Age of Mythology: The Titans N/A serial key or number
Age of Mythology: The Titans N/A serial key or number
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July 29, 2020
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Thank you for posting. I've taken the direct quotes from one of the links that was given in answer to Zezlot's problem. This is going to be the correct answer that can be supplied on Windows Vista forums. Please read carefully as it describes who should give you a replacement cd-key and the proper way to get one. This was originally given by Sreekanth47 in the second post.
Important Note: This response contains a reference to a third party World Wide Web site. Microsoft is providing this information as a convenience to you. Microsoft does not control these sites and has not tested any software or information found on these sites; therefore, Microsoft cannot make any representations regarding the quality, safety, or suitability of any software or information found there. There are inherent dangers in the use of any software found on the Internet, and Microsoft cautions you to make sure that you completely understand the risk before retrieving any software from the Internet.
There are solutions for some copies of the game. This problem is caused by new copies of Age of Mythology - Gold Edition being shipped with the same CD-Key. Since a CD-Key can only be logged onto ESO once at a time, this causes these copies to never or almost never work online.This is a very common problem that many new users have been facing ever since Microsoft gave the distribution rights for Age of Mythology to other publishers. If you have one of these newer copies of the game and are experiencing this problem, your CD-Key will be as follows: BDKRJ-HFRHW-8W3YV-*****-*****
Luckily, our users have found that these sellers are able to give out new, unique, CD-Keys. Firstly you'll need to check the box of your recently purchased game to find the vendor. The following vendors are known to sell Age of Mythology - Gold Edition: Valusoft, Ubisoft, That's Hot and Xplosiv. Once you find your vendor, follow the directions under the corresponding header below: Ubisoft
You will need to email their support department using the form on this page, asking for new CD-Keys for online play. You will probably have to provide certain information from your CD or box. For more information, see this thread.
Recently people have reported that Ubisoft were only given a certain amount of new CD-Keys from Microsoft and have now run out. At this point, there is nothing you can do except try to get a refund and find another copy of the game from a different distributer.
Microsoft and Ensemble Studios is printed on all versions, because they released the original game. If you have a shared CD key, then "Ubisoft" or "Valusoft" can definitely be found on your cover or manual somewhere.
The only other alternative is that you still have an "original" game from Microsoft. This can only be the case if your copy is old, or you bought one that has been rotting on the shelf for over a year. In that case, your CD-key is unique and should work. Unless you bought it second hand, and the original owner is still using it, that is.
Below is an example of the how a owner got repalcement cd-key
I FINALLY GOT MY NEW CODES!!!
I had to send the original codes (keep a scan or photo copy for yourself) to this 'snail mail' address:
I sent mine registered/return receipt. Cost about 5 bucks.
email them first and establish a case number.
Here is what I sent them via emailMAKE SURE YOUR GAME INFORMATION IS SPECIFIC TO THE GAME YOU PURCHASED) I have blanked all the numbers I used. Feel free to copy and paste the text.
Greetings,
I am one of the lucky purchasers of the "everybody has the same CD Key as me"
release.
I consistently get the error message: "YOUR CD KEY CANNOT BE VALIDATED. PLEASE WAIT A FEW MINUTES AND TRY AGAIN"
I would greatly appreciate CD Keys that I can call my very own.
The numbers on my disks are as follows:
[AOM disc 1
(P/N:*****/*)
(Part # - ***-*****)
(Product.ID-*****-***-*****-*****)].....
[AOM disc 2
(P/N:*****/*)
(Part # - ***-*****).....
[Titans Expansion Disc
(P/N:*****/*)
(Part # - ***-*****)
(Product.ID-*****-***-*****-*****)].....
**Please note - this was not labeled as the gold edition.....
The top of the slip cover say:
BONUS! INCLUDES TITANS EXPANSION.
.....
Lower center says:
AGE OF MYTHOLOGY
FROM THE CREATORS OF
AGE OF EMPIRES I & II
Zack
Microsoft Answers Support Engineer Visit our Microsoft Answers Feedback Forum and let us know what you think.
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Age of Empires
Age of Empires is a series of historical real-time strategy video games, originally developed by Ensemble Studios and published by Xbox Game Studios. The first game was Age of Empires, released in 1997. Eight total games within the series have been released.
