Cradle Of Rome 3

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Your challenge is to rebuild the Ancient Roman empire, and your object is to collect gold, supplies, and food in order to provide for your new empire as it grows. Just like a baby grows from infant to adult in stages, your new empire rises from its modest cradle among the Seven Hills to its glorious Golden Age in stages called Epochs.

Use our helpful Cradle of Rome gameplay walkthrough to guide you to Roman Fame and Glory!

Contents

Cradle of Rome – Walkthrough

The Five Epochs in Ancient Roman History

The Five Epochs in Ancient Roman History

Five Epochs span the ages that you will conquer in your challenge to rebuild Rome, each with its own architectural challenges necessary for successfully developing it.

  • Seven Hills
  • New City
  • Birth of Empire
  • Gladiator’s Arena
  • Age of Glory
Cradle

There are multiple game levels in each Epoch. In total, there are more than 100 different levels to challenge your brain. Here you will race your match3 skills against the clock, matching up 3 resources in vertical or horizontal rows. The games within each Epoch start out easier and get progressively more challenging. Swap adjacent tiles in order to produce three in a row, and collect your prized resources, whether they are gold, supplies, or food.

Match Three or More in a Row

Tiles explode as they line up, increasing your resource points, which are displayed in the game screen’s top left corner. Then they are replaced by falling tiles from the layers above landing into the new empty spaces. Any tiles falling into three or more in a row will also explode, adding to your points. Tiles will continue falling into place until the board is stable. Don’t wait to watch the tiles falling – keep swapping and matching tiles in the stable areas, and don’t waste time!

Hoard as many resources as you can in each puzzle before the water in the lovely clay jar runs out. You can watch for this in the game screen’s bottom right corner. Some tiles have a blue background – these are called plaques. Some, but not all, plaques are chained. These are more challenging to clear. Because chained plaques don’t move, you must form matches above, below, or beside them, as the game allows. When you clear all the plaques, you win the game, and win resource points for however much water is left in the jar. Check out the resource list and their point values in the Tips and Tricks Section, below.

Here’s where you can use your strategy skills – can you collect more resources by lining up tiles while you still have time, or collect more resources by finishing quick and taking your resource points from the leftover water? You can do either one, or both!

Build Your Empire & Elevate Your Public Status

As each level is completed, you are returned to the beautiful valley where your Roman Empire is rising. Along this screen’s bottom row are the architectural features you will build during that Epoch. Learn historical facts about these features, and pay the required price for them from the points you win in each level.

Over the five Epochs, you will build a Sawmill, Foundry, Quarry, Mill, Village, Fountain, Field Plot, Tavern, Farm, Harbor, Ship, Tabulareum, Rostra, Forum, Coliseum, Trajan’s Statue, Titus’ Arch, a temple for Venus, a temple for Saturn, and the Pantheon. Each new architectural feature you pay for is added to your rising empire.

Additionally, as soon as you buy a new feature, you can win citizens for it on the very next match game by lining up 5 tiles in a row. Resources related to the new addition will be available to win on the following level, as well. Check out the building list with available citizens, and tips for how to win these people in the Tips and Tricks Section, below.

With each Epoch successfully completed, your public status will increase. You will rise from Peasant to Merchant, and then to Priest. From there, you’ll go on to Senator, and finally rise to Emperor. Only by rising to Emperor will you will have a chance to reach Olympus.

Use Bonus Tools to Win More

As levels increase in difficulty, bonus tools are also possible to earn. Including a hammer, lightning, bomb, hour-glass, plus-sign, star, shield, and orb, they are collected like resources, three in a row. You will notice them as they power up in their places in the toolbox along the game screen’s bottom row. They will give you big advantages to help you win that level easier, but once you use them you must power them up again by collecting matching points.

As you buy each building within the five different Epochs, bonus tools will become available for the related building. The first game level you play after buying the building will have the related bonus item available to collect. After that game level, however, if you have more than one bonus item collected, the bonus item available on game levels after that will appear randomly. Check out the Bonus Tools Tips and Tricks Section, below.

Gameplay Tips & Tricks

Resources

Every building in your rising Roman empire requires resources to sustain its development. Resources come in three categories: Gold, Supplies, and Food. Various icons are pictured on the tile faces in each game, representing the resource points you will accumulate by lining up three icons in a row.

Three tiles lined up in a row will get you a match, but four or more lined up tiles will earn far more resources. Three in a row will be awarded 3x the points per tile. Four in a row will be awarded 8x the points per tile. Five tiles in a row will be awarded 20x the points per tile!

The following list indicates each icon type and its associated point value.

