the renown of the leader. Participants in a battle can be either mounted or on foot. The player has to indicate the direction in which he or she wants to swing by moving the mouse accordingly, unless they have changed the options so that the game automatically chooses it for them.[13] Aiming with a ranged weapon is also done by using the mouse.[14]
Damage is dealt depending on multiple factors. Aside from each weapon's quality, its effectiveness is also influenced by the character's skill with that type of weapon, and the speed of the player relative to the target: for example, a javelin thrown while running or riding a horse will be potentially more damaging than a javelin thrown while standing still.[15] Further, weapons have certain ranges where they are minimally and maximally effective, which gives the different weapon types different playing styles. A spear, for instance, will do minimal damage when used on an enemy very close to the player, where a hammer could cause maximum damage. Cyberlink powerdirector 19 ultimate.

Plot[edit]

Mount & Blade has a very minimal plot, most of which is up to the player. Although certain things are constant, such as towns and kings, the player's own story is chosen at character creation, where the player can be, for example, a child of an impoverished noble or a street urchin. This has little impact besides starting skills and dialogue (e.g. a lord may treat the player better if they are a nobleman rather than a steppe child.) Player choices also make an impact on dialogue; if the player spends time raiding caravans, a lord may treat them as criminals, as opposed to a player who spends time doing tasks for a king or trading items. There is no overarching storyline, however, so the player is left to their own devices.

Development[edit]

The game originated as an independent project of Armağan Yavuz, founder of TaleWorlds, and his wife, İpek Yavuz.[16] According to Armağan Yavuz, the game's inspirations include Sid Meier's Pirates!, The Elder Scrolls II: Daggerfall, Frontier: Elite II, and older Koeistrategy video games such as Genghis Khan, as well as historical fictionnovels, particularly those by Bernard Cornwell.[17]
Prior to its retail release, beta versions of the game were published on the developer's website beginning in 2004.[18] The game was made available on Steam on September 30, 2008.[19]
Paradox Interactive lost the Mount & Blade license on January 31, 2014.[20]

Reception[edit]

Reception
Aggregate score
AggregatorScore
Metacritic72/100[21]
Review scores
PublicationScore
Eurogamer5/10[22]
GamePro[8]
GameSpot6/10[1]
IGN8/10[5]
PC Format54%[23]
PC Gamer (UK)69%[24]
PC Zone62%[10]
411Mania6.8/10[25]
Awards
PublicationAward
GameProEditor's Choice[8]
Mod DBBest Indie Game
(Editor's Choice[26] and
Player's Choice[27])
IGNPC Editors' Favorites of 2008[28]
Mount & Blade received 'mixed or average' reviews according to the review aggregation website Metacritic.[21] Reviewers acknowledged the game's potential, but also said it suffers from poor production values. GameSpot concluded that the game 'feels more underdeveloped than it does flat-out bad',[1] and Eurogamer made a similar review, saying that Mount & Blade has 'foundations [..] for something really quite special, but in its current state the game is nowhere close to delivering on its promises'.[22] The game also received more positive reviews, IGN saying that it may be 'the best game about medieval life ever made',[5] while TechAdvisor called it 'the first, great medieval role-playing game'.[2]
Mounted combat has been one of the most widely appreciated aspects of the game.
Combat has been one of the game's most widely appreciated elements. Critics like Eurogamer, GameSpot, IGN and TechAdvisor praised it, describing it as one of the best implementations of medieval combat ever created.[1][2][5][22] Not all reviewers agreed on the quality of the combat system; PC Zone criticized it, claiming that melee combat feels random in its effectiveness on both foot and horseback.[10] The complexity and thoroughness of the character skill system was also well received.[1][3]
Mount & Blade has received negative criticism for its repetitive quests, dialogues, and locations, as well as poor graphics quality.[1][5][8][22]Eurogamer said the graphics engine 'does little to entice you deep enough',[22] and GameSpot said that conversations with NPCs feel more like 'consulting a travel guidebook for Calradia than actually speaking to a human being'.[1]
The fandom has received positive attention from both developers and critics. During an interview, TaleWorlds declared itself to be 'most proud' of its community, considering that 'Mount & Blade has arguably some of the best mods developed for a computer game'.[29] Reviewers such as GamePro and Game Industry News also admired the number of mods made available for the beta versions even before the game's official retail release.[3][8]

