A screenshot from Caesar IV, a game using the Titan 2.0 engine. |
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Developer(s) | Stainless Steel Studios |
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Stable release | 2.0 / May 11, 2004 |
Operating system | Microsoft Windows |
Type | Game engine |
Website | Tilted Mill Entertainment web site |
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Titan is a game engine developed by Stainless Steel Studios used in the real-time strategy genre. It was mainly used as a PC game engine in the early 2000s. The engine was used in Stainless Steel Studio's first couple games, such as Empire Earth and Empires: Dawn of the Modern World.
Titan 2.0, an update of the original Titan Engine, was to be a comprehensive real-time strategy engine, and was sold before Stainless Steel Studios was dissolved in 2005.[1]
SSSI described their engine on their website (before it shut down) at the day of its release. They said it would handle all objects in the gaming world, has an integrated scenario editor, a powerful mulitplayer mode and communicator, built-in artificial intelligence and 3D graphics.[2] The engine was announced in May 2004 [3], and was designed by SSSI, whose head designer is Rick Goodman, the designer of Empire Earth and Age of Empires. SSSI's last game made using this engine was Rise and Fall: Civilizations at War [4]. Since SSSI has closed its doors, its website, the original Titan website, and any information about Titan 2.0 has for the most part has disappeared. Little more is known about the original game processor, other than that it was used in some of the Empire series, such as Empire Earth.
After its press release, the engine was promptly purchased by Tilted Mill Entertainment, a small production company out of Massachusetts. The engine was also available out for purchase to anyone for US$250,000 at its release. [2]
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