Age of Empires focused on events in Europe, Africa and Asia, spanning from the Stone Age to the Iron Age; the expansion game explored the formation and expansion of the Roman Empire. The sequel, Age of Empires II: The Age of Kings, was set in the Middle Ages, while its expansion focused partially on the Spanish conquest of Mexico. The subsequent three games of Age of Empires III explored the early modern period, when Europe was colonizing the Americas and several Asian nations were on the decline. The newest installment, Age of Empires Online, takes a different approach as a free-to-play online game utilizing Games for Windows Live. A spin-off game, Age of Mythology, was set in the same period as the original Age of Empires, but focused on mythological elements of Greek, Egyptian, and Norse mythology. A fourth main installment in the series, Age of Empires IV, is under development.
The Age of Empires series has been a commercial success, selling over 25 million copies. Critics have credited part of the success of the series to its historical theme and fair play; the artificial intelligence (AI) players have fewer advantages than in many of the series' competitors.
Games[edit]
The games in the series focus on historical events throughout time. Age of Empires covers the events between the Stone Age and the Classical period, in Europe and Asia. Its expansion, The Rise of Rome, follows the formation and rise of the Roman Empire. The Age of Kings and its Nintendo DS spin-off follow Europe and Asia through the Middle Ages. The Age of Kings' expansion pack, The Conquerors, is set during the same period, but also includes scenarios about the Spanish conquest of Mexico, El Cid, and Attila the Hun. Age of Empires III and its first expansion, The WarChiefs, take place during the European colonization of the Americas. Its second expansion, The Asian Dynasties, follows the rise of Asia in the same period. Age of Empires Online focuses on the Greek and Egyptian civilizations. The series' spin-off, Age of Mythology, and its expansion pack, The Titans, are set during the Bronze Age, but focus on mythology as their themes, rather than history.
Main series[edit]
Age of Empires[edit]
Age of Empires, released on October 26, 1997,[1] was the first game in the series, as well as the first major release from Ensemble Studios.[2] It was one of the first history-based real-time strategy games made,[3] utilizing the Geniegame engine. GameSpot described it as a mix of Civilization and Warcraft.[4] The game gives players a choice of 12 civilizations to develop from the Stone Age to the Iron Age. The expansion pack, The Rise of Rome, published by Microsoft on October 31, 1998, introduced new features and four new civilizations, including the Romans. Although the two games had contained many software bugs, patches resolved many of the problems.[5][6]
Age of Empires was generally well received, despite some highly negative reviews. GameSpot criticized a confused design, while Computer and Video Games praised the game as strong in single and multiplayer.[7] The Academy of Interactive Arts & Sciences named Age of Empires the 1998 "Computer Strategy Game of the Year."[8] For several years, the game remained high on the sales charts, with over three million units sold by 2000.[9]The Rise of Rome sold one million units in 2000[9] and attained 80% as an aggregate score from GameRankings.[10]
In June 2017, Adam Isgreen, creative director of Xbox Game Studios announced Age of Empires: Definitive Edition at the Electronic Entertainment Expo 2017. It will feature overhauled graphics with support for 4K resolution, a remastered soundtrack, and other gameplay improvements, and was planned to be released on October 19, 2017, but was delayed until February 20, 2018, when it was released on the Microsoft Store.[11][12][13] On May 30, 2019, Microsoft announced that the Definitive Edition would be coming to Steam in the future, along with the Definitive Editions of both Age of Empires II and Age of Empires III.[14][15]
Age of Empires II[edit]
Age of Empires II: The Age of Kings, released on September 30, 1999, used the Genie game engine, and had gameplay similar to its predecessor.[16]Age of Kings is set in the Middle Ages, from the Dark Ages to the Imperial Age. It allows players to choose one of 13 civilizations, from Europe, Asia, and the Middle East.[17]
On August 24, 2000, Microsoft published the expansion, The Conquerors. It added new units and five new civilizations, including two Mesoamerican civilizations: the Maya and the Aztec.[18]The Age of Kings was a bigger critical success than the first two games, with Game Rankings and Metacritic scores of 92%.[19][20] Microsoft shipped out more than two million copies to retailers, and the game received numerous awards and accolades.[21] Critics agreed that The Conquerors expanded well on The Age of Kings, though issues of unbalanced gameplay were raised.[22]The Age of Kings and The Conquerors won the 2000 and 2001 "Computer Strategy Game of the Year" awards from the Academy of Interactive Arts & Sciences, respectively.[23][24]
