R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception

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GAME SUMMARY

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception

Rating: 4.3 (606 votes cast)

R.U.S.E™ is a one-of-a-kind real-time strategy game that allows players to bluff their enemies to lead their nation to victory, controlling the action using views that range seamlessly from the heart of the battlefield to the full theatre of war. Players will be plunged into the action thanks to the exclusive IRISZOOM® engine which offers an intuitive interface that allows for smooth, rapid transitions from a birds-eye view of the entire conflict, down into the heat of the battle and vice versa.

In R.U.S.E, your brain is your ultimate weapon as you fight a war of perception, where your ability to deceive and mislead your enemy determines success. A first in a strategy game, R.U.S.E reinvigorates the genre by using deception to give new-found depth to the gameplay.

  • Become a master of deception
    • Fight a war of perception using recon units & your spy network to gather intelligence on your enemy and then strike his Achilles heel!
    • Use deception techniques to mislead your enemy: decoys, camouflage, radio silence, deciphering…
    • From captain to the chief in command, live an epic campaign full of manipulation, jealousy & betrayal!
  • Experience War as a Strategist
    • Command a huge spectrum of units: dozens of infantry, vehicles and aircraft units with specific abilities
    • Wield executive power: secure revenues, plan unit production and launch advanced research programs
    • Undermine the enemy’s strategy by cutting off its supply lines and weakening its logistics
    • Use the exclusive IRISZOOM® engine to quickly and intuitively zoom into the heart of the battlefield and out to the full theatre of war o Fight on immense and incredibly detailed maps, the biggest in an RTS – a perfect playground for strategy!
  • Fooling real people is the ultimate thrill
    • Test your strategic skills with fast-paced, addictive cooperative and adversarial skirmishes, up to 8 players
    • Face unpredictable battle situations and reverse the balance of power by deceiving your opponents
    • Choose your nation – choose between 6 Axis or Allied powers with specific units and abilities

© 2009 Ubisoft Entertainment. All Rights Reserved. R.U.S.E, Ubisoft, Ubi.com, and the Ubisoft logo are trademarks of Ubisoft Entertainment in the U.S. and/or other countries. Developed by Eugen Systems.

Windows + Mac logo

System Requirements

    • OS: Windows® XP (with Service Pack 3) or Windows Vista® (with Service Pack 2) or Windows® 7
    • Processor: 2.8 GHz Intel® Pentium® 4 or AMD® Athlon™ 64 3000+ or higher
    • Memory: 1 GB for XP / 2 GB for Vista and Win7
    • Graphics: 128 MB DirectX® 9.0c-compliant video card (ATI® Radeon X1000/GeForce® 6 Series or better)
    • DirectX®: DirectX 9.0c (included)
    • Sound: DirectX 9.0c-compliant sound card
    •  
    • Mac
    • OS: OS X version Leopard 10.5.8, Snow Leopard 10.6.3, or later.
    • Processor: Intel ® Core 2 Duo 3Ghz / Intel ® I7 2.6Ghz
    • Memory: 3 GB
    • Graphics: 256 MB video card (Geforce GT 120/330M or ATI HD4670)
    • Hard Drive: At least 6.3 GB of free space
    •  
  • Note: This product requires a third-party download and account

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REVIEWS

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By WindAbx posted 22nd April

I remember trying the demo for RUSE out on the Playstation 3 and throughly enjoying it, but having a hard time navigate the various menu's with the control pad. Now that I finally have a PC, I have been itching to try this game out and bought it for a good price. I have to say that it really is one of the best strategy games I have ever played. Very challenging and you have to have a sharp mind to keep up with the constantly changing scenario's. I would have no hesitation in recommending RUSE to anyone at all. I truly hope a sequel is one day released.

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By jooj21 posted 20th April

probably among the best WWII strategy games around, the system of Ruse's is ingenious and adds an extra depth that goes beyond most strategy games

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By tayfuntuna posted 11th March

A fantastic strategy game with new gameplay elements; mainly about fooling the enemy. Of course this is fun only when played against human players, since the AI can't be fooled; only acts like it has been.

