Return of Age of Empires
Microsoft has announced the return of Age of Empires. Dave Luehmann, general manager of Microsoft Games Studios said, "This next version will really change the rulebook of how those games are played."
Age of Empires Online, now in a closed beta release, will be familiar to franchise fans, who can go here and sign up for a chance to join the beta. However, at the game’s core is a new, socially connected experience. The game now invites players to create a living, growing online world that’s shared with friends around the world through Games for Windows LIVE, an online gaming network related to Xbox LIVE.
Anyone with a LIVE account can see their friends online and send and receive voice messages, text messages, and game invites. In Age of Empires Online, players can use the service to invite friends for a cooperative quest or a friendly challenge in the local arena, trade goods and weapons, and visit each other’s capital cities.
With LIVE at its core, Age of Empires Online reflects a broader trend underway in gaming, says John Dongelmans, director of Games Marketing.
The updated title is now a blend of real-time strategy (RTS) and massively multiplayer online (MMO) gaming, Luehmann says. A key element of MMO games is “persistence.” In the case of the Age of Empires Online, that means a player’s capital city never sleeps.
Even when offline, the quarries are producing stone, the sawmill is producing lumber and the smelter is firing metal. The MMO elements also mean that gameplay has a different focus. “Instead of getting through a skirmish with a friend, the game is now a long civilization of mission after mission, many of which are focused on cooperative play,” Luehmann says.
It’s still an RTS game, though, he adds. Players go on the attack with archers and cavalry. “Only now, you can invite a friend for some ‘comp-stomp,’” he says. That’s taking on the computer-controlled players, for the non-gamer.
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