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Age of Mythology: Gold Edition
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Age of Mythology: Gold Edition

200380/100
Real Time Strategy (RTS)Strategy

Fantasy · Historical · Military

Age of Mythology's enduring appeal stems from its blend of historical and mythological units, allowing players to command armies of hoplites, trolls, and frost giants. The game's unique resource system, where players gather food, wood, gold, and favor, encourages strategic expansion and unit composition. Its campaign, memorable for its varied scenarios and engaging story, remains a high watermark for RTS campaigns, offering a satisfying blend of base-building, combat, and resource management.

About Age of Mythology: Gold Edition

Details
AoM: Like many other real-time strategy games, Age of Mythology is based on defeating enemy units and towns, building your own units and towns, and training villagers and fighters. In this way, players are able to defeat and conquer rival towns and civilizations. Players advance their tribe through four "Ages": starting in the Archaic Age, the player may upgrade to the Classical Age, the Heroic Age, and finally, the Mythic Age. Each upgrade to a higher Age unlocks new units and technologies for the player, which strengthens their settlement. However, upgrading requires a sum of resources to be paid and a certain prerequisite building to be constructed. There are three playable cultures in Age of Mythology: the Greeks, Egyptians, and Norse. Each culture has three "major gods"—important deities such as Ra, Zeus, or Odin. The player chooses their major god before the game begins. Every time a player advances to the next age, a "minor god" is selected. Minor gods are slightly less significant historically than their major counterparts. Some minor gods include Bast and Aphrodite. All gods grant the player unique technologies, myth units, and a unique "god power"—A one-time special ability that can either damage an opponent, or benefit the player that uses it. AoM - The Titans: The story begins with Kronos, who is still trapped in Tartarus, watching the Atlanteans, who are attempting to survive the harsh winters in the Norselands after Atlantis was destroyed 10 years ago in the events of Age of Mythology. He sends his unnamed servant to the colony, who kills the Theocrat Krios and possesses his body. Krios tells of a temple he saw in a vision. The Atlanteans leave the Norselands by using the foreseen temple called a Sky Passage, and they come to a resourceful island. Upon their arrival, Krios points out the plant-covered Temples to Oranos and Kronos. He convinces everyone including Kastor to worship them. This angers the Greeks, who promptly attack them. The Atlanteans retaliate by destroying the entire Greek colony. The survivors tell of their defeat to General Melagius. The Atlanteans invade Melagius' city called Sikyos, and slay him. Just as the Atlanteans kill Melagius, his Egyptian and Norse allies come to aid the city. Kastor decides they are too powerful and retreats. He decides to attack their homelands while they are heavily defending Greece. In the Norselands, Kastor destroys Norse temples and replaces them with Atlantean temples, to show his superiority. He also destroys the Tower of Odin (Odin's only stronghold on Earth) by using a god power from Kronos. Some Atlantean forces then sail to Egypt. Queen Amanra is warned by Arkantos that the Atlanteans are coming to steal relics from the Egyptians. Amanra fortifies the protections around the relics, but the Atlanteans still manage to steal them. Arkantos protects Amanra from Atlantean soldiers then tells her that Kastor is being tricked. He tells her to find Kastor and to help him. Meanwhile, Krios congratulates Kastor on his work and shows him a Sky Passage that he has found, which will take him behind Greek lines. Kastor enters it and finds himself on Mount Olympus. Using special temples that change his men into different myth units, Kastor slays the followers of the Olympian Gods, including Odysseus. However, once he does this, the temple to Zeus on the mountain collapses. Back in Greek territories, the Titan Prometheus and his army of Prometheans from Tartarus are destroying Sikyos. Krios arrives and announces that Kastor's actions in Greece, Egypt and the Norselands, combined with his invasion of Olympus, have weakened the Olympian Gods' control over these territories and allowed minor titans to spawn. Krios reveals his true form, a winged demon and servant of Kronos, and flees.

Top 4 Alternatives to Age of Mythology: Gold Edition

1
Rating
Critic & community
83
Match
Recommendation strength
91%

Age of Empires IV

2021 · Real Time Strategy (RTS)

Like Age of Mythology, this game offers a deep real-time strategy experience centered on historical civilizations, but shifts the focus to medieval warfare with distinct factions and strategic depth.

Why recommended

  • Features multiple distinct civilizations with unique units, technologies, and playstyles, similar to Age of Mythology's diverse mythological factions.
  • Criteria compliance: Provides robust multiplayer modes for competitive and cooperative play, alongside a strong strategic core and action-oriented combat.
  • Emphasizes base building, resource management, and large-scale army engagements, which are core pillars of the Age of Mythology experience.
2
Match
Recommendation strength
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While lacking the mythological elements, Praetorians offers a pure real-time strategy experience focused on tactical Roman warfare, where unit positioning and counter-play are paramount, much like the strategic unit matchups in Age of Mythology.

Why recommended

  • Focuses heavily on tactical unit deployment and counter-units, requiring players to understand strengths and weaknesses to win battles, akin to Age of Mythology's unit triangle.
  • Criteria compliance: Delivers a strong strategic experience with direct unit control for action-packed battles and supports multiplayer skirmishes.
  • Features distinct Roman legions and auxiliary units, each with specific roles and abilities, creating diverse strategic options for engagement.
3
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Recommendation strength
75%

This RTS transports you to ancient China, offering a blend of city-building, resource management, and large-scale battles that will feel familiar to Age of Mythology players, albeit with a focus on historical conflict rather than gods.

Why recommended

  • Combines economic development and base building with real-time combat, mirroring the dual focus of Age of Mythology's gameplay loop.
  • Criteria compliance: Offers a strategic gameplay experience with real-time action combat and supports multiplayer modes for competitive play.
  • Features distinct factions from the Three Kingdoms period, each with unique units and strategic advantages, encouraging varied playstyles.
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Recommendation strength
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Bannermen brings a medieval fantasy setting to the RTS genre, emphasizing base building, resource gathering, and tactical combat with hero units, providing a similar strategic depth and action feel to Age of Mythology.

Why recommended

  • Features hero units with unique abilities that can turn the tide of battle, reminiscent of the powerful god powers and myth units in Age of Mythology.
  • Criteria compliance: Offers a traditional RTS experience with strategic base building, action-oriented combat, and multiplayer functionality.
  • Focuses on classic RTS mechanics like resource management, tech trees, and building up an army to overwhelm opponents, a core loop shared with Age of Mythology.

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