Gaming Round-Up: Wrapping up 2024

My Sharen in The First Descendant.Time for another grab-bag on the games I’ve been playing lately, focused particularly on what I played over the holidays and into these first days of 2025.

This also marked my first few weeks playing with my very expensive and unnecessarily powerful new gaming computer, which I have dubbed the Thundercougarfalconbird.

New World

New World remains somewhat back-burnered as I remain unhappy with its sudden hard shift towards forcing everyone into raids and PvP in order to progress, but I did log in for my holiday event rewards, and I made some progress with crafting.

Originally I wanted crafting to be my main endgame activity, but the extreme grind involved put an end to that plan. Since then, however, I have occasionally undergone spurts of trying to level up my skills again, usually because my storage was full. In the past I had managed to max out furnishing and cooking, though the value of those skills is limited.

My new armoured bear mount in New World.As the holidays approached, though, I realized that a number of my skills were getting close to maxed, so I made the final push and got to 250 in armouring, weaponsmithing, and arcana.

I still can’t make any useful gear, of course. That would require yet more grinding to get all sorts of rare trophies and crafting gear, to say nothing of the high end materials I’d need (and of course the mats for 725 gear are only available from the raid).

But what I can do now is make my own weapon and armour matrices, and that will save me a lot of gold on upgrading artifacts in the future. There’s also a certain satisfaction in making them yourself instead of just buying them from the trading post.

Saints Row reboot

I’ve only played one or two short sessions in the past few weeks, having finished the game months ago, but GODS IT’S SO PRETTY ON THE NEW COMPUTER.

The Saints Row reboot looks gorgeous on my new computer.Diablo IV

Diablo IV recently ran yet another free trial recently, this one featuring the new spiritborn class.

I didn’t have a lot of enthusiasm for the spiritborn as a concept. It uses the same resource mechanic as the monk from D3, and while I did play a monk and even finished the base game campaign with it, I always found it a bit clunky, and I abandoned it for good once the crusader game along. I wasn’t in love with the idea of essentially the same class but with a new (and admittedly cool) Mesoamerican theming.

I think the spiritborn improves on the monk, but I’m not sure it entirely fixes the fundamental issues. The tuning is a lot better this time, so you don’t feel nearly as resource-starved as you did on the monk, but there’s still a certain clunkiness to a resource that doesn’t naturally regenerate but also requires an inconsistent number of builders per spender.

If you’re going to do a resource that’s not affected by time, I think it would make more sense to use more precise numbers. The spiritborn’s builders are all about three-hit combos, so I don’t know why they didn’t make it take precisely three builders per finisher. Instead it’s always just slightly off of that, and passive abilities add more uncertainty to your resource generation, so you just never quite get into a clean rhythm.

My spiritborn in Diablo IV.I think the spiritborn also suffers from the extreme homogenization of class design in D4. Almost every build of almost every class follows the same formula of a builder, a spender, and four cooldown abilities. It’s not the worst playstyle, but it shouldn’t be how every class plays, and it fits the spiritborn very poorly. Spiritborn clearly wants to be all about hit combos and resource-management, and baby-sitting all these little cooldown abilities doesn’t fit with that at all.

On the plus side, it’s a very aesthetically appealing class. The visual and auditory design of abilities is excellent, and I do think the mix of Mesoamerican spiritualism with martial arts makes for a very fresh-feeling aesthetic.

They also have much better character models than any of the other classes. I’m not one of those person who thinks all video game avatars need to be super hot, but all the classes in D4 pre-spiritborn just look… unhealthy. Every character looks like they have an eating disorder and/or the flu. The spiritborn actually look like healthy, normal humans.

Overall, I liked the spiritborn more than I expected to, but I don’t think it’s going to be the thing that convinces me to finally buy the game.

My spiritborn clearing a dungeon in Diablo IV.The First Descendant

The majority of my gaming time for the last few weeks has gone towards The First Descendant, despite or perhaps because of the fact it’s one of stupidest games I’ve ever played. I’ve put most of my thoughts on that into a column for Massively Overpowered, though, so I’m only briefly mentioning it here for the sake of thoroughness.

I’m not entirely sure right now when Bree plans to publish the column, but hopefully within the next week or so.

Heroes of the Storm

Not much to say about this other than I’m still playing, albeit sporadically. D.va remains my de facto main these days, insomuch as that term ever has any meaning for my indecisive self. She’s now my third most-played hero of all time, though it’ll still be a bit before she catches up to Tassadar and Jaina.

The recent buffs to D.va have only encouraged me to keep playing her. I don’t think she really needed buffs — I feel she’s simply difficult to play rather than underpowered — but I certainly won’t complain about some increased survivability. It’s good to see the game is still getting updates, even if they’re small.

