SpellForce is a combination Real Time Strategy and RPG franchise created by German game developers Phenomic.

The original game SpellForce: The Order of Dawn was followed by two expansions: SpellForce: The Breath of Winter (2004) and SpellForce: Shadow of the Phoenix (2005).

SpellForce Gold Edition includes the first two games in the series, while SpellForce Platinum Edition includes all three games. SpellForce: Universe includes all three of the SpellForce games as well as both the sequel games.

A sequel, SpellForce 2: Shadow Wars was released in 2006 and SpellForce 2: Dragon Storm was released in 2007. JoWooD Entertainment spent many years working on a standalone expansion called SpellForce 2: Faith in Destiny, which was released in 2012 after many delays and acquisition by what is now THQ Nordic. A third expansion pack, Demons of the Past, was released in 2014.

A third game, SpellForce 3 released in 2017. An expansion to that, Soul Harvest has been announced.

Both games take the RTS/RPG concept and run with it, using slightly different leveling concepts along the way. There are Diablo-like hero-only maps, and full scale RTS maps as well.

Like everything else, there's a wiki.


Tropes used in SpellForce include:

All games in the series provide examples of:

  • All There in the Manual: Background information to the units and races are found here
  • Exclusively Evil: Subverted! The Shadows are portrayed as very nearly Eldritch Abominations in the first game. In the Shadow Wars the Big Bad makes a pact with the Shadows, (which most characters consider her Moral Event Horizon). They turn out to be bound to a particular artifact, and more of a Proud Warrior Race than anything. Also Averted with regard to every other playable race.
    • Played straight with the Demons.
  • Authority Equals Asskicking: Bosses tend to be the leaders of their factions.
  • Batman Gambit: How the Big Bad kills the Big Good. Also, the Convocation on the part of the Demons and elemental powers. They convinced the Circle Mages that performing the rituals at the right time would give the performer unlimited power. It turned out that it summoned them to wreak havoc on the world.
  • Blessed with Suck: Rune warriors can summon huge armies and are immortal. However, if they are stay too long "dead" they will loose their memories and abilities. Oh, and they have to completely obey the person who has their rune stones.
    • Maybe more a bit of a case of Cursed with Awesome are the Shaikan: They can revive other Shaikan, summon them from great distances and can use Blood Magic. The downside? If they die, they are not allowed into the River of Souls and have to stay on the riverside forever.
  • Broken Bridge: Many of them. Most portals don't become available until you've done something on that map. A new quest arc is usually kicked off by a previously-inaccessible gate in a major city becoming available.
  • Call Back: SpellForce and all its sequels start with a shot of a hero monument, which lights up and summons the Player Character. SpellForce 2 starts with a shot of a hero monument, totally inactive, then pulls back to the Player Character ruminating on the fact that the Rune Warriors are no more.
  • Contemptible Cover: Look at that smoking hot elf chick! What do you mean the graphics are nothing like that?
  • Critical Existence Failure: Almost. One's damage output is unaffected by Hit Points, but at about 15% of a unit's health, it slows way down. Useful to you when hunting down enemies, but it cuts both ways.
  • Cutscene: Most in-engine, the beginning and ending ones are cinematics.
  • Dark Is Not Evil: The PC can use Black Magic, if you like. Also, both the light and dark races are playable, and form a segment of the campaign.
  • Dropped a Bridge on Him: A npc in a side quest informs you that the ice elves from The Breath of Winter were wiped out by an invasion.
  • Expy: Craig Un'Shallach is a dark elf who wields two swords and had to leave his homeland.
  • Good Is Not Nice: The light races suffer from Obstructive Bureaucrats in Shadow Wars and Jerkassery throughout. Also, the PC is more than willing to slaughter armies of the light races if they get in his or her way.
  • Head Desk: To get your siege units to use their anti-building attacks against buildings, you have to set them next to the buildings without ordering them to attack -— otherwise, they'll bang their heads against the walls as they melee attack the buildings.
