Game of Thrones: Conquest
Game of Thrones: Conquest is a free-to-play mobile MMO strategy title that drops you into Westeros and asks you to play the long game, build a power base, and clash with other lords for control of the realm. It follows the familiar city-builder and world-map war formula, but wraps it in Game of Thrones characters, locations, and courtly ambition.
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Publisher: R2 Games / Warner Bros Playerbase: High Type: Mobile Strategy Release Date: October 19, 2017 PvP: World Pros: +Recognizable Game of Thrones characters. +A decent spread of Westeros-inspired regions and backdrops. +Leader cosmetics add some personalization. Cons: -Core loop feels like standard mobile RTS. -Monetization can tip fights toward spenders. |
Game of Thrones: Conquest Overview
Game of Thrones: Conquest is a free-to-play 2D MMO strategy game for mobile that uses Westeros as its battleground. If you have played other kingdom builders on phones, the foundation will feel immediately familiar: you expand a stronghold, train troops, gather resources, and coordinate with allies while keeping an eye on rival houses across a shared world map. Where Conquest tries to stand out is in the theme, leaning on well-known faces from the series such as Jon Snow, Daenerys Targaryen, Cersei, and Tywin Lannister to give missions and progression a more recognizable coat of paint.
On the strategic layer, most of your time is split between construction queues, research-style upgrades, and preparing armies to send out for fights and objectives. The overworld features more than 120 named points of interest tied to the setting, including places like Winterfell, Castle Black, and King’s Landing, which function as targets to contest and landmarks that help sell the fantasy of carving out influence in the Seven Kingdoms. Guild play is central, partly because coordinated players can cover weaknesses, share help for timers, and better defend against opportunistic attacks.
Highlights and core systems:
- Build and reinforce your seat of power – expand structures, upgrade production, and keep defenses relevant as the server economy escalates.
- Grow from minor lord to major threat – develop your keep, raise stronger units, and push your influence outward toward the Crown.
- World encounters and resource hunts – challenge roaming foes and objectives on the map to secure materials that feed long-term upgrades.
- Rally with a guild – alliances matter for coordination, protection, and spying; teamwork is often the difference between surviving and being farmed.
Game of Thrones: Conquest Screenshots
Game of Thrones: Conquest Featured Video
Game of Thrones: Conquest Review
Game of Thrones: Conquest plays like a textbook mobile war strategy game, then layers recognizable Westeros branding on top. That is not automatically a negative, because the formula remains effective on phones, especially for players who enjoy planning building upgrades, timing shield windows, and coordinating alliance actions. The real question is whether the Game of Thrones dressing, and the steady treadmill of progression, is enough to keep you engaged past the early growth spurt.
Moment-to-moment play and pacing
The first hours are a steady loop of constructing production buildings, completing quests, and unlocking features at a comfortable pace. As the stronghold level rises, timers lengthen and the game starts asking for more optimization. You either log in regularly to keep queues moving or rely more heavily on alliance help and speedups. If you enjoy incremental planning, this cadence can be satisfying, but it also means the game is not trying to be an active tactics experience.
Combat and PvP
World PvP is the heart of the competitive side, and most battles are decided by preparation, troop investment, and coordination rather than direct control. Scouting, choosing your targets, and organizing rallies through your guild are more important than flashy combat inputs. That style suits the genre, although players looking for skill-based battles may find outcomes too dependent on progression and wallet size.
Theme and presentation
The best part of Conquest is the setting use, especially for fans who like seeing iconic names and locations folded into objectives and progression beats. Landmarks around Westeros help the map feel less abstract than some competitors, and the leader customization adds small but welcome personality. Still, the core systems remain very close to other city-building RTS titles, so players expecting a storytelling-heavy Game of Thrones game may be disappointed.
Monetization and fairness
As with many mobile war MMOs, the free-to-play structure can create a gap between highly invested spenders and everyone else. You can make progress without paying by leaning on smart resource management and alliance support, but top-end conflicts can feel tilted toward players who accelerate upgrades and recovery through purchases. If you dislike pay-to-win pressure, this is the biggest caution flag.
Who it is for
Game of Thrones: Conquest is best suited to mobile strategy players who want a long-term guild game and like server politics, diplomacy, and coordinated war. It is less appealing if you want tight tactical control, minimal monetization, or a campaign that focuses on narrative rather than empire management.
Game of Thrones: Conquest Links
Game of Thrones: Conquest Official Site
Game of Thrones: Conquest iOS
Game of Thrones: Conquest Android
Game of Thrones: Conquest Facebook
Game of Thrones: Conquest System Requirements
Minimum Requirements:
Operating System: iPhone 5S with iOS 10.0 or later, Android 6.0 or later
Game of Thrones: Conquest Music & Soundtrack
Details on the music and soundtrack are not listed here yet. The game focuses more on the familiar mobile strategy loop than on a standout audio package, but fans of the franchise will still appreciate atmosphere that aims to match the setting when playing with sound on.
Game of Thrones: Conquest Additional Information
Developer: R2 Games / Warner Bros. Entertainment
Platforms: iOS, Android
Release Date (Worldwide): October 19, 2017



