Lost Empire

This article is about the 2007 video game. For other uses, see Lost Empire (disambiguation).
Lost Empire
Developer(s) Pollux Gamelabs
Publisher(s) Paradox Interactive
Designer(s) Flemming Pedersen
Platform(s) Microsoft Windows
Release date(s) 14 June 2007
Genre(s) 4X, Turn-based strategy
Mode(s) Single-player, Multiplayer

Lost Empire is a 4X turn-based strategy video game developed by Pollux Gamelabs and released in June 2007.[1]

Synopsis

The game is set in the year 4620. There are seven major civilizations in space, humankind is one of them. The story is that an attack led by an unknown evil alien race has almost destroyed the seven civilizations, and they are therefore now trying to expand furthest in order to ensure their continued survival. However, a powerful character with devious motives known as Enais is interfering with the seven civilizations and their expansion plans.

You play the leader of one of the seven civilizations and must bring this civilization to victory by dominating the galaxy. It is possible to achieve victory through military domination, diplomacy, research, culture, or by killing the character Enais.

The game was released June 14, 2007 and quickly went to the top of the charts on the Paradox Interactive homepage. It featured 7 major races, 45 minor races, a huge tech tree, 3D-battles, a very large galaxy with 5000 solar systems, and a special dragon-like race called the Chi Lung-race, which the player can choose to play. The game is mod-able with the possibility to tweak and change science descriptions, their effects, races, artwork, all text, and more. Lost Empire was nominated "Best Game of the Year" in 2006 at the D3Expo.

Civilizations

Next in series

A follow up on this title called Lost Empire: Immortals, a revamped version of the game, was released March 11, 2008.[2] This new version is based on the original design but now improved by Jonas Møller.

Lost Empire Immortals received a Metacritic score of 58, which means "mixed or average" reviews. Reviewers praised the graphics and the scale of the game, but criticized the awkward interface, computer AI, and balance problems with very large galaxies.

References

  1. "Lost Empire". Described by MobyGames.
  2. "Lost Empire: Immortals". Described by MobyGames.
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