In April 2013, Age of Empires II: HD Edition was released on the Steamdigital distribution platform for Windows operating systems. The HD Edition includes both the original game and the expansion The Conquerors, as well as updated graphics for high-resolution displays.[25] In November 2013, a second expansion entitled The Forgotten was released by Microsoft exclusively for the HD Edition.[26] A third expansion named The African Kingdoms was released by Microsoft in November 2015, also exclusively for the HD Edition.[27] A fourth expansion entitled Rise of the Rajas was released on 19 December 2016.[28] On August 21, 2017, Microsoft announced Age of Empires II: Definitive Edition.[29]
In June 2019, Adam Isgreen, now the Franchise Creative Director for Age of Empires, shared more information regarding the Age of Empires II: Definitive Edition at the Electronic Entertainment Expo 2019. He confirmed that the Definitive Edition was being developed by Forgotten Empires, Tantalus Media, and Wicked Witch Software. He announced that the game would feature new 4K graphics, Xbox Live support for multiplayer, exclusive achievements, four new civilizations (Bulgarians, Cumans, Lithuanians, Tatars[30]), three new campaigns, a new spectator mode and tournament features, and additional quality of life improvements. It was released on November 14, 2019.[31][32] Bert Beeckman, co-founder of Forgotten Empires, confirmed on June 12 that Age of Empires II: HD Edition would not be removed from sale after the release of Age of Empires II: Definitive Edition.[33]
Age of Empires III[edit]
Age of Empires III, released on October 18, 2005, was built on an improved version of the Age of Mythology game engine with the most significant changes being the updated graphics engine and the inclusion of the Havok physicsmiddleware engine.[34][35] The game is set in the period between 1421 and 1850, and players can choose one of eight European nations. The game introduced a large number of features, such as home cities. Described by Ensemble Studios as "an important support system to your efforts in the New World," home cities help provide the player with resources, equipment, troops, and upgrades. They can be used across multiple games, and upgraded after each battle; the feature was compared to a role-playing game character by Ensemble Studios.[36] The first expansion to Age of Empires III, The WarChiefs, was released October 17, 2006. Most gameplay changes in the expansion pack were small, but it introduced three new civilizations, with a focus on Native Americans.[37] Most notable was the introduction of the WarChief unit.[38] The second expansion, The Asian Dynasties, went on sale October 23, 2007. It was a jointly developed product; Big Huge Games helped Ensemble Studios develop the game, with Brian Reynolds joining Bruce Shelley as lead designer.[39] The game expanded the Age of Empires III universe into Asia, and introduced three new civilizations.[40] Reception towards Age of Empires III was mixed; Game Revolution described it as "about as much fun" as a history textbook, while GameZone argued it was "one of the best looking games, much less an RTS game, that is out on the market currently".[41] It sold more than two million copies, and won the GameSpy "real-time strategy game of the year" award.[42][43]The WarChiefs failed to equal the success of its predecessor, with a lower score on both Game Rankings and Metacritic, and The Asian Dynasties' score was lower still with 80%.[44][45][46][47]
Several collectors' editions of Age of Empires III included a hardcover artbook. The last page of the artbook has a pictorial depiction of the series; the Roman numerals below each panel range from I to V, indicating the series would include an Age of Empires IV and Age of Empires V. Ensemble Studios employee Sandy Petersen said that the image "was total speculation on [their] part."[48]
In 2008, Microsoft announced they were closing down Ensemble Studios following the completion of Halo Wars. Some of its employees would form a new team as part of Microsoft Studios.[49] Kevin Unangst, director of Games for Windows, denied it was the end of the Age of Empires series, telling The San Francisco Chronicle "we're very excited about the future potential for Age of Empires".[50]Edge confirmed, in an interview with Microsoft's corporate vice president of interactive entertainment, Shane Kim, that Microsoft continued to own Age of Empires and that they had plans to continue the series.[51] However, Bruce Shelley wrote in his blog that he would not be part of any new studios formed.[52][53]
Following the announcement of remastered editions of previous games, Microsoft announced Age of Empires III: Definitive Edition on August 21, 2017.[29] On May 30, 2019, the company revealed that the Definitive Edition would come to Steam in the future, along with the Definitive Editions of both Age of Empires and Age of Empires II.[14][15] On August 28, 2020 Microsoft announced at Gamescom 2020 that Age of Empires III: Definitive Edition would release officially on October 15, 2020. [54]
