Dated, but a classic

User Rating: 8 | Age of Empires II: HD Edition PC

Age of Empires II and The Conquerors expansion had a huge following its original release in 1999. It had an active online community for several years until Microsoft shut down the servers, but even then, there were still third party ways of playing online. There was also the creative side of the community; people liked creating mods, custom maps and campaigns. Due to the potential audience, it is no surprise this game was chosen to receive a HD update and provide an easy way to play multiplayer games and install mods via Steam.

In Age of Empires, you take control of a civilization, gathering resources to create buildings, build an army, and invest in research in order to defeat your enemies. A game starting in the Dark Ages would usually give you a Town Centre and some Villagers, and would see you advance through to the Feudal Age, Castle Age, then Imperial Age. To advance through the ages, you need to build a couple of buildings from that era, and collect the required amount of resources to advance. At each Age, you will gain access to different types of buildings, better military units and better research upgrades to improve your army.

The strategy is getting the balance between resource collecting, creating your army, and upgrading it to give you the competitive edge. You need to explore the map to uncover it, finding access to more resources (Food, Wood, Stone, Gold), locating your enemy, and finding strategic positions on the map. The game uses 'Fog of War' where you can only see enemies if they are in range of your units and buildings. Unexplored map is totally black and out of range areas are foggy.

The military units have different strengths and weaknesses, and sometimes comes down to a rock-paper-scissors formula. For example, Pikemen are good against mounted units. It's therefore advantageous to have at least a few types of unit in your army, otherwise you leave yourself vulnerable for a simple counter. Each civilisation has certain strengths and weaknesses too, so it's best to invest in your stronger units and avoid your weaker ones. Most civilisations have the same core set of units with the addition of one or more unique units.

There's a Campaign mode where the scenarios are based on historical events and follow famous generals such as Barbarosa, Genghis Khan, Attila The Hun, Joan of Arc etc. If you would rather battle properly without playing with the set pieces in the campaign, you can play Random Map where you can specify how many opponents, teams, map sizes, starting age and many other options.

The HD release has been out for some time now and has received many patches. When the HD version was first released, there was a large list of problems. The numerous patches that followed fixed bugs but introduced others, and this was a recurring pattern over the years. For example, a recent patch fixed this issue: 'AI should now function correctly and participate during gameplay'. How the previous patch managed to get released with a bug like that is anyone's guess.

Once major complaint of the HD release was the lack of HD textures. Some of the graphics were tweaked and looked better, but some objects like cliffs and farms initially looked horrendous. The major selling point was that the game supported larger resolutions than the original game. It was this fact that they were selling the HD moniker on, rather than a overhaul of graphics.

Rather than introduce changes to the interface to add features that were seen in subsequent installments (like Age of Empires 3), it sounded like the developers focussed their efforts on refactoring the game's code and tweaking AI scripts. After this, they began adding new content in the form of expansion packs where new civilisations and campaigns were added.

Back in the day, I racked up an insane amount of time on the original Age of Empires II, and it's easy to do the same now. The game has aged a lot in the way it plays, and you notice how slow it takes to progress through the ages if you have played games like Age of Empires 3 which streamlined the process a lot. Initially, it was hard to recommend this HD release, but since the major issues have been resolved and there's plenty of tweaks to the game; then it's worth picking up if you wish to revisit the game. If you are a newcomer, then it's probably best looking for a more modern strategy game, since I think the major appeal of this game is nostalgia.