Earning MVP as Li-Ming in Heroes of the Storm.I’ve also returned to playing Li-Ming on a semi-regular basis. Once a favourite, I struggled to relearn her after my long absence, at least in part due to balance changes since her early days. But I tweaked my talents on her (mostly swapping out some Magic Missiles talents for more Arcane Orb support), and I seem to have gotten back into the swing of things with her.

It soothes my disappointment over Diablo IV abandoning III’s story, somewhat. That’s one of the great things about Heroes: All my favourite characters are frozen in time at their moment of greatest coolness. WoW ruined Jaina’s character? She’s still a cool-headed badass in Heroes. D4 pretends Li-Ming never existed? She’s still kicking ass in the Nexus.

Epic Games freebies

Finally, I sampled several free games from the Epic Games Store, though unfortunately none of them quite stuck.

First there was Lord of the Rings: Return to Moria. I loved hearing John Rhys-Davies as Gimli again, and it did seem to be made with some genuine love for the source material, but the gameplay didn’t particularly excite me. Is there some rule that survival games have to have the jankiest animations and combat imaginable? Once again it proves true that I enjoy survival mechanics, but not survival games.

It's naked Norman Reedus.Next up was Death Stranding, which I claimed a long time ago and never got around to playing until now. Based on its trailers and reputation, I was expecting it to be very strange, but it still managed to far more bizarre than I expected. At times I found the sheer surrealism coupled with the breathless seriousness with which it is delivered a bit unintentionally funny, but it’s so different I couldn’t help but be intrigued.

Again, though, the gameplay was the stumbling block. The vast majority of what I played was cutscenes, but when I actually controlled my character, the moment to moment mechanics were a bit dull. I wasn’t prepared to spend forty hours playing a mini-game to keep my backpack’s weight balanced.

I’m glad a game like this exists, though. It’s good to see developers taking chances. I might watch the rest of the story on YouTube at some point or something. Death Stranding may not be a game I enjoy playing, but I respect its originality.

Finally, there was Sifu. Like the original Mirror’s Edge, this is a game that I like, but which I simply suck too hard at to play. I’m pretty bad at this kind of combo-focused combat, and that coupled with an extremely punishing death mechanic was a deal-breaker. Definitely a skill issue on my part, but it is what it is.

Fighting my way down a hall in Sifu.The Secret Level episode based on it was quite cool, though.

Has the Success of AoE2 Become a Self-fulfilling Prophecy?

While I also dipped my toes into New World and Heroes of the Storm, November ended up being a month almost entirely devoted to real time strategy for me. Aside from checking out the ZeroSpace demo, I also spent quite a lot of time on the Age of Empires franchise.

A cutscene from Age of Mythology: Retold's massively disappointing Arena of the Gods mode.First, there was the release of the Arena of the Gods mode for Age of Mythology: Retold. As a reminder, this is the only new content for the remaster that isn’t paid DLC, and it was supposed to be a launch feature but got delayed.

It should have been delayed a lot more. The intention seems to have been to make something that combines the best of both skirmish and campaign play, but instead it’s the worst of both, with extra issues on top.

When we got the first preview, everyone took it to be a repeatable rogue-like style pseudo-campaign, but it’s actually exactly the same every time with no randomization or replay value at all. The “story” is paper-thin and a complete rehash of the original game’s story, and every mission is just a standard skirmish map with minor twists that rarely change how the game is played in any significant way.

The enemy AI is also woefully inadequate. It supposedly does get harder eventually, but the first dozen or so missions at least are incredibly easy, and the AI isn’t programmed to change its behaviour based on the “world twist” buffs, leading to lots of situations where you can just roll it effortlessly.

The Arena of the Gods mode in Age of Mythology: Retold.Oh, and you also can’t save mid-mission for some reason.

My expectations for Arena of the Gods were never that high, but I’m just shocked at the poor quality of it. I struggle to imagine how they could have done a worse job. I’d genuinely rather just play regular skirmishes because at least then you have full freedom to choose your civilization, opponent, and difficulty, and you can save your game if you get called away suddenly. I gave up out of sheer boredom before I even made it to the halfway point of the campaign.

Retold continues to be an incredible disappointment across the board. The Immortal Pillars expansion has now been delayed, and I can only hope the extra time pays off and they can finally deliver some quality content. So far Retold does not feel remotely worthy of the money I spent on it.

After that, my attention turned to Battle for Greece, the experimental new narrative-focused expansion for Age of Empires II.

I do think this one was a little over-hyped, especially by the community. There was so much talk about the quality of the story-telling being taken to another level, but it’s just like any other AoE2 campaign on that front. The voice acting is as hokey as ever, and the new cinematic mission intros are not meaningfully different from the old journal entries, still being mostly static images accompanied by a single narrator’s voice over.

