Your strategic path is further refined each time you advance an age, when you get to pick one of two civ-specific landmarks that will advance your empire in different directions.
Even the relatively vanilla English have no less than 10 unique traits, in their case focused largely around agriculture and establishing defensive structure networks that grant speed bonuses to your units. Delhi’s use of garrisoned scholars instead of resources to research technologies turns the blacksmith into a kind of persistent research lab ticking along in the background while you get on with other stuff. I had a real blast with the Delhi Sultanate too, stomping my hapless AI enemies with War Elephants they had no answer for.
The Mongols are the biggest wildcard, capable of packing entire towns up into carts and relocating to anywhere on the map. It’s not a huge number, but the visual and strategic variety between these factions is one of the most significant evolutions in the series.Īge of Empires 4 might not have the balanced esport appeal of AoE 2, but damn is it fun to experiment with the different civs and learn their unique ways. These missions aren’t easy either, and on standard difficulty I found I had to quickly wrap my fingers around the new keyboard shortcuts to keep up with an efficient, nagging enemy.ĭamn is it fun to experiment with the different civs and learn their unique waysīut these sleek campaigns are just a foreword to the stories you’ll be crafting on the Skirmish maps with the eight eclectic civs on offer. Regardless, the campaign throws up plenty of great set-pieces there’s the Battle of Xiangyang to establish Kublai Khan as Emperor of China, Dmitry Donskoy’s power-shifting defeat of the Mongols at Kulikovo, and over in the west the Battle of Bremule to establish England as a regional power.
To chart decades of Mongol conquests without mentioning the centrality of terror and massacre to their strategy, for instance, seems like a bit of a convenient oversight. It does also sometimes feel like the squeaky-clean presentation skirts around the ickier parts of history.