

While Age of Mythology may not have as many civilisations as Age of Empires (three, with two more added in expansions) you get as much diversity in gameplay, if not more, as the game seeks to reflect the wonderful diversity of ancient mythology. Here’s why we think Age of Mythology deserves the loving remaster treatment that its historical stablemates have received.

Besides, Age of Mythology is such a different game that, despite all the recent remasters in the broader Age series, there's still a certain mythological itch that needs scratching. It’s had some support over the years – and an 'extended edition' back in 2014, which already looks a little outdated – but the last big content update was back in early 2016 when the poorly received expansion Tale of the Dragon was released. Released in 2002, Age of Mythology was received very positively by critics and fans alike the substantial differences between the three core civilisations, and between the gods within them, making AoM stand apart from Age of Empires and indeed other RTS games at the time. Mistakes learned from past games, new technology, and the wave of interest created by these new Age of Empires games creates the perfect environment to reintroduce Age of Mythology to the world, and perhaps extend it with new ancient civilisations and fantastical creatures to control, all with modern graphics. A new update that arrived in June 2020 added a new map, new cheat codes, and tuned balancing across the game – all great news, but it's not quite what many fans expected from Isgreen's comment. Indeed, it hasn't been totally forgotten. But there's one Age game that's still absent from the remaster and sequel talk where is Age of Mythology?Īt E3 2019, Adam Isgreen said that the mythological spin-off had not been forgotten. Updated graphics, new features, remastered soundtracks… everything the discerning RTS fan could hope for.

We now have the definitive editions of all the historical Age of Empires games, and they're brilliant.
