The tutorial teaches you that a head-on charge against a shield wall of Harold’s soldiers was a bad idea. Harold’s army had to first go north to defeat a Viking invasion, and then rush south to meet William at a place called Senlac Hill. I didn’t mind that I never had more than 200 soldiers on the battlefield because the game did such a good job of making me feel like I was in a battle as the commanding general. While you have no real way to compare the number of soldiers on the battlefield to the actual numbers in the real armies, the game does a good job of representing the right scale of the forces and the look of the battlefield in a way that will leave you marveling at the graphics.
The armies of King Harold, the defending king of Anglo-Saxon England, squared off against William, who came from the Norman province of France. The first mission after the tutorial is the Battle of Hastings, which turns out to be great choice for learning the game. The single-player campaign starts out with the Norman conquest of England by William the Conquerer in 1066. This new game takes advantage of the last 15 years of graphics improvements that allow for much more detail to be used in the individual characters and buildings that make up the scenes in 4K HDR battlefields.Įight civilizations appear in Age of Empires IV. It’s easy for Age of Empires IV to look pretty compared to its predecessors. Other games had higher priorities at Microsoft. Microsoft’s success with Age of Empires started in 1997, and the marriage of history and RTS generated so much revenue that, in addition to Microsoft Flight Simulator, it enabled a vast expansion in the company’s game investments and ultimately led to the debut of the Xbox game console in 2001.Īge of Empires and its sequels sold more than 20 million copies, but Microsoft shut down Ensemble Studios in 2009 during the Great Recession after attempts to branch out (think Halo Wars) met with limited success.
Other startups working on RTS titles are Frost Giant Studios and SunSpear games.īut Age of Empires IV could exploit a much bigger opportunity in RTS for the mainstream.
Meanwhile, Eugen Systems has been doing a great job with World War II titles with its Steel Division series. Sega’s The Creative Assembly has a thriving Total War series, with Total War: Warhammer III coming, Total War: Rome Remastered out, and Total War Saga: Troy, also in the market. While Microsoft’s Age of Empires franchise has been stalled since 2005 (with the exception of some retro remakes), other key players have been carrying the RTS flag.