On January 23, 2020, Microsoft announced a closed beta for early February of that year. Betas ran on Steam and the Microsoft Store, with each beta session including a small piece of the game.[55] The first closed beta session began on February 11, 2020 and ended on February 19, 2020.[56][57] The second closed multiplayer session began on March 31 and ran until April 7. [58]
Age of Empires IV[edit]
On August 21, 2017, Microsoft announced Age of Empires IV, developed by Relic Entertainment.[59] Microsoft's Executive Vice-President of Gaming, Phil Spencer, confirmed on June 11, 2019, that Age of Empires IV is still in development, with more information coming later in 2019.[60] On November 14, 2019, gameplay footage of Age of Empires IV was shown at the XO19 event.[61] It showed medieval warfare between English and Mongol forces.[62][63] The release of Age of Empires IV is rumored to be in 2021.[64]
Spin-off games[edit]
Age of Mythology shared many elements of gameplay with the main series,[65] and was considered a part of the series, despite its different focus.[66][67] The campaign in Age of Mythology tells the story of an Atlantean, Arkantos, and his quest to find why his people are out of favor with Poseidon.[68] Microsoft published the game on October 30, 2002,[69] and its expansion, The Titans, on October 21, 2003.[70]The Titans featured the Atlanteans as a new civilization.[71] Its campaign is shorter than previous expansions, and centers on Kastor, son of Arkantos, who falls for the lies of the titans and frees them from Tartarus.[72]Age of Mythology sold more than one million units in four months.[73] It scored 89% on Game Rankings and Metacritic.[74][75]The Titans failed to equal the sales success of Age of Mythology, although critics rated it highly.[76][77]
Backbone Entertainment developed Age of Empires: The Age of Kings as a turn-based game for the Nintendo DS. Majesco Entertainment published the game on February 14, 2006. It is similar to other turn-based games, such as Advance Wars, but with a gameplay based on its PCcounterpart.[78]Age of Empires: The Age of Kings scored 80% on Game Rankings and Metacritic.[79][80]Konami brought a game of the same title to the PlayStation 2 around five years earlier than the DS version, but the game had little promotion, and sold poorly.[81]
On August 16, 2010, Microsoft announced Age of Empires Online, which was a free-to-play Games for Windows Live online game, it developed in collaboration with Robot Entertainment. It featured Free-to-play experiences via Games for Windows LIVE as well as: A persistent online capital city that lives and grows even when you're offline, Cooperative multiplayer quests, trading and a level-based system that lets you progress at your own pace.[82] Premium content could be earned or purchased, such as access to blueprints and special items, as well as more quests and features. In September 2013, it was announced that the game would remain functional until July 1, 2014, after which it would be shut down due to the content being too expensive to maintain.[83]
On April 13, 2014, Age of Empires: World Domination was announced. It was developed by KLab Games for the iOS, Android and Windows Phone.[84] It was released on December 7, 2015,[85] with the service terminated on 30 November 2016.[86]
On August 25, 2014, Age of Empires: Castle Siege was announced. It is a touch-based game developed by Smoking Gun Interactive. It was released on September 17, 2014 for the Windows PC and Windows Phone 8.[87][88]
Development[edit]
Historical elements[edit]
The development phases of the Age of Empires games were similar in several ways. Due to the games being based on historical events, the team often had to do large amounts of research.[89] However, the research was not in depth, which, according to Age of Empires designer Bruce Shelley, is "a good idea for most entertainment products."[89] Shelley also said that Ensemble Studios took most of the reference material from children's sections at libraries. He pointed out the goal was for the players of the game to have fun, "not [its] designers or researchers."[89] At the Games Convention Developers Conference in 2007, Shelley continued with this thought and explained that the success of the series laid in "making a game which appealed to both the casual and hardcore gamer."[90] Shelley also remarked the Age of Empires games were not about history in itself, but rather "about the human experience;"[90] they focused not simply on what humans had done but on what they could do in the future such as "going into space."[90] Ensemble Studios developed Age of Mythology in a different way than the previous two games. The team had worried they "couldn't get away" with a third historical-based game, and chose mythology as the setting after they had discussed several options.[91]
Artificial intelligence[edit]
