I really love that they actually added Greeks and Mesopotamian factions. Since both, though in the far future, become the ruler of the Nile (Alexander Macedonia and Achaemenid Persia)
To be fair they were not consolidated and really didn't had much of a proper identity or lands, and probably at this time they were still wandering in the desert, closest thing to Israel whould be the Habiru faction nomad cannanite.
@@ruiz1358 Beg to differ. Merneptah (1207 BCE) reorded "ISRAEL" as one of the "Nine Bows" of foreign power he fought against. Dr Eric Cline states in his latest book, ISRAEL came to dominate Canaan by 1100 BCE. Theres now a plethora of recent evidence overturning outdated views.
@@davehas12 That egyptians called them "Israel" as a unified force or group doesn't mean they were, they basically called all people north of Sinai Canaanites despite they having not a consolidated identity and being a very diverse and fragmented people, who fought amongst themselves, probably there were Israelites but they were not yet a united kingdom and wouldn't really be united until the age of kings and about their "dominance" this was very fragile as the many times they were invaded and subjugated by other cannanite tribes and the philistines manifest in the book of judges, probably they weren't dominant at all and if they were it was in inconsistent periods of time under warlords, until, again the age of Kings.
@@ruiz1358 The YWH worshipping Hebrew of the Judean Hills were not Canaanite. Whilst distantly related (both Semitic) from Western Amorites, the Hebrews of the 13th and 12th C BCE spoke a proto-Hebrew language distinct from Canaanite, had different religous practice (predominantly what we'd call 'kosher') and contruction / building preferences (only previously seen in the Nile Delt during the 15th Egytian Dynasty)
@@ruiz1358 The YWH worshipping Hebrew of the Judean Hills were not Canaanite. Whilst distantly related (both Semitic) from Western Amorites, the Hebrews of the 13th and 12th C BCE spoke a proto-Hebrew language distinct from Canaanite, had different religous practice (predominantly what we'd call 'kosher') and contruction / building preferences (only previously seen in the Nile Delt during the 15th Egytian Dynasty)
I really love that they actually added Greeks and Mesopotamian factions. Since both, though in the far future, become the ruler of the Nile (Alexander Macedonia and Achaemenid Persia)
The Persians won’t really become a thing until after the Assyrians and Babylonians decline. I doubt Persians are considered Mesopotamian
@@freakrx2349 keyword: though in the far future
Just wait for alexander mod
Assyrians before them.
@@Liquidsback i don't think Assyria ruled over the Nile, they tried to invade but failes
Saw people talking about you and this campaign on Reddit. Keep workin man you’re getting a great rep.
Now back to watching chorfs
did that Assyrian dude just run into a line of infantry 😂😂 fuck that amazing 😂
That's Assyrian's Lu Bu for you
Enough talking. Let the swords talk now!
Looks great
Agamemnon world conquest!
You, know if the guy wore heavy armor, and was taller, and had a longer spear, and his guys were not so far behind,
This would look a lot cooler
I 100% agree.
Babylonians and Assyrians are somehow cooler than the Aegean.
This guy gets it
I like Troy and Thrace better personally
the grape scene never gets old
Factions Characters & Units olease
Total war pharaoh: the reboot.😅
This isn't the new trailer. This is the intro to the Ramesses II campaign that has been there all along.
It has the same beginning as the original. But when he talks about the eyes of Set there are different cuts to the Aegean and Mesopotamian factions.
you didnt watch until the end do you?
It is indeed a dynastic animation, with Troy, the Aegean, Assyria and Babylon beginning after 2 minutes and 35 seconds.
ancient Egypt had 31 dynasties. like all it rose and fell. political schemes exists
maniton said only 30 and the egyptian historians agree on his point of view
the last native Egyptian pharaoh was Nectanebo II, and after him came the Greeks
So I would say that the 30 Dynasty is the last true Egyptian dynasty
@@neferneferuaten286 the ptolemaic still counts because egypt was conquered several times and so did every else
there is a poem about Ramses the second
We have Merneptah .. we now have all the factions he fought .. with one exception - ISRAEL
CA have removed the Jews from the game. Shame CA Shame
To be fair they were not consolidated and really didn't had much of a proper identity or lands, and probably at this time they were still wandering in the desert, closest thing to Israel whould be the Habiru faction nomad cannanite.
@@ruiz1358 Beg to differ. Merneptah (1207 BCE) reorded "ISRAEL" as one of the "Nine Bows" of foreign power he fought against. Dr Eric Cline states in his latest book, ISRAEL came to dominate Canaan by 1100 BCE. Theres now a plethora of recent evidence overturning outdated views.
@@davehas12 That egyptians called them "Israel" as a unified force or group doesn't mean they were, they basically called all people north of Sinai Canaanites despite they having not a consolidated identity and being a very diverse and fragmented people, who fought amongst themselves, probably there were Israelites but they were not yet a united kingdom and wouldn't really be united until the age of kings and about their "dominance" this was very fragile as the many times they were invaded and subjugated by other cannanite tribes and the philistines manifest in the book of judges, probably they weren't dominant at all and if they were it was in inconsistent periods of time under warlords, until, again the age of Kings.
@@ruiz1358 The YWH worshipping Hebrew of the Judean Hills were not Canaanite. Whilst distantly related (both Semitic) from Western Amorites, the Hebrews of the 13th and 12th C BCE spoke a proto-Hebrew language distinct from Canaanite, had different religous practice (predominantly what we'd call 'kosher') and contruction / building preferences (only previously seen in the Nile Delt during the 15th Egytian Dynasty)
@@ruiz1358 The YWH worshipping Hebrew of the Judean Hills were not Canaanite. Whilst distantly related (both Semitic) from Western Amorites, the Hebrews of the 13th and 12th C BCE spoke a proto-Hebrew language distinct from Canaanite, had different religous practice (predominantly what we'd call 'kosher') and contruction / building preferences (only previously seen in the Nile Delt during the 15th Egytian Dynasty)
Others TW game trailer was better