  • Infinity+1 Sword: There's always some convoluted quest to craft or find one. The quest for Amra's Armor (from The Order of Dawn) particularly stands out.
  • Lady Not-Appearing-In-This-Game: Every cover for every SpellForce game or expansion has a scantily-clad woman on it. Most of them have nothing to do with the game, and the few that do tend to have minor roles that don't warrant their place on the cover.
  • Loveable Rogue: Flink McWinter.
  • The Medic: Various healing units, the player if they choose Life Magic.
  • Mana: For the PC, heroes, and basic units alike.
  • Portal Network: The world is set up as a series of interconnected RTS or RPG maps. Travel is via portal, or Bindstone for the player character.
  • Novelization: A trilogy written by Uschi Zietsch about the Shaikan.
  • Precursors: The Formers. No plot significance until Dragon Storm, just the source of some MacGuffins and Plot Coupons.
  • RPG: Whenever it's not a RTS. Notably:
    • Adventure Towns: Each inhabited island generally has a big problem and some little ones. Uninhabited ones generally have a whole bunch of demons/undead/orcs/whatever to kill.
    • An Adventurer Is You: Pretty much any option is available.
    • Black Magic: Direct damage and life-sucking spells.
    • But Thou Must!
    • Level Cap: 30, except in Shadow of the Phoenix. 24 for the rest of the Player Party.
    • Featureless Protagonist: The Player Character, which is used in all the cutscenes. There's a male and female voice actor, but that's it.
    • Player Party: Up to five heroes serve the player character. In the first game they don't level, you just replace them with new ones as you level. In the second one they do level, and are actual characters in their own right.
    • Sidequest: Aplenty. Some particularly convoluted ones lead to the Infinity+1 Sword and Armor, and stretch throughout entire games.
    • Take Your Time: Unless you've opened up a headquarters for an RTS mission. In that case, get an army ready, and quick, because the CPU will start attacking soon and the attacks will get stronger and stronger unless you destroy their camps.
      • Either way, you can still turtle like an absolute Frenchman for hours - the plot can't go on without you unless you go through the Portal Network, and there are no Timed Missions.
    • White Magic: Healing and buffing, as well as Turn Undead.
  • Real Time Strategy: Sometimes. Notably:
  • The Siege: You defend at least a few bastions of light from The Horde.
  • Stable Time Loop: All Time Travel seems to work this way. Anytime the player helps build a Time Machine, he'll also be deeply involved in the resulting time loop. The entire plot of the first game is one of these, with the Big Bad/Big Good as the time traveler in question.
  • Standard Fantasy Setting: Just about everything on the list. Notably:
  • Storming the Castle: If the enemy has a legendary, nigh-impregnable fort, you'll take it from them. No Exceptions.
  • Sudden Sequel Death Syndrome: Urias in Shadow of the Phoenix, Borias and Lyen in Dragon Storm
  • Take a Third Option: The Circle Mages began to research and create rune warriors as a result of their need for reliable assistants. Standard magical servants such as bound elementals were loyal but unable to think for themselves, human mercenaries had the power to think and learn, but were prone to treachery. The rune warriors, humanoid souls bound to magical runes, have the best of both worlds.
  • The Computer Is a Cheating Bastard: Logistics don't apply to the CPU at all in SpellForce's campaign. In SpellForce 2, less so.
  • The End of the World as We Know It: In the opening cutscene, as a result of "The Convocation". Only regions immediately around the Godstones fail to be reduced to chaotic ocean. This justifies the Portal Network.
  • Time Machine: Terminator rules. The Player Character helps build at least one in the first entry of each game. In both cases, it's an extremely elaborate process and takes the entire game. The one in The Order of Dawn is by way of MacGuffin Delivery Service, and is used by the Big Bad to go back in time and... become the Big Good.
  • Unholy Nuke: The Death sub-branch of Black Magic.

SpellForce and its expansions provide examples of:


SpellForce 2 and its expansions provide examples of:

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