Introduction: The Irony of the Unfair Advantage
If you want the authentic experience—the sweat, the panic when your supply line is cut, the genuine joy of seeing your first Ironclad roll off the line—you must play vanilla (or with difficulty mods). The trainer robs you of the catharsis that comes from overcoming impossible odds. total war shogun 2 fall of the samurai trainer
Because in the end, even the Shogun couldn't stop the foreign shells. And no trainer can stop the existential boredom of a game you can no longer lose. “The perfect blade is not the one that never breaks; it is the one that cuts exactly what the wielder intends.” – Some Bushido proverb (probably). Introduction: The Irony of the Unfair Advantage If
This is the most defensible argument. A 40-year-old lawyer with two kids loves Total War but doesn't have 60 hours to grind a campaign. They want to see the explosions, hear the "BANZAI!" charges, and roll over Tosa with a massive treasury. For them, the trainer is an accessibility tool—a way to skip the "spreadsheet simulator" aspect and jump to the "dudes dying in mud" aspect. And no trainer can stop the existential boredom
So why would anyone download a trainer —a piece of third-party software that gives the player infinite money, god mode units, and instant building—to play it?