Nice looking graphics and historical value makes this game a must play (or at least, a must try) for the strategy fans.

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By uldrenn posted 9th January

Really interesting and original World War II RTS. The game is heavily focus on combat and tactics rather than in gathering resources, which is obviously important too as long as you can try to cut your enemies supply lines, and you will need a large amount of credits to do the powerful units. I've played many strategy game and most of the time, the bigger army wins. In Ruse, you can elaborate tactics using "ruse cards". You can hide troops, deceive the enemy with decoy... Ruse is about pretending you are doing one thing, while actually you are doing a different one. Ruse is about deception and striking heavily your opponent in the precise time.

It's trully a great FPS and a must have to my mind !

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By arvindrajayadav posted 6th December 2012

The game is a casual strategy game with a world war 2 theme - so far so familiar. The two unique things about it are: a) an aesthetic similar to boardgames which it pulls off surprisingly well, and b) ruses, where you can position fake units on the map to distract/confuse your enemy, which is a great feature I want to see more games try and implement.

I'm not an experienced RTS player (only ever got into Age of Empires 2), but I enjoyed this game for what it is - great for short sessions of play. Multiplayer is pretty much dead now, although there is a small bunch of regular players still.

All warfare is based on deception. - Sun Tzu

By lejyoner00 posted 29th November 2012

Before the playing R.U.S.E., you must analyze historical generals tactic, read Sun Tzu - Art of War and a little Machiavelli, learn chess game and texas hold em, study WWII units specs, feel and command your units like a general.. and dont give up when you are losing. Certainly you have a way which goes to victory. RTS gained a new dimension with R.U.S.E.

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By Lyrhik posted 13th September 2012

In Ruse, the player can fight with one of a faction which participate in the world war 2. Each faction had her owns troops with special abilities. Tanks, planes, soldiers, there are many troops to plan strategies in order to crush the ennemies. In plus of the unites, the player can use cards which allows him to make trap and embush. A very good game.

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By JeanHipster posted 9th September 2012

This game is just amazing, rly addicting. Just played a few times versus a friend of mine, each time we killed each other with another tactic. But who cares?

War is always there, so get your gun and come in.

The stage is yours!

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By iameggnest posted 20th August 2012

i have so many WW2 games and this one is a blast to play. its amazing how they designed this game where you command entire armies in a giant map but make it seem like its not complicated, its fast, and its fun! theres also something very stylish about the game, too! highly recommended. great game for brain exercise. very strategic.

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By elbersame posted 26th June 2012

R.U.S.E. is a fun and fascinating real-time strategy game, as long as you know which parts of it to invest in and which to skip entirely. It prospers in the competitive arena, putting an intriguing use of bluffs and reconnaissance to good use on expansive maps that will test your ability to control the battlefield. Offline, you get some mileage out of its single-player skirmishes, but where R.U.S.E. falters is in its plodding, poorly paced campaign. Bizarre character models and bad writing prove distracting, while too-frequent story intrusions interrupt the flow of missions just as they start to get interesting. But the clumsy campaign aside, R.U.S.E.'s unique mechanics lead to tense and enjoyable standoffs in which, literally, things are not always what they seem.

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By commiered posted 28th May 2012

Very good game with a different take on the RTS genre. Campaigns are a bit too scripted and rely on the 'puzzle' style mechanic of knowing exactly what special card to play in a given situation but the campaigns are still fun and lengthy. Would have preferred a bigger chance to improvise. In multi it's a different story as against a human there is ample opportunity to to try many approaches and make up for any mistakes. If you like this, I recommend getting the Rising Sun expansion for a Japanese faction. It adds quite a bit.

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By rexvivat posted 13th February 2012

Ruse is an interesting strategy game. Its another WW2 game, yes, but is an intresting take on the usual formula. No tank rushes here. It has an interesting concept in the ruses, but the execuation is somewhat lacking in places. While they work well against the computer opponents, they are too strictly used in single player to really get a feel for them, and real human opponents can often see through them easily. Some of the visual stylings of the game are good, the zoomed out view reverting to a 'map' in the war room is a nice touch for example. I'd recomend this game to strategy fans looking for something a bit different, that isn;t just another C&C type game. Its definaelty worth a look at its current low price. The biggest downside is the ubiDRM. But if you can overlook that, go for it.

