Guild Wars should be able to do it. And this is a long shot, but lineage II might be able to. You should read up more on that game because that one is going into open beta on sunday. Guild Wars you'd have to wait for.
Also, Horizons definitley has that feature as well.
A lot of the "coming soon" games are including player housing, I don't think any of them let you actually expandyour own land though, except maybe Guild Wars. Shadowbane might be the only game thats actually out right now that gets pretty close
Dark and Light. Two alignments fight for territory and economic resources, conquer fortresses and develop the land around the fortresses. It is strategic PvP and it will occur on one large server cluster.
Lineage II does not have any land controlling strategy in the sense of Dark and Light. High level clans can conquer 1 of 5 castles and then set the tax rate in the nearest town. Thats about it.
Comments
Guild Wars should be able to do it. And this is a long shot, but lineage II might be able to. You should read up more on that game because that one is going into open beta on sunday. Guild Wars you'd have to wait for.
Also, Horizons definitley has that feature as well.
FFXI- 30Warrior/13Monk
Server- Lakshmi
Linkshell- Drunken Chocobos (www.drunkchocobos.com)
Shadowbane allows you to build cities, attack other guilds cities, etc. You can put up guard towers and have guards (NPC's) to command, etc...
But it is a real PvP-fest...
A lot of the "coming soon" games are including player housing, I don't think any of them let you actually expand your own land though, except maybe Guild Wars. Shadowbane might be the only game thats actually out right now that gets pretty close
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Dark and Light. Two alignments fight for territory and economic resources, conquer fortresses and develop the land around the fortresses. It is strategic PvP and it will occur on one large server cluster.
Lineage II does not have any land controlling strategy in the sense of Dark and Light. High level clans can conquer 1 of 5 castles and then set the tax rate in the nearest town. Thats about it.