A cutscene from the Chronicles: Battle for Greece DLC for Age of Empires II.I also think the animations themselves were pretty goofy, and it really took me out of the story. The exaggerated body proportions and limited motion kept making me think of the “virgin versus chad” memes.

The gameplay was a bit more interesting. Again, not quite as revolutionary as it was cracked up to be, but they did get a bit more creative with mission design, and there’s the naval revamp, which I think I liked. I wouldn’t go so far as to say it actually made me enjoy naval gameplay, but I did dislike it less. What was really fun was the super OP upgrades you got when playing as Themistocles, but I guess I grudgingly understand why those couldn’t be in every mission. I guess.

I did find consistency was an issue. The difficulty was all over the map, and I found some of the more “creative” missions could be more irritating than anything, especially those with limited economies. If you asked me to list my favourite AoE2 campaign missions, a lot would be from Battle for Greece, but the same would be true if you asked me to list my least favourite.

Still, it’s good to see them trying new things, and I mostly enjoyed it. I expect I’ll buy the Alexander the Great sequel they teased at the end.

A massive battle in the Chronicles: Battle for Greece DLC for Age of Empires II.Finally, the Sultans Ascend expansion for Age of Empires IV finally went on a deep enough discount that I decided to pull the trigger on it.

All the praise directed at Battle for Greece’s story-telling would have fit a lot better here. The animated cutscenes for the Sultans Ascend’s lone eight-mission campaign are absolutely gorgeous, and the narration is top notch. This was a real high water mark for story-telling in the Age of Empires franchise.

I did find the missions again suffered a bit from inconsistent difficulty and too many missions with limited economy or otherwise gimmicky design, but overall it’s a very strong campaign. I do, however, remain frustrated by its paltry size. Even at 30% off, I feel like I overpaid for what was ultimately an incredibly small amount of content.

I also tried the new civilizations, the Byzantines and the Japanese, which once again had me feeling that AoE4 is starting to repeat the mistakes of AoE3 by over-complicating its design.

An animated cutscene from the Sultans Ascend campaign in Age of Empires IV.The Byzantines in particular felt like they had enough unique gimmicks for at least two or three different civilizations. Between the aqueduct mechanic, olive oil and mercenaries, and a wealth of unique units that almost all have active abilities, it’s just too much. None of those are bad mechanics individually — aqueducts in particular are quite clever — but it’s too much for one civ. This level of asymmetry makes sense in a game with three or four factions, not a game with over ten factions.

The Japanese also felt intimidating at first due to have a roster comprised almost entirely of unique units, but it got a lot more manageable once I figured out most of them are effectively just buffed versions of standard units. I also enjoyed the bannerman mechanic and the choice of religion. It’s still a bit more complexity than I’d like in a single civilization, but it’s not too bad once you get the hang of it, and I ended up liking the Japanese overall.

It’s kind of a moot point, though, as they have no campaign content, and the skirmish AI in AoE4 remains FUBAR even after all these years. When I tried the Byzantines, the enemy seemed to keep most of its army next to its town centre for the entire game, sending out only small groups to apparently wander the map at random. Never once did my base actually get attacked. I can’t believe they still haven’t gotten the skirmish AI working at even a basic level.

I didn’t even bother with the variant civilizations. I still think the whole idea is dumb from top to bottom, and I wish the resources spent on them had gone to more campaign content instead.

A Japanese settlement in Age of Empires IV.And that brings me to the question in my headline. Age of Empires II remains the most popular AoE game, but I do wonder how much of that is a self-fulfilling prophecy at this point as it’s clear the other games are suffering from a lack of development resources.

I feel like we’re caught in a feedback loop where AoE2 gets the most resources, so it produces the most content, so people play it more, so it gets more resources… Meanwhile the other games get neglected because they never got the resources they needed to equal AoE2’s momentum.

AoE2 is a great game, but at the end of the day it’s still over twenty years old, and after playing so much of it, it is starting to feel a bit tired for me. These days I would much rather play AoE4 or AoM: Retold, but the content just isn’t there. When AoE2 offers me twenty-one campaign missions for $20 and AoE4 offers me eight missions for the same price, it’s kind of a no-brainer where I’m going to prioritize spending my money. I like AoE4 better, but I don’t like it more than twice as much.

I’m worried that the powers that be are looking at the metrics and getting the wrong message. I’m worried they’ll see that no one is playing Arena of the Gods and people mostly bought Sultans Ascend for the multiplayer content and conclude that there isn’t a desire for versus AI content outside of AoE2, but I think there very much is. I would happily sink dozens of hours into those games if content of sufficient quality and quantity was there.

A naval battle in the Chronicles: Battle for Greece DLC for Age of Empires II.But right now AoE2 is the only Age game that consistently serves my playstyle, so I’ve got no choice but to keep slinking back to it until the other titles get their act together.