Mount & Blade series[edit]

Paradox produced a standalone expansion for the game, titled Mount & Blade: Warband, which includes multiplayer support with up to 250 players as well as improved diplomacy, graphics and artificial intelligence. Warband also has an updated map and a sixth faction. The expansion was set to be released in Q3 2009, but was delayed until March 2010.[30] Closed beta testing began on August 2009, and became open in February 2010,[citation needed] before the sequel's release on March 30, 2010.
Paradox released a spin-off titled Mount & Blade: With Fire & Sword, based on the historical novel With Fire and Sword (Polish: Ogniem i Mieczem) by Henryk Sienkiewicz,[31] developed by Snowberry Connection, Sich Studio, and TaleWorlds Entertainment. The game is set in Eastern Europe, and includes the playable factions Poland–Lithuania, Cossack Hetmanate, Russia, Sweden and the Crimean Khanate. The game was released on May 4, 2011.[32]
A sequel, Mount & Blade II: Bannerlord, was announced in September 2012.[33] In an interview with PC Gamer, a TaleWorlds producer confirmed that there would be a prequel to the original game Mount & Blade. A Turkish documentary featured footage of what would be seen as early alpha footage of the upgraded engine.[34] Over time, Taleworlds had released Work in Progress screenshots of Bannerlord.[35]

References[edit]

  1. ^ abcdefghijTodd, Brett (September 22, 2008). 'Mount & Blade Review'. GameSpot. CBS Interactive. Retrieved May 28, 2018.
  2. ^ abcdefDagley, Andrew (September 19, 2008). 'Mount & Blade review'. TechAdvisor. International Data Group. Retrieved May 28, 2018.
  3. ^ abcBreeden, John (September 9, 2008). 'Mount And Blade Puts Knights At The Ready!'. Game Industry News. Noble Order Press Enterprises. Archived from the original on September 16, 2008. Retrieved October 7, 2008.
  4. ^ abMcGehee, Steven (September 25, 2008). 'Mount & Blade'. Digital Chumps. Gloomy Tree Productions. Retrieved May 28, 2018.
  5. ^ abcdefOcampo, Jason (December 17, 2008). 'Mount & Blade Review'. IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved May 28, 2018.
  6. ^Stegerwald, Kyle (September 28, 2008). 'Mount & Blade review'. CPUGamer. 2404 - PC Gaming LLC. Archived from the original on December 16, 2008. Retrieved May 28, 2018.
  7. ^Savage, Phil (28 July 2015). 'Mount & Blade series has sold 6 million copies'. PC Gamer. Retrieved 2 April 2019.
  8. ^ abcdefgDagley, Andrew (September 16, 2008). 'Mount & Blade (PC)'. GamePro. GamePro Media. Archived from the original on September 21, 2008. Retrieved October 7, 2008.
  9. ^ ab'4.1. Character Generation'. Mount & Blade manual. Paradox Interactive. pp. 16–17.
  10. ^ abcdSefton, Jamie (November 2008). 'Mount & Blade review'. PC Zone. Future plc. p. 65. Retrieved May 29, 2018.
  11. ^'4.4. Weapon Proficiencies'. Mount & Blade manual. Paradox Interactive. p. 21.
  12. ^'12. Battles'. Mount & Blade manual. Paradox Interactive. p. 52.