The artificial intelligence (AI) used in the Age of Empires series has been developed and improved regularly by designers. AI specialist Dave Pottinger noted the development team gave the AI in the original game a very high priority, and spent over a year working on it. He said that the AI in the game relies on tactics and strategies to win, instead of "cheating" by giving bonus resources to itself, or tweaking its units to be stronger than normal.[92] Pottinger later noted that the Age of Empires series team took great pride in their AI playing a "fair game"[93] and didn't know what the player was doing and had to play by the same rules as its human opponents.[94]
Age of Empires allows players to choose to play either along specialized, story-backed conditions or as individual battles against the AI (and other players). Choosing to battle against the AI – rather than following the storyline – allows the AI to adapt to players' strategies and even remember which games it won and lost. The AI eventually overcomes players' strategies and easily destroys their villages after several games. For instance, in Age of Empires III, this is referred to as playing a "Skirmish." However Age of Empires III allows players to refine their strategies further against the AI by "Building a Deck," which allows players to replace "Home City" shipments with improved alternatives.
In Age of Empires II: The Conquerors the AI was given a high priority, the result being the "smart villager" feature, which was included in subsequent games of the series. After building a structure that stores or produces resources, smart villagers would proceed to collect resources related to the structure, such as crops from farms or ore from exposed deposits.[95]
Age of Mythology: The Titans lets players use an AI debugger when creating custom scenarios; players can change the settings of computer players and make them act according to certain patterns.[96] More basic changes to the AI had previously been available in the series' first two games.[97]
Graphics and visuals[edit]
The graphics and visuals of Age of Empires improved with each successive release. From the original release to the second, Age of Empires II: The Age of Kings, noteworthy improvements gained praise from several critics.[98][99][100] With the release of Age of Mythology the praise continued,[98][101][102][103] and the fourth release, Age of Empires III, garnered even more.[104][105][106]
GameSpot praised the improved graphics[98] in the second release, Age of Empires II: The Age of Kings.Eurogamer welcomed its introduction of female villagers[107] as compared with the original male only version. Allgame praised the advanced grouping and path-finding systems in the second release.[99] Despite the improved graphics, Allgame complained that units in Age of Empires II: The Age of Kings were at times difficult to distinguish from one another,[99] a point numerous reviewers agreed on.[98][108] Nevertheless, Game Revolution wrote that the second release was "the best looking of the 2D RTS games out there right now."[100]
The graphics continued to improve in Age of Mythology and was praised by a majority of reviewers. IGN ranked the graphics in this third release, "a joy to watch ... awesome."[101] GameSpot assented, also rating the graphics a 9 out of 10.[98] Game Revolution agreed,[102] and PC Gamer stated that the graphics in the third release "are packed with detail."[103]
The trend in improved graphics continued well into the next release, Age of Empires III, much to the delight of reviewers. IGN stated, "After seeing the screenshots, our jaws hit the floor at the amount of detail."[104]1UP.com described Age of Empires III as "one of the most beautiful games you will put on your computer for the foreseeable future."[105] GameSpy agreed, stating, "Age III's graphics are unmatched in the strategy genre."[106]Age of Empires III builds on and introduces new features to the prior release, Age of Mythology, such as the inclusion of the award-winning[109] Havok physics simulation middleware[110] game engine for the Windows version and PhysX for the Mac OS X. The innovative result is that pre-created animations are avoided; instead events are calculated according to the physics engine. Consequently, views of events like building destruction and tree felling are not pre-recorded. GameSpot also admired the graphics in the fourth release but complained about "the awkward unit behavior."[111] Other graphical features of the game include bloom lighting and support for pixel shader 3.0.[112]
GameSpy awarded Age of Empires III the "Best Graphics" award at GameSpy's "Game of the Year 2005."[113]
Music[edit]