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By stealingurpez posted 11th February 2012

Decent strategy game, does things a bit differently from the usual RTS fare. The ruse system is quite clever, and makes multiplayer games a tense affair. Overall an enjoyable game once you get into it.

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By ipodguitar posted 29th January 2012

R.U.S.E. is a great game and requires thinking over brutal action.

Only downside its not as complex as other RTS games, you haven't got a lot of options how your units do things.

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By conman12345 posted 3rd January 2012

R.U.S.E is a really great strategy game which I think will appeal to pretty much any fan of the genre. The main focus is the use of "RUSE" cards, which allow you to do a number of tactical things, like view all hidden enemy units in an area, move your own units at a quicker speed, view all orders given by enemy generals or deploy decoy units to trick the enemy. To succeed, you need to co-ordinate which RUSE cards to use when and where, whilst also creating units and providing them with orders.

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By eddible posted 13th December 2011

R.U.S.E is a really great strategy game which I think will appeal to pretty much any fan of the genre. The main focus is the use of "RUSE" cards, which allow you to do a number of tactical things, like view all hidden enemy units in an area, move your own units at a quicker speed, view all orders given by enemy generals or deploy decoy units to trick the enemy. To succeed, you need to co-ordinate which RUSE cards to use when and where, whilst also creating units and providing them with orders.

The graphics are great, and look great on my Mac (when run on "high" settings). The storyline is great, and there's the option of online play and offline skirmish battles. You level up depending on how well you perform in each mission, which adds a layer of purpose to completing side-missions and main objectives. I really, really enjoyed this game - and although I managed to grab it in the sale for £6, I would certainly pay the full amount for it as well.

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By bendle posted 5th December 2011

Interesting concept, instead of just building massive armies the gamer is allowed to use his brain over brawn to overcome the odds meaning more intelligent people can feel mroe rewarded than power whores!

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By gitom7 posted 24th November 2011

Excellent RTS that's fun and well balanced as others have mentioned. Campaign is a little annoying as cutscenes slow you down, and the story is overdone. But, it makes the basis of an excellent tutorial as you move through the battles and it's hard to stop playing once you've started. This one will stay up front for me for a while. Well done to Ubisoft and Eugen.

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By Severose posted 15th August 2011

Wow... This game is something else, in a good way. I first started playing this game, expecting a lot from it, and it definitely delivered. All the reviews were right, and that is that this is a GREAT game, which is an understatement in my opinion. Stop reading this and pick the game up. Just do it, you won't regret it. =]

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By acare84 posted 7th August 2011

RUSE is an awesome strategy game. Zooming mechanics and balance is really good in this game. If you are fan ot RTS games and if you love the WW2 ERA you should buy this game. Ubisoft and Eugen Systems made a great RTS game.

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By PauloBJ posted 6th August 2011

R.U.S.E. is a revolutionary RTS on it's on way. It brings fresh elements to a beaten genre. "RUSE cards" are special abilities that allows you to confuse and lead your enemy to false conclusions, thus making it take wrong strategies against you. More than a brute force RTS, your troops will often complement your RUSE cards strategy, and so a small army can often beat a large one, using it's general's brain instead of it's brawl. The Iris Zoom engine applied on RUSE also makes the game graphically impressive, great graphics with great gameplay. A game really worth playing, RTS fans can't miss it. One of a kind.

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By jmarquiso posted 3rd August 2011

By no means a perfect Strategy game, it is still a fun, rewarding, and unique experience. The addition of "RUSE" cards added a new dimension to explore - that of deception. The commander is given several tools to alter the other players' perception or gain more information about the board. RUSE Cards hold a function of manipulating general information, but strategy also plays a role. A commander can also place units in such a way as to hide them from other factions (hiding them in the trees provides a bonus to both effectiveness, and hides them - though other players can do so as well).

