8/6/2023 0 Comments Age of empires hd edition megaMore importantly, they’ve redone all the sound! Virtually every track from the original AoE2 score was a banger, and now they’ve been retooled with slightly more convincing synthesised lutes and the like. Ah yes, now *that's* the way the castle crumbles There’s a sort-of zoom function, but it’s comically limited - more like a simulated squint than anything else. It’s a prettier blender now, mind, and I do appreciate the new, satisfying crumble animations for busted buildings, replacing their old tendency to vanish into sudden rubble. But at the end of the day, when all the horses start mashing each other up, AoE2 is always going to look like a load of paint in a blender. It’s in mega hyper 4K Ultra HD, and the unit animations have all been reslickened. Definitive Edition is largely more of the same, but more moderner. I’m never particularly interested in visual remasters for old games, and I wasn’t keen on 2013’s HD edition for that reason. To a chump like me at least, they were a massive challenge, and far more compelling than I'd expected.Īnd I guess it’s beautiful, too? I dunno. They're little time trials designed to train your efficiency at doing things like early rushes, quick age advances and early defence (pictured). The Art of War challenges are really cool, actually. You can go up to 500 population now, if you want. There are dozens of new technologies and units. I have no idea what came from what expansion, but it’s more than you could get through in years of obsessive play. In multiplayer and skirmish play, the array of game modes and map types on offer is, frankly, dizzying. There’s a set of timed ‘Art of War’ challenges. The nine campaigns are now 24, for a total of 136 single-player missions - Microsoft reckons that’s 200 hours, but I think they’re being modest. The post-Conquerors roster of 18 civs is now up to 35. For those like me, who last played in AoE2’s heyday, the game’s put on a lot of weight. The Definitive Edition bundles together everything from these expansions, as well as 2000’s Conquerors, and a brand new expansion, The Last Khans, too. This was The Forgotten, and it was followed up by two more Forgotten Empires expansions - 2015’s African Kingdoms, and 2016’s Rise of the Rajas. Microsoft, already working on 2013’s HD re-release of AoE2, liked what they saw, and offered to make the team’s work official, as the HD version of the game’s first expansion. One thing led to another, things got out of hand, and soon a full-blown, fan-made expansion was in the works. The team that would become Definitive Edition developers Forgotten Empires started work in 2011, coalescing from separate community efforts to crack the problem of adding new civs to the game, and to improve its AI. Those who really knew what they were doing, and had modding chops besides, could work wonders. This is due in part to the game’s absolute belter of a scenario editor (returning in this edition, of course), which made the creation of new stuff accessible to just about anyone. While the king of RTS games still doesn’t have a successor, he’s looking bloody good in his old age.Īs someone who stopped playing AoE2 regularly in the mid-2000s, I’m astonished at just how much happened to the game after I thought the party was over. Bravo then to former modders Forgotten Empires, who tinkered with the game they loved long enough to inherit it, and yet never went too far. Altering the formula of a classic is always a risk - and in Ensemble Studios’ case, it was one that didn’t pay off. While its early-2000s successors, Age of Mythology and Age Of Empires 3, were both good games, they suffered from their attempts to innovate on a proven formula. Make no mistake: this is much more of a compilation job than it is any kind of reimagining.īut then, crucially, there’s also nothing added that dilutes the success of the original, either. Still, virtually every design decision its quality rests on was made twenty years ago, and what few changes have been to its inner workings are fairly conservative. And with the release of Age Of Empires 2 Definitive Edition, it’s… well, it’s still that. Developer: Forgotten Empires, Tantalus Media, Wicked WitchĪge Of Empires 2 is, as far as I’m concerned, the greatest real-time strategy game of all time.
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