  13. ^'11.3. Fighting in melee'. Mount & Blade manual. Paradox Interactive. p. 47.
  14. ^'11.4. Fighting at range'. Mount & Blade manual. Paradox Interactive. p. 48.
  15. ^'11.2. Damage'. Mount & Blade manual. Paradox Interactive. pp. 46–47.
  16. ^Video interview with Armağan Yavuz. Gamereactor TV (Television production). Leipzig, Germany: Gamez Publishing A/S. September 29, 2008. Retrieved May 29, 2018.
  17. ^McCarroll, John (September 12, 2008). 'RPGFan Exclusive Interview: Armağan Yavuz, Taleworlds Entertainment'. RPGFan. Retrieved June 8, 2009.
  18. ^Yavuz, Armağan (June 18, 2008). 'Mount & Blade Version 0.960 is Released!'. TaleWorlds. Archived from the original on June 19, 2008. Retrieved October 7, 2008.
  19. ^'Mount & Blade'. Steam. Valve Corporation. Retrieved May 29, 2018.
  20. ^BjornB (January 30, 2014). 'Mount and Blade leaving the Paradox stables, heading out on new adventures!'. Paradox Interactive Forums. XenForo. Retrieved February 1, 2014.
  21. ^ ab'Mount & Blade for PC Reviews'. Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved May 29, 2018.
  22. ^ abcdeWhitehead, Dan (September 30, 2008). 'PC Roundup (Page 2)'. Eurogamer. Gamer Network. Retrieved May 29, 2018.
  23. ^'Mount & Blade'. PC Format. No. 222. Future plc. January 2009. p. 100.
  24. ^'Mount & Blade'. PC Gamer UK. Future plc. December 2008. p. 72.
  25. ^Huston, Ty (September 24, 2008). 'Mount & Blade (PC) Review'. 411Mania. Archived from the original on April 8, 2016. Retrieved May 29, 2018.
  26. ^Stenchy (February 24, 2009). 'Editors' Choice: Best Indie Game feature - 2008 Mod of the Year Awards'. Mod DB. DBolical Pty Ltd. Retrieved March 1, 2009.
  27. ^INtense! (March 1, 2009). '2008 Indie Game of the Year Winners feature'. Mod DB. DBolical Pty Ltd. Retrieved March 1, 2009.
  28. ^Ocampo, Jason; Butts, Steve; Onyett, Charles (January 12, 2009). 'IGN PC Editors' Favorites of 2008'. IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved May 29, 2018.
  29. ^Yavuz, Armağan (October 1, 2008). 'The Horse's Mouth: Mount & Blade Interview'. Rock, Paper, Shotgun (Interview). Interviewed by Kieron Gillen. Gamer Network. Retrieved October 9, 2008.
  30. ^Rick, Christophor (January 31, 2009). 'Paradox Interactive New Titles Announcement'. Gamers Daily News. Archived from the original on July 9, 2010. Retrieved January 31, 2009.
  31. ^'Mount & Blade – New Spinoff from CD Projekt'. RPGWatch. DragonByte Technologies Ltd. September 4, 2009.
  32. ^Thomsen, Michael (January 24, 2011). 'Mount and Blade: With Fire and Sword Preview'. IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved May 29, 2018.
  33. ^Senior, Tom (September 28, 2012). 'Mount & Blade 2: Bannerlord announced with tiny teaser trailer'. PC Gamer UK. Future plc. Retrieved May 29, 2018.
  34. ^TaleWorlds Entertainment (September 27, 2012). 'Mount&Blade II Announcement Teaser'. YouTube. Alphabet Inc.
  35. ^Christopher (March 23, 2018). 'Top 8 Best Mount and Blade Warband Mods'. The SuperOcean.

