Arthur realized too late that he hadn't downloaded a game; he’d invited a privateer into his own system. His files were being plundered, his passwords hoisted like captured flags. The "Free Download" was a Trojan horse, and the enemy was already inside the citadel.
"Don't click it, lad," the old veteran rasped, his hand heavy on Arthur's shoulder. "A gentleman pays his way, or he pays the price in iron." Total War: Empire Definitive Edition Free Down...
Arthur laughed. In the age of digital conquest, why pay gold when a 'crack' could open the gates? He bypassed the storefronts, ignored the warnings of his peers, and followed a trail of shady links into the dark underbelly of the web. He found a site promising the Definitive Edition , complete with every DLC and a "high-speed installer." With a single click, the invasion began. Arthur realized too late that he hadn't downloaded
Suddenly, his computer fans roared like a broadside from a first-rate ship of the line. The game froze, but the sounds didn't stop. Instead of cannons, there was a high-pitched mechanical screaming. A message box popped up, written in a language of broken code: “ALL YOUR PORTS ARE OPEN.” "Don't click it, lad," the old veteran rasped,
By morning, the screen was black. The empire he tried to build for free had cost him everything on his hard drive. As he sat in the quiet of his room, he remembered the old veteran’s words. In the world of Total War, there are no shortcuts to the throne—only the hard march of the honest soldier.