Endless Legend
Endless Legend | |
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Retail cover art | |
Developer(s) | Amplitude Studios |
Publisher(s) | Iceberg Interactive |
Engine | Unity |
Platform(s) | Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X |
Release date(s) | 18 September 2014 |
Genre(s) | 4x, turn-based strategy |
Mode(s) | Single player and multiplayer |
Endless Legend is a turn based 4X fantasy-strategy game developed by Amplitude Studios and published by Iceberg Interactive for Microsoft Windows and Mac OS X in September 2014. The purpose of the game is to dominate the world "Auriga" with one of the eight races through either diplomacy or war while developing new technologies, exploring new lands and founding new cities.[1][2]
Endless Legend is the third game made by Amplitude Studios in their Endless series of titles, following Endless Space and Dungeon of the Endless.
Gameplay
Endless legend is a turn-based 4X strategy game, in which players take control of a fantasy faction to establish an empire through exploration, conquest, diplomacy and research.[3] The game is set in the land of Auriga, with the layout of its landmass and ecosystems being randomized per game, represented on a model-like map made up of a hexagonal grid. The map is populated with a variety of terrain, each made up of biomes within the world which have effects on the player's units. Tiles and their layout are all randomly generated to create a unique playable world with each separate playthrough. Fog of war covers the play space requiring exploration by the player's units to find resources and minor factions and races that players must utilize and exploit to benefit their growing empires. Unlike other 4X games, however, in Endless Legend the world map is also formed of separate regions. Once a city has been established within the borders of a region for the first time, the entire region becomes part of a faction's territory and control. At the start of each game, each faction begins with a settler unit to establish their first city and region. Regions can only host one city each within its borders.[4]
Players choose from one of eight factions, each with their own unique characteristics including appearance, units, abilities and play-styles:[3]
- Wild Walkers: Former forest dwellers who have harnessed magic to control and shape the natural world.
- Broken Lords: Knights of honor and chivalry who have lost their humanity, remaining as specters within their suits of armor.
- Vaulters: Great smiths and craftsmen who have lived in solitude underground for most of the history prior.
- Necrophages: A great hive mind of insectoid creatures that can spread plagues while infecting and controlling others.
- Ardent Mages: Sorcerers who warp their bodies and minds to achieve great magical power and sustained life.
- Roving Clans: Travelers and merchants from distant lands of a nomadic tradition.
- Drakken: An ancient dragon race whose longevity has made them a wise race of scholars and diplomats.
- Cult of the Eternal End: A fanatical cult that spreads influence on lesser races, mechanical in their appearance and thought, who wish to destroy the relics of the Endless, the advanced alien race that once counted Auriga among the planets under their possession.
Faction controlled cities are used to generate resources, construct buildings and recruit armies. There are five different key resources each faction requires to remain stable and grow: food, industry, dust, science, and influence. Food is used to increase and sustain the population. Industry is used to produce units and buildings. Dust is the standard currency in Auriga. Science is used for research. Finally, influence is used for empire level actions, in which the player gains boons like boosted attack on units or additional resource gain. Influence is also required for diplomatic proposals with other factions. Resources are gained through the properties on game world tiles within a city's border, buildings the player has constructed and research. How much of a resource a city can gather is dictated a city's worker force, gained by its native population, which can grow. Workers are the main tool for gaining resources. They are placed to collect certain resources for the player, with more workers on a certain task gaining more resources. Another aspect of Endless Legend is progression of research. Research is cut into four areas within multiple eras. The four areas of research are military, science and industry, empire and expansion, and economy and population. Each aspect is intended to tailor the experience to the player and pushes toward that players specific goal of victory.[5]
Cities are where armies are raised. Armies are composed of individual units spawned by the player, with different units types having their own abilities and uses in combat. Players move armies through an action points system. Each movement and interaction subtracts one action point until the counter hits zero, at which point no further actions can be taken.[3] The units are used for exploration, combat, diplomacy and questing. Units in an army can be outfitted with different equipment researched and purchased by the player or found. Acquired equipment can change the statistics of a units to the player's liking. Armies can also the include a hero, a powerful unit with the ability to gain skill points to temper the character to a player's play style.[5]
Endless Legend also has a quest system where quests are found in the game world. Many of these are completed through the use of armies. Quests differ between factions and are the main source of story content throughout the game.[4] Completing all of the player's chosen faction's quests is also one possible victory condition for a player. Armies can accomplish quests given by other faction for diplomacy points. Diplomacy is used to gain favor with other faction, and if enough influence points are gained alliances can be formed.[4] On the other hand, a declaration of war between the player and another faction can also occur if a player helps that faction's enemy. Outside of both peace and war, all players begin in a state of "cold war".
There are eight win conditions in the game:
- Elimination Victory: No other faction is left alive.
- Score victory: having the highest number of overall points at the end of the 300th turn in a normal game.
- Expansion Victory: 80% of the map is claimed by a player.
- Economic Victory: in a normal game 555,500 Dust has been collected by a player.
- Diplomatic Victory: in a normal game collecting 3000 Diplomatic Points.
- Wonder Victory: the first player to complete all of their faction's quest and build the associated Wonder.
- Scientific Victory: the player must discover five of six technologies in the 6th era.
- Supremacy Victory: conquer all capitals on the map.
Reception
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Endless Legend received generally positive reviews from critics. Review aggregation website Metacritic gathered an average rating of 82 out of 100 based on 35 reviews for the PC version.[7] and GameRankings gathered a score of 83% based on 19 reviews.[6]
PC Gamer US gave it a 89 out of 100 stating,"Amplitude Studios has created another astounding story-driven game, that really has taken the best bits of RTS, RPG and 4X, drawing much from Endless Space, and spun it differently for every faction."[4] IGN commented, "It combines style, substance, and setting into a marvelous overall experience for both empire management and tactical combat." giving it an 8.3 out of 10 [10] GameSpot warned of passive and weak AI but remarked, "Endless Legend's driving forces are so thoroughly executed that it serves as an imperfect, but well worthwhile step in the series, and hopefully a sign of things to come." giving it a 8 out of 10.[9]
Rock, Paper, Shotgun named Endless Legend Game of the Year in 2014.[11]
References
- ↑ Barret, Ben. "Endless Legend’s Early Access Not Endless, Ends Soon". Rock Paper Shotgun. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
- ↑ Kaiser, Rowan. "A Cartographer's Dream". IGN. IGN. Retrieved 8 October 2014.
- 1 2 3 Campbell, Colin (22 July 2014). "Endless Legend seeks the perfect imbalance to keep players exploring and exterminating". Polygon. Polygon. Retrieved 16 November 2014.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Griliopoulos, Dan (14 October 2014). "Endless Legend review - PC Gamer". PC Gamer. Future. Retrieved 16 November 2014.
- 1 2 Parrish, Peter (6 May 2014). "Endless Legend Early Access Preview". incgamers. Retrieved 16 November 2014.
- 1 2 http://www.gamerankings.com/pc/763924-endless-legend/index.html
- 1 2 http://www.metacritic.com/game/pc/endless-legend/critic-reviews
- ↑ http://www.eurogamer.de/articles/2014-10-04-endless-legend-test
- 1 2 http://www.gamespot.com/reviews/endless-legend-review/1900-6415914/
- 1 2 http://www.ign.com/articles/2014/09/23/endless-legend-review
- ↑ "The Bestest Best Game Of 2014: Endless Legend". Rock, Paper, Shotgun. December 24, 2014. Retrieved January 7, 2015.