External links[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mount_%26_Blade&oldid=899727671'
Here I am with the games like mount and blade and this one is a series made in the early era that takes you to the middle ages. It is a well-known and successfully established series for sure which offers you the single-player experience. There you find the medieval era going through those lands that are settled for wars and continue your adventure. Strategy making is also a point here while conquering the enemy. Also, it is a Sandbox genre where exploration is the main thing, and so there is no bar ion the storyline.
Here several roles are available to be performed, and you can choose any one of them. Right after, you can start exploring the world taking help of those maps that takes you through several lands as per the objective and quests. So it’s a fantastic medieval game world where action role-playing also takes place and to find out more here is the list.
Mount And Blade Game Details

15 Games like Mount And Blade Warband, Bannerlord, & With Fire & Sword

Check out our 2018 collections of best action role-playing games like Mount And Blade Warband, Bannerlord, & With Fire & Sword for Android, PC, PS4, Xbox, on Steam with System Requirements.

#1 Sid Meier’s Pirates!

Players are free to explore the world of seas roaming in those ships and sailing around. So in this wide world, you have total freedom to roam just anywhere and explore the depth of the SeaWorld. It is a 1987 game that was later launched in 2004 in an improved form for every aspect. The storyline takes you to the Caribbean islands where you have the ability to sail the seas, complete the missions, gather resources and get awarded. Here your goal is to find your family who separated from you in your childhood.
Platforms: Amiga/CD32, Apple II/IIGS, Atari ST, Commodore 64, Macintosh, Amstrad CPC, NES, PC booter, Sega Genesis, Windows 3.x, Nintendo DS

#2 Skyrim

Games Like Skyrim | Best Skyrim Console Commands Download tafsir al misbah.
The second one and one of the most exciting mount and blade like games. Actually, the game is a result of the Elder Scrolls franchise that was built when developers found out the tremendous success and fans ranking for the previous gameplay. This may be the next version of the franchise but the storyline is totally a new one, and there are only a few factors that match up the previous one. Here you are a dragon hunter who can suck out that weird soul of the dragons. This way you are on the mission to save the world and continue the combats.
Platforms: Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Microsoft Windows

#3 Medieval: Total War

It is the first one in the Medieval: Total War series where you are in the medieval era or the early age that depicts the era of 6 to 14 century or so. The game offers pretty good gameplay with the tactical combat system. Here you are aimed to build your empire and expand it that goes over the Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East. Here you aim to grow the civilization under your control using strategic gameplay. Here you can start expanding looking out those maps and having your choice of options before going for the battles.
Platform: Microsoft Windows

#4 Medieval II: Total War

The second and successful version in the series that depicts the almost same storyline and the Medieval era where the first one was set. The game is a blend of turn-based and real-time strategy gameplay where you are in the journey of covert up the regions of Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. You have weapons, tactics, political power that you use to win over the opponent. After selecting out your preferred division and customizing your character, the game begins. The more efficient strategy you use, the more chances you get to victory. So take your army and start your settlement in these lands using trade and diplomacy.
Platforms: Microsoft Windows, Mac, Linux

#5Knights of Honor

The game needs your real-time strategy making skills to set the victory over others and keep moving forward. The storyline is all about building your huge empire and managing it with all you have got. You can choose your kingdom to build, select the class and other options and just go to the conquer world. Here every region gives you several states, cities, and even monasteries where you fight goes on. Collecting resources give you upgrades and this way you progress at that particular level easily. So here you use all types of powers to take the cities in control and continue expanding it.
Platform: Microsoft Windows

#6 Wars and Warriors: Joan of Arc

It seems like a blend of innovation and the ghostly where you are settled in the ancient era with your character that stays in somewhat robotic form with that ultimate sword. The game needs you to take control applying the real-time strategy and sword oriented actions that look so amazing. So the game falls among the alternatives to mount and blade where the storyline leaves you in the year 1337. The more power your sword has the quickly you are going to expand the empire. So it seems cool gameplay if you want some amazing sword techniques to bring your enemy on kneels.
Platform: Microsoft Windows

#7 Panzar

This one comes to the games that follow the Multiplayer online battle arena or the real-time strategy gameplay. The game gets you a third person perspective where you can fully view your avatar and not just hands or the weapon holding. It is excellent for the content too because this is a world where your online mission is to get in the wars. Just after choosing your race from orcs, humans, elves, and dwarves, you can start battling. All the landscapes and characters have very rich visuals so for the beauty the game deserves at least one gameplay.
Platform: Microsoft Windows
Mount and blade 2 coop plans

#8 The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion

Again, a similar one among the games like mount and blade that took place in 2006 on Windows, Xbox 360, and PS3. Oblivion takes you the world named Cyrodiil that features a fantasy-themed environment. There are several side quests too other than following the main mission. There are endless monsters that are destined to be killed, so you can develop your character and head in the world of Cyrodiil after getting over with you emperor’s story.
The game has a vast content that features a fast travel system that you can access through the world map appears on the screen.
Platforms: Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360

#9 Rome: Total War

RTW brings you a strategy based gameplay in the real time that went totally popular. You can access it on Mac and PC where the game begins in the Roman Empire and sets you in the campaign game mode. You can choose your family from Scipii, Julii, and Brutii and each of them features different attributes and abilities. Also, you can experience each family separately and take pleasure in all the abilities included in the game.Also if you think handling campaign takes so much longer then you can go with the trial mode that needs only 15 provinces to be controlled.
Mount And Blade 2 Coop
Platforms: Microsoft Windows, iOS, Mac

#10 Total War: Rome II

The sequel continues the concept of the Total War: Rome series where you are in the region of Rome. Surely it is an improved form of the game where the game brings you more features and vibrant visuals. Here you experience an era of 272 BC and where your main focus is around the Rome that is unlike the first version.The content is very much large that you can easily see on the campaign map that features you about 170 regions or more. Graphics are also attractive, and that’s another great thing about the game. Visuals take the battles in a realistic mode that you can experience getting the game.
Platforms: Microsoft Windows, Linux, Mac

