PublisherWarner Bros. Interactive Entertainment and developer Monolith Productions detailedMiddle-earth: Shadow of War’s endgame, which appears to be much more substantial than its predecessor Shadow of Mordor’s endgame.
Defend Mordor Against Saurons' Onslaught in secret Mini Campaign: “Shadow Wars”
According toEurogamer, the game’s endgame essentially presents with you with an additional mini campaign. After conquering all of Mordor, you will be presented with a mission type called Shadow Wars, which will see you defending your regions and fortresses from a counter assault bySaurons' forces.
Split up via various stages, more regions will come under attack by harder enemies the more you repel the assaults. It’s basically a straight swap with the game’s campaign, which sees you taking over regions and assaulting enemy fortresses.
If you successfully repel an attack the fortress will remains yours; when you fail then the fortress will fall back under Sauron’s control. Should the latter happens, you will need to retake the fortress before you can advanced to the next stage. Further, you will need to launch a rescue-type mission to save the Orc follower who you had previously installed Overlord of said fortress.
The game’strue endingthen apparently ties in the events from Shadow of War directly to Lord of the Rings. The “True endings” inShadow of War’sendgame content does appear to be a nice reply to criticism of Shadow of Mordor’s lackluster and light endgame.
Middle-earth: Shadow of Waris set to launch for Xbox One, PC, PS4 onOctober 10, 2017. It will support bothXbox One X and PS4 Pro.
In case you missed it, last week Warner Bros. and Monolith Productions announced a rathercontroversial inclusion: micro-transactions and loot boxes in Shadow of War. you may read more about the contentious decisionhere.
Or you’re able to skip all controversy and just check afull developer stream of the game, or new gameplay footage ofShadow of War’s endgame: