![]() ![]() ![]() Resisting all temptations, I made sure to finish one campaign before moving on to the next. With Warhammer 3, I persevered and stuck to my (sometimes literal) guns. I had no problem with my time as Nurgle – in fact I was loving it – but as with the two prior Warhammer games, my brain was always jumping forward to ask: who’s next? Fighting across the Chaos Wastes I saw Tzeentch’s daemons gleefully sling fiery magic into my ranks, witnessed hardy mortals hold off vast tides of monsters with bullets and brawn, and lost hundreds of troops to the brutal charge of towering Ogre footsoldiers. Stupendously cool, right? That’s true, but in my 19-hour campaign, I encountered plenty of stiff competition that nearly tempted me into pressing ‘New Game’. My ranks are swollen with pus-dripping daemons, and I’m constantly inventing new diseases to spread upon the poor campaign map. ![]() I played my first Warhammer 3 campaign leading worshippers of Nurgle, a hardy faction that’s all about soaking up damage, spreading disgusting plagues, and wearing a lot of green. The problem doesn’t end when I pick a side and press play – it just gets worse. READ MORE: ‘Elden Ring’ preview: this could be FromSoftware’s best game yet.In a world where every fantasy race is as violent and varied as the next, you’re telling me I can only choose one to start with? In Total War: Warhammer 3, I suffered from a problem that’s plagued me since Creative Assembly first introduced me to Warhammer in 2016: deciding who to play first. ![]()
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