#11 Morrowind

A great game and another one in the Elder Scrolls series plus the alternatives to mount and blade. This fantasy world brings you a role-playing mode that you can play on Windows and Xbox. The land is named as Vvardenfell where you begin exploration just after doing character customization. Here changes are pretty impressive here as you can edit your gender, class, stats, skills, and other features too. As it’s an Elder Scrolls series, so it justifies the same gameplay where you progress and increases your set of skills day by day. Also, there are sword skills were attacking the enemy with the sword feels so cool.
Platforms: Xbox, Microsoft Windows

#12 War of the Roses

The Game brings you medieval era and countless wars with that where you can be ready to fit once you are done customizing your character. There are pretty good options to customize where you cease your soldier and assign it with some weapons and other abilities. It is a multiplayer environment, and there can be up to 64 players for each battle. So this one actually deserves being among the mount and blade like games. The game is also known for regular improvements as updates are often on your screen. There are animals too that you can pick up to get a ride and are permanently yours once you make a purchase.
Platform: Microsoft Windows

#13 Chivalry: Medieval Warfare

Set in the early era, it’s all about having fights against each other and see who goes on with the victory. Providing a multiplayer experience, the game brings you two sections that you can choose and spend time in Chivalry: Medieval Warfare also the game offers both first and third person perspective, so it depends on your choice. You can choose from four classes, get equipment accordingly and be ready for the melee moves. The objective depends according to the two teams you choose, and so Chivalry is put here in the list of similar games like mount and blade.
Platforms: PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Microsoft Windows, Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, Linux, Macintosh operating systems

#14 Pirates, Vikings and Knights II

Again a medieval style wars game that is an improved form of Pirates, Vikings and Knights first version. The game allows you to play in the multiplayer mode where the war goes on among these three classes – pirates, Vikings, and knights. Whatever you choose these gives you different options and abilities so if you like any particular strength you can go with that class or category. The objective does not remain same, and it changes according to the game you choose and updates are there to play you and improved feel all the time. Aldo maps are there so you can choose several settings like arena, island or a temple to play in.
Platforms: Microsoft Windows, Linux, Macintosh operating systems

#15 Life is Feudal: Your Own

Here players take form in the medieval setting where the world seems huge to explore and beat your enemies. It also has some other factors that include crafting, building, battles, and other sandbox material. So mechanics are fun to learn, and they get easy if you have already done with mount and blade. So, explore this vast world of MMO that supports 64 players at a time for any particular map. Here you start with any piece of land and claim it to build your stay here. Later following the genre, you also take part in combats using your strength and abilities you got.
Platform: Microsoft Windows

Mount And Blade Warband System Requirements (Minimum)

30 Best Mount and Blade Warband Mods

There are 30 mods for mound and blade sequel Warband as of Today not all time.
  1. A Clash of Kings (Game of Thrones)
  2. Tainted Paths
  3. Prophesy of Pendor
  4. The Last Age
  5. A World of Ice and Fire (Game of Thrones)
  6. Warsword Conquest
  7. Braveheart: War of Freedom
  8. Anno Domini 1257
  9. Perisno
  10. Gekokujo – Daimyo Edition
  11. The Red Wars
  12. Star Wars – Bear Force II
  13. Medieval Conquests
  14. L’Aigle
  15. The Reckoning Third Stage
  16. Gekokujo
  17. Empire IV
  18. Floris Mod Pack
  19. Rise and Fall : Victorian Era 1860
  20. TLD Overhaul
  21. Naruto Era of Shinobi
  22. Phantasy Calradia
  23. Nova Aetas
  24. Suvarnabhumi Mahayuth
  25. cRPG
  26. Empire: Fall of Napoleon 1815
  27. Blood in The West
  28. 15th Century Calradia
  29. Full Invasion 2
  30. Mount and Blade Warband World War 2
Conclusion
So here I defined all the fifteen games like mount and blade that offers you a fantastic experience just like mount and blade. Many of them offer MMO mode too, so you are going to enjoy with your friends being in these medieval eras. So guys enjoy the gameplay and don’t forget to mention your favorite one after the mount and blade.