With fully mobile bases, no population buildings, and an economy heavily focused on burning down other people's stuff to get money, the Mongol faction breaks with tradition and convention and shows what Relic can do when it’s really trying to bring something new to the table. At the same time, new mechanical ideas like being able to hide units in forests to set up ambushes are a nice twist, but other than that I'm not really doing anything that I couldn't in the Definitive Editions of Age of Empires 2 and 3 that have been released recently. And with Microsoft signing the checks, it's not like Relic made this on a shoestring budget. That includes the graphics: even on max settings they don't look that impressive, especially when I could go play any Total War released since 2010 and see an order of magnitude more units with much more detailed models and far higher-fidelity environments. The Abbasids get the Baghdad House of Wisdom which positions them to be a leader in tech and – hilariously if you know its real-world fate – grants fire resistance to nearby structures.īut these modest touch-ups didn't do much to change the fact that there's almost nothing in Age 4 that couldn't have existed 10 years ago. The Chinese gain much of their gold income from Imperial Officials who walk around collecting taxes from all of your buildings. I mean, they each do play a bit differently unique techs, units, and landmarks are great at establishing an identity evoking their historical inspiration and varying up how you maximize your economy. But for six out of the eight playable factions, I just didn't feel like there was enough new going on here.
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