Two factions, light and dark, are playable in the game, with each side having units fulfilling the typical roles of warrior, archer, flying unit and wizards – as well as more powerful individual hero characters. The campaigns are split into 13 missions of which 10 are battles and the other three being a dungeon crawl for a hero character.[2] Skirmish and multiplayer modes were also supported, with online games with human opponents organized via the Wargate.Net server.[2]
Plot
Kingdom Under Fire is set in the fantasy land of Bersia and covers the struggle between the forces of light (Humans, Dwarves, and Elves) and the forces of dark (Ogres, Orcs, Undead, and others).[2] One hundred years before the events of the game, an epic war was waged between the two forces until finally a legendary group known as the Knights of Xok defeated the forces of dark and brought peace to the land of Bersia.[3]
The game received mixed reviews according to the review aggregation website Metacritic.[5] The hero missions were unfavourably compared with Blizzard's Diablo games. The difficulty was claimed to be too high by some reviewers, with hero units unbalanced and the game's AI also found lacking. The game's graphics were considered good or passable, though the animations limited, but the audio and story were praised by critics.[2][3] John Lee of NextGen said, "A potential treasure cruise for gamers, Kingdom misses the boat by a hair."[15]
The game sold 20,000 units in the U.S. by October 2001.[17]
^"Kingdom Under Fire". PC Gamer. Vol. 8, no. 5. Imagine Media. May 2001. p. 39.
^"GOD's Games"(PDF). Computer Gaming World. No. 207. Ziff Davis. October 2001. p. 31. Archived(PDF) from the original on 29 July 2023. Retrieved 17 December 2023.