2016 is the year of the strategy game. With high-profile releases like Total War: Warhammer, Stellaris, and Offworld Trading Company receiving high praise and a massive amount of attention, PC strategy games are better and more popular than ever. And with heavy hitters like Civilization 6 cresting the wave and Dawn of War 3 on the way, they’re not going away any time soon.
But what’s behind this seemingly sudden explosion in popularity, especially in the United States where strategy games just aren’t thought of as a popular genre like it is in Europe? Certainly 2015 and 2014 had their gems, and indie strategy games like Crusader Kings II started to gain traction, but that was nothing compared to the massively high quantity of good, popular titles we’re seeing this year. Is this just a cyclical event that’s past due, or is something more at play here? We asked the people behind the biggest strategy games in recent memory to get some insight into why strategy games are rocking this year.
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This year was front-loaded with strategy games, and all of them resonated in a big way, extending their reach to an audience that’s no longer small enough to be called a niche. So what changed? A big part of it is the rise of game maker Valve’s digital distribution platform, Steam. “Now, with the explosive rise of Steam and digital sales, the PC has had an incredible revival,” said Romain de Waubert de Genlis, the creative director and chief operating officer at Amplitude Studios, makers of hits such as Endless Space and Endless Legend and recently purchased by Sega thanks to the strength of the Endless line. “Not many platforms can pretend to have so many active users.”
You can also attribute the increase in audience interest to streamers bringing their games directly to the people thanks to early access development (where a studio sells a game before its finishes, using the proceeds and feedback from players to complete it). This model is another benefit of Steam, though other studios use it away from Valve’s platform. “Strategy games are in step with a number of trends in the industry, specifically Early Access and videos/streaming,” says Soren Johnson, founder of Mohawk Games and the main mind behind Civilization IV and Offworld Trading Company. “In both cases, games with dynamic, replayable content have more value, which is the natural domain of strategy games.”
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The 2016 strategy games explosion is also a byproduct of the natural evolution of game design in the HD era, paving the way for more sophisticated, accessible products. “In order for a strategy game to be easy to understand, you need to be able to provide very useful information to the player easily,” explains Brad Wardell, the CEO of Stardock (Galactic Civilizations III, Ashes of the Singularity). “At 1,024-by-768 [resolution], you really can’t do this very well. But at 1080p and higher, you have the screen space to display a tooltip that explains what you are looking at.”
And then, of course, the genre has been around for so long that it’s been steadily accumulating a larger audience. “I think more people are gaming than ever before, and that is both in the realm of computer games and board games,” says Ed Beach, the lead designer of the recently released Civilization VI, one of the most popular strategy series in the world. “Most people have tried a strategy game in some form by now. With so many offerings available, people are getting very discerning about the experience they expect from each game session. I think if you put that all together, many gamers now prefer a deeper game experience.”
Johnson sees a similar trend. “I think a certain audience that yearns for deep, messy systems has grown big enough that they can support a publisher like Paradox, which would have been considered very niche ten years ago.”
Perhaps the most prolific success story of the strategy surge is Paradox Interactive, the makers of grand strategy games like Crusader Kings 2 and Europa Universalis IV. In an email exchange with GamesBeat, Thomas Johannson and Henrik Fahraeus tells us that they see their studio’s recent success as the result of years of hard work and a careful cultivation of the audience.
“It’s exciting to see strategy games get a bigger and bigger audience. It’s probably due to many factors but one thing I think is behind it is a feedback loop where strategy developers are getting better at presenting complex strategy games in a way that makes them more accessible to larger audiences, and larger audiences means we have more room for even more ambitious projects. From Paradox Development Studio’s perspective, we have seen a steady growth over 10-plus years where we have constantly managed to reach a bigger and bigger audience and thereby managed to increase both the number and the scope of our games. The fact that we released two big titles, Hearts of Iron IV and Stellaris, in 2016 is both the latest result of our continued growth and also due to the fact that these games had been pushed forward to different degrees.”
Cultural victory
PC gaming culture is a lot different now than it was 10 or 20 years ago. Audiences are a lot more connected to both each other and developers thanks to social media and Steam.
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“For finding issues and balancing and guiding what direction to take future work in it’s invaluable,” says Mike Simpson, the creative director of Creative Assembly’s Total War. “During Warhammer’s four-year development, the team probably played half a million battles. The players played 10 times that many in the first weekend. They provide a depth and breadth of feedback that dwarfs what we can achieve in the same time.”
Community feedback is so important that Amplitude put together an initiative dedicated solely to harnessing their vocal community.
“For Amplitude, we can’t do a good job at creating games without constant feedback,” explains de Genlis. “Our games are too rich, too complex, to try to just throw something over the wall without having constantly bounced ideas off of our players. In fact, it’s important enough that we built an entire web platform around it – our Games2Gether initiative. It’s a whole system we have set up to help get community input on our design process.”