Stephen Rippy has been the series' music director since the first game. He has had occasional help from his brother, David Rippy, as well as Kevin McMullan.[114] He created the original music in Age of Empires with sounds of instruments from the periods in the game.[115] These sounds came from actual instruments, and their digital samples.[115] The tunes were the result of extensive research on the cultures, styles, and instruments used.[115] Rippy said that sound development on The Age of Kings was easy, since there was knowledge of the instruments used in the Middle Ages. Therefore, they were able to reproduce the tunes for the soundtrack of the game.[116] In Age of Mythology, an orchestral instrumentation was used, instead. According to McMullan, the team also collected large numbers of audio recordings from zoos, and created "a massive sound library of [their] own material."[117] The music of Age of Empires III was similar to The Age of Kings, in which the team used more historical instruments; Rippy noted the team used instruments such as "bagpipes and field drums" to give it a realistic feel.[114]
Collaboration[edit]
Ensemble Studios worked together with Big Huge Games to develop The Asian Dynasties, Age of Empires III's second expansion. This was the first joint venture for both teams. The reason for them doing so was compatible schedules: Ensemble Studios was busy with other projects—particularly Halo Wars—while Big Huge Games' real-time strategy team had few projects at that time. Big Huge Games did most of the work, but Ensemble Studios designers Greg Street and Sandy Petersen joined in the brainstorming, and had control over the final product.[118] Both studios had roles in testing the game before its release.[119]
Reception and legacy[edit]
The Age of Empires series has been a commercial success. As of 2008, five of its games have each sold more than one million copies. According to Gamasutra, Age of Empires had sold more than three million copies, and The Rise of Rome sold one million copies as of 2000.[9] Around the same time, Microsoft announced that they shipped over two million copies of The Age of Kings.[21] In 2003, Microsoft announced the sales of one million copies for Age of Mythology.[73] By 2004—prior to the release of Age of Empires III—the Age of Empires franchise had sold over 15 million copies.[136] On May 18, 2007, Ensemble Studios announced that two million copies of Age of Empires III had been sold.[42] Games in the series have consistently scored highly on video game review aggregator websites GameRankings and Metacritic, which collect data from numerous review websites. As noted in the adjacent table, the highest rating game is Age of Empires II: The Age of Kings, receiving a 92% score from both sites.[19][20]
Critics have credited Age of Empires for influencing real-time strategy (RTS) games such as Rise of Nations, Empire Earth, and Cossacks.[137][138]Star Wars: Galactic Battlegrounds was also influenced by the series: it utilized the Geniegame engine, as Age of Empires and Age of Empires II: The Age of Kings had, and was considered by critics to be a very close replica to the games; IGN began their review with the statement "I love Age of Star Wars, I mean Star Empires. Whatever it's called, I dig it."[139] and GameSpot wrote that "fundamentals of the Age of Empires II engine are so intact in Star Wars: Galactic Battlegrounds that veterans of that game can jump right in."[140] In October 2005, Shelley commented on the impact of the series. In a GameSpy interview, he explained that parents would "tell Ensemble Studios that their kid is reading books about ancient Greece because they enjoy playing with the triremes so much, or that they want to check out books about medieval history because [the] game taught them what a trebuchet was."[141]
Shelley has said that the key to the success of the games was its innovation, rather than imitation of its peers. He also claimed the unique elements in the games "helped establish the reputation of Ensemble Studios as masters of the real-time strategy genre."[142] Mark Bozon of IGN wrote in his review of The Age of Kings, "The Age of Empires series has been one of the most innovative real-time strategy games for PC in the last decade or so."[143] Gamenikki called Ensemble Studios "the developer that started it all" when they talked about how much Age of Empires III had done to advance the real-time strategy genre.[144] Shelley has acknowledged the success and innovation of Age of Empires helped to ensure Ensemble survive its early periods since startup.[145] In 2005, Shelley complained of critics holding an "innovation bias" against the series; citing the 60% score from Computer Gaming World, he said that despite Age of Empires III being "perhaps the best selling PC game in the world", reviewers expected "something really new", and rated it harshly.[146]
Bungie chose Ensemble Studios to develop Halo Wars, an RTS game based on their Halo series. They said that one of the reasons they chose to work with Ensemble was because of the Age of Empires series.[147] They also noted that Ensemble was the perfect choice "to realize the original vision of Halo", which started life as an RTS.[147]
References[edit]
- ^"Age of Empires screenshots and statistics". Universal Videogame List. Archived from the original on March 15, 2012. Retrieved May 21, 2011.