The single player holds a lot to be desired. The cutscenes are inane and the characters are predictable. However, the mission design remains challenging and exciting. The map board is sprawling, allowing you to zoom out from a war room all the way in to a view almost akin to being on the ground with the troops. Most likely, however, a player will stay in a mid-ranged view so that they don't get overloaded with information. The AI is mostly alright in operating on its own. One interesting design choice: units don't immediately respond to an order as if it actually takes time to go from a war room to a unit - as it would have. So, for the most part, the AI needs to make decisions on its own - such as when to hold and retreat.

Games are all about gaining and manipulating as much information as possible. Truly a unique experience done in such a way that's fun as well.

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By miss_clara posted 27th July 2011

Nice RTS with two innovations:

1) Full 3D zoom in/out rotate camera and so on. But, turns out it's not that important for playing, I expected more of it.

2) RUSE cards: throw them on sector, and grant your units/buildings stealth, speed, berserk, or see/scare enemy units and so on.

Everything other, just another nice RTS, good one.

However, this game runs with Steam, and that's a big minus.

First, it's not as easy as with other games bought from Gamers Gate, download and start. No, you have to wait for Steam to download. Then please wait some more, steam downloads updates.

Then, Steam interferes with the game: second time started, no zoom nor scroll, till all Steam checkboxes are disabled.

Then after PC crash, guess what, Steam decided I'm running game on a new PC, so I had to type password send by email:))

Then, I wanted to download DLC, and Steam won't let me play while I'm downloading! Is it supposed to be a feature?! Someone please explain to me why this is better than downloading patch and running it manually.

Oh, also, running Steam makes web browser incredible slow, copy key from browser window to Steam window takes forever.

Then... and so on. In a word, disaster.

Actually, it prevents me from playing.

Mark my words, I will never ever buy another game downgraded by Steam.

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By MGephart posted 26th July 2011

This is a great strategy game. A hybrid between an operational strategy and battlefield tactical game. Switching between the two is seamless, and control of dozens of units is done with quick clicks of the mouse. Graphics are acceptably good for such a wonderfully executed game.

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By capitaltpt posted 21st July 2011

Excellent Game! I first tried this as a demo on PS3 and bought it for PC when I saw it on sale. You can definitely get lost in this game and spend hours playing at a time. Graphics are pretty good and controls seem pretty well laid out.

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By Morboth posted 1st May 2011

When Company of Heroes meets Supreme Commander: R.U.S.E. has you incarnating a General from one of six (or seven, if you get the FANTASTIC Japan DLC) factions, as you battle it out across a wide array of maps - which, I must say, are ENORMOUS, the sheer scale of the battles will make you feel like you are indeed a WWII Field Marshal. Still, the only 'awkward' aspect of the game is the Ruse mechanic itself... it just feels like you could live without it. Sure, you get some fancy toys and abilities to play around, but the game could have done being called some other way judging by the importance - or lack thereof - these Ruses have.

That aside, the game is SUPERB, great visuals, great performance, great everything! I have yet to touch the campaign, for the Skirmish mode is too great to leave it aside...

The only other complaint I could have is the lack of players online... not much people plays this, which is a shame, but still, you ought to get this, trust me.

5/5

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By lordextra0 posted 11th April 2011

If you buy RUSE, buy it for the multiplayer and/or skirmishes. The campaign really is not that engaging, though good to theach the game to you if you have never played a RTS game.

The multiplayer is where the ruses are the funnest to use and is a great part of the game, however the AI, while not using the map as well as a player, will still provide a fun, if not overly challenging game.

This game definitely has some long term appeal

If you are looking for a slightly different RTS, definitely give this one a try.

R.U.S.E.: The Art of Deception review

By goillananoge posted 3rd January 2011

RUSE is interesting and engaging. I like the way they make use of Spys and camo netting and communication, it is more realistic than most games...and far more useful (to me). The campaign is enjoyable, but not overly replayable. I was also disapointed there was no conquer europe campaign or ability to pick german or russian campaigns. Perhaps they will add this in an expansion. The battle maps are lacking.

The resources are far to few for a total war game (tech advances every 10 minutes). All the resources are typically gone by 1942. I have not tryed multiplayer, and i have little desire too.

Overall i would say it is worth the money, i do hope they make a conquer europe campaign because after you finish the campaign there is little left to do.

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