Of course, this is nothing new for many developers delved deep into message boards a decade ago for feedback. Rather, the new social media environment merely increases the volume. As Johannson and Fahraeus recall, “We’ve always been very engaged with our community. Many of the devs and designers at Paradox post on the official forum and have from the very beginning of the company. The fact that many of us still engage there, if not as frequently, is a happy holdover from our smaller days. So instantaneous feedback is something we are used to. Social media and places like Reddit just increase the volume.”
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Early Access is also becoming more important for strategy game developers thanks in no small part to how these games in particular play.
“Early Access is not a good fit for content-based games because players can only experience a single story once, so most players want to wait for those types of games to be finished,” says Johnson. “In contrast, a strategy game can be played — and enjoyed — throughout the Early Access process. Indeed, the fact that the game is constantly changing makes the process more interesting to some players.”
Early Access also lets developers take more risks in their designs, something de Genlis says Amplitude relies on because “we like to try things that are off the beaten path and see how people react to them. Without that, there is no way I would have taken the chance to innovate as much. If people are onboard with a game feature and love it before its release, that’s a win-win and is great for everyone. If not, you remove it or fix it — no harm done!”
Diplomatic victory
Many of the strategy games in this new wave are also based on some of the most storied IP in gaming. Wargaming.net hopes to bring Master of Orion’s sheer ambition and complexity to 2016 with their remake without changing what made the original game great. This is where working within the framework of an existing franchise can be limiting.
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“Because the game has to appeal to as many of the players of the original series as possible, each of whom has a different idea of what made the game great, we have to stick as closely as we can to the original story, aesthetics, and features of the legendary games,” Wargaming.net’s director of product vision Chris Keeling explains. “On the other hand, to expand the audience enough to bring in more new players, both those who never heard of the game or genre and our “older selves” who no longer have the free time we had 20-plus years ago, the game has to be more approachable, with simpler interfaces, faster gameplay, and more understandable mechanics. Balancing these opposing forces results in about 5-10 percent of players telling us we’re not enough like the original, and another 5-10% saying that we’re too much like the original.” Ultimately, though, the bottom line is for them to make a great game that most people will be happy with. “This means that about 80-90 percent of the players are perfectly happy with the balance, as we are, and that is exactly what we’re after.”
Perhaps the highest profile brand in this resurgence, though, is Warhammer, with Total War: Warhammer released by Creative Assembly and Warhammer 40,000: Dawn of War 3 coming soon from Relic. Games Workshop’s Warhammer lines have been the most popular tabletop strategy games on the market for decades now, so converting that to a PC strategy game seems like a no brainer.
According to Simpson, it’s a pretty painless conversion, but the sheer breadth of the Warhammer lore is a big challenge to tackle: “In a way making, Warhammer has been no different to making an historical game. We start with detailed research and a strong drive to make it as authentic as possible. The fact that Games Workshop have been adding content to the Warhammer world for decades does give us one problem – there is just so much of it, both in the sheer quantity of different factions and units, but also in the variety of shapes and sizes of them.”
The Warhammer world also brings with it another big problem that historical iterations of Total War didn’t: cost. “I was recently browsing through work estimates for various units. I noticed that the first pass estimate for the cost of animating the war hydra locomotion was around $50,000. That’s about 100 times more than locomotion for a typical historical TW ‘man with spear and shield’ which would take just a couple of hours in the mo-cap studio.”
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Relic’s Dawn of War 3 required slightly more drastic measures, though, as its real-time strategy saturated gameplay clashes with the turn-based nature of the minis game. Again, we hear a familiar refrain from Relic game director Philippe Boulle: quality and reverence.
“The thing to remember is that the Dawn of War franchise isn’t an attempt to reproduce the tabletop game; it’s about bringing the fantasy 40K to life. The amazing artwork and epic stories of the universe are what’s important to our process, not the specifics of the tabletop ruleset. It’s that combination of our reverence for the IP and our drive to make great RTS games that allows us to put our unique spin on the moment-to-moment gameplay while still being true to 40K.”
Domination victory
You could go on and on listing reasons why strategy games are so big in 2016, but one common thread runs through all of them: The heart and soul of strategy games has always been there, and remains strong to this day. Strategy games always burst at the seams with ambition and creativity, but now the industry has advanced to the point where it’s impossible not to see. Graphics are now advanced enough that interfaces can both hold an ever-increasing array of information and be accessible enough to explain what everything does. Long-running franchises like Warhammer and Master of Orion snowball in popularity, setting the stage for an explosion of interest. And newer phenomenons like Early Access and streaming break down the walls between audiences, the developer, and their work. In the same way, the games themselves didn’t change so much as the barriers to entry crumbled, revealing the brilliance that was hiding in plain sight.
Strategy games didn’t catch up with the rest of the industry in 2016. We finally caught up with strategy games.
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