Gold:

Silver coin = 3 points

Gold coin = 5 points

Ring = 6 points

Pearl = 7 points

Diamond = 8 points

Goblet = 9 points

Brooch = 10 points

Food:

Meat = 3 units

Flour = 4 units

Barrel = 5 units

Watermelon = 6 units

Fish = 7 units

Supplies:

Lumber = 5 units

Stone = 7 units

Buildings with Winnable Citizens

Once you buy a new building for your rising empire, you will receive the following citizens – but ONLY if you complete the following requirements:

Cradle of rome big fish

Building, Citizen, and Requirement:

Sawmill — win a Farmer — if you make a Match 5 in the level following the purchase Far cry 3 download free full version.

Foundry — win a Blacksmith — if you score 10,000 points in less than 10 levels following the purchase

Quarry — win a Miner — if you score 2,000 points for Supplies in one level following the purchase

Mill — win a Miller — if you make 15 successful moves following the purchase

Field — win a Peasant — if you score 3,000 points for Food in one level following the purchase

Tavern — win a Wine Maker — if you make 2 successive combos following the purchase

Tabularium — win a Scholar — if you make 3 successive combos following the purchase

Port — win a Fisherman — if you make a match 5 three times in succession following the purchase

Forum — win an Orator — if you score 3,000 points in Gold in one level following the purchase

Colosseum — win a Gladiator — if you make a chain reaction with 15 blows in one level following the purchase

Pantheon — win a Priest — if you complete the level in less than 3 minutes following the purchase

Bonus Tools

Hammer — breaks one tile, plaque or chain. Break chains first for more advantage

Lightning — breaks any 20 tiles, plaques, and chains all over the game board

Bomb – breaks a three-by-three grid from tiles, plaques, and chains

Hour-Glass – provides extra time to win the level

Plus-Sign – replenishes a resource or powers up a bonus tool faster

Star – breaks all the tiles with the same icon on the game board

Shield – breaks all the tiles in one row

Orb – remixes the tiles on the game board
Congratulations! You’ve completed our Cradle of Rome Walkthrough!

For more great tips and tricks, visit our blog!
This guide is meant to help you through the game’s basics, and does not include hacks and cheats.

Cradle of Rome
Developer(s)cerasus.media
Publisher(s)D3 Publisher
Platform(s)Nintendo DS, Wii
ReleaseNintendo DSWii
  • NA: March 31, 2009
Genre(s)Puzzle, strategy
Mode(s)Single-player

Cradle of Rome (released in some regions as Jewel Master: Cradle of Rome) is the first in a series of tile-matchingpuzzle and strategyvideo games developed by German studio cerasus.media and published by D3 Publisher on November 18, 2008 for the Nintendo DShandheld game console. The Wii version was released on March 31, 2009. The game has been brought to Steam since 2007.

The game was originally created for Windows by Awem studio from Belarus as a casual game. It has been followed by a variety of Cradle/Jewel Master games including Cradle of Athena, Cradle of Egypt and Cradle of Persia.

Gameplay[edit]

The main screen of Cradle of Rome

The gameplay is similar to that of Bejeweled; the player must flip jewels/resources on a playing field to create matches of at least three items of the same type. As matches are formed, reserves of resources such as grain and wood are built up, which are used towards building the Roman Empire.[1] Between rounds, resources can be spent on farms, taverns and other buildings to cultivate the commonwealth. The goal of each round is to form matches on blue tiles to clear them from the screen. Obstacles increase the game's difficulty; they include locked gems/resources, which cannot be switched until a match is made to unlock them. Each round also has a time limit, which is represented by a slowly emptying vase of water on the top screen. To help the player, several power-ups can be acquired, such as a hammer that can destroy any tile on the field. The game progresses with new types of gems and resources being unlocked at every new building built in Rome. Some buildings provide an extra bonus citizen with in-game bonuses if the player plays skillfully with the particular resource unlocked from that building.[1]

Reception[edit]

Cradle of Rome was given a mixed reception by video game critics, and it received an aggregated score of 63% at Metacritic.[2]IGN was disappointed with the game, noting that the game's manual did not adequately explain how the game worked. They also found that its electronic soundtrack did not fit the game's Roman theme. Their review gave the game a score of 5.9 of 10 and suggested that players purchase better alternatives such as The Quest Trio, stating, 'It's another match-three game. There's nothing wrong with it, but it's been done better before.'[1]Game Informer gave it a 6.75 with the subheading 'MORE LIKE CRADLE OF BORING' in Game Informer Issue 189 January 2009.

Rome Puzzle[edit]

Cradle of Rome was originally developed from an Awem Studios game by the name Rome Puzzle. This game was intended to be a casual game and many websites hosted and are currently the game as 'play online for free' - Rome Puzzle version. The Rome Puzzle version was developed and revamped before being published as Cradle of Rome by D3.

References[edit]

  1. ^ abc'Cradle of Rome Review'. IGN. Retrieved 2008-12-25.
  2. ^'Cradle of Rome'. Metacritic. Retrieved 2008-12-25.

External links[edit]

  • Cradle of Rome at IGN
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