- ^Jeff Sengstack (February 14, 1997). "Age of Empires Preview: Microsoft takes a stab at the golden age of wargaming". GameSpot. Archived from the original on March 16, 2009. Retrieved June 17, 2008.
- ^Bruce Shelley (April 9, 2007). "Play Age of Empires – Study History in College". Ensemble Studios. Archived from the original on February 17, 2008. Retrieved April 21, 2008.
- ^T. Liam McDonald (October 27, 1997). "Age of Empires Review". GameSpot. Retrieved June 17, 2008.
- ^James Holland. "Age of Empires". PC Gameworld. Archived from the original on December 21, 2007. Retrieved January 14, 2008.
- ^"Age of Empires Downloads". Microsoft. Archived from the original on February 27, 2008. Retrieved February 28, 2008.
- ^ ab"Age of Empires (pc: 1997)". Metacritic. Archived from the original on June 20, 2008. Retrieved June 17, 2008.
- ^"Computer Strategy Game of the Year". Academy of Interactive Arts & Sciences. Archived from the original on January 28, 2008. Retrieved January 19, 2008.
- ^ abcMatt Pritchard (March 7, 2000). "Postmortem: Ensemble Studios' Age of Empires II: The Age of Kings". Gamasutra. Archived from the original on February 27, 2008. Retrieved February 1, 2008.
- ^ ab
Age of Mythology: The Titans
The Age Of Mythology series has always been a reassuringly dependable RTS, the strategy equivalent of a cup of cocoa and a pair of fluffy slippers. However, Ensemble wasn't content to rest on its well-established laurels with Age Of Mythology, and instead dug deep into its RTS pockets to bnng us a beautiful, finely tuned game with a host of weird and wonderful creatures pulled straight from the pages of a book on mythology.
The Titans expansion pack focuses mainly on a new civilisation, the Atlanteans, led by Kastor, the son of Arkantos, the hero from the original game. In the meaty single-player campaign, the tale of the Atlanteans is spread over 12 missions, all of which are neatly designed and more than a match for anything in the original game.
New Toys On The Block
Part of this is due to the wide range of new features and tilesets Microsoft has added to the in-game editor - the flourishing AoM modding community will have nothing to complain about when they see all the new toys they've got to play with. In fact, the developers do seem to have paid quite a bit of attention to the multiplayer side of Titans. As well as polishing up the online interface, they've also included a number of Al 'personalities', with unique playing styles that mimic the methods of real-life opponents.
Greek Chic
The Atlanteans themselves are like a more interesting version of the Greeks, who personally I've always found to be quite dull compared to the showy and frantic Egyptians and the Norse. They come complete with their own set of major Titan gods; Kronos, Oranos and Gaia, plus nine minor gods.
The various Titan god powers and the Atlantean features add some very interesting strategic twists to the game. For instance, all their buildings come replete with a time shift power, which allows them to be moved to different parts of the map. The vortex god power literally sucks all your military units up and drops them in one place. The Atlanteans also curry favour with their chosen gods by taking over town centres rather than praying at temples, building relics or fighting, making them much more of a territory conscious side to play.
Unfortunately there are very few changes to the existing sides, but the key addition is a giant creature for each side -monstrous beings that can cause enormous amounts of damage. When you've managed to create one of these Titans they will roam about the map tearing things up and fighting each other like a Japanese monster movie.
Overall this is a great value expansion pack. The singleplayer campaign is very satisfying, the new race has some very interesting potential for online games and the new Titans are superb fun, if not particularly subtle. With typical Ensemble aplomb, Age Of Mythology has just received a titanic new lease of life.
What’s New in the Age of Mythology: The Titans N/A serial key or number?
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System Requirements for Age of Mythology: The Titans N/A serial key or number
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