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RTS essentials

Nutmeg

Arcane
Vatnik Wumao
Joined
Jun 12, 2013
Messages
24,073
Location
Mahou Kingdom
Greetings, my favorite IBM PC compatible gaming community. In the General Gaming forum, We have a general thread for FPS recommendations, reviews and discussion, but nowhere do we have one for RTS - the other great keyboard and mouse genre - so I'm making one.

This OP used to be a "discussion kick off" post, containing my own personal chronology of play and my thoughts and understanding of the genre. Now, that has been moved to the post below, and this post will be a tabulated summary of the discussion so far:

NameYearDeveloperMade inBasesResourcesRecommendationsMentions
Dune 21992-12WestwoodUSAYes?Gaznak (#1)Nutmeg (#1)
Settlers1993Blue ByteGermanyYes?markec (#1)
Warcraft1994-11BlizzardUSAYesFiniteNutmeg (#1), luj1 (#1)
Command & Conquer1995-09WestwoodUSAYesDiminishingNutmeg (#1), Reality (#1), markec (#1)
Shadow of the Horned Rat1995-11MindscapeUSANoFinitemarkec (#1)
Warcraft 21995-12BlizzardUSAYesFiniteluj1 (#1)Nutmeg (#1)
War Wind1996-10DreamForgeUSAYes?markec (#1, #2, #3), Gaznak (#1)vota DC (#1)
Z1996-09Bitmap BrothersUKYesInfiniteGaznak (#1), Naraya (#1), Nutmeg (#1)Lucumo (#1)
Red Alert1996-11WestwoodUSAYesDiminishingNutmeg (#1), markec (#1)Zboj Lamignat (#1)
Dungeon Keeper1997-06BullfrogUKYesFiniteGaznak (#1), markec (#1)
KKND1997-07BeamAustraliaYes?Zboj Lamignat (#1)
Dark Colony1997-09Alternative RealityCanadaYes?Zboj Lamignat (#1)
Dark Reign1997-09AuranAustraliaYes?Bigg Boss (#1)Blutwurstritter (#1)
Total Annihilation1997-09CavedogUSAYesInfiniteZboj Lamignat (#1), Gaznak (#1), luj1 (#1), SomeGuyWithAnOpinion (#1)Johannes (#1), L'ennui (#1)
Age of Empires1997-10EnsembleUSAYesDiminishingGaznak (#1), luj1 (#1)Nutmeg (#1), JarlFrank (#1), Zboj Lamignat (#1), rado907 (#1)
Myth1997-11BungieUSANo?markec (#1, #2, #3), ValeVelKal (#1)
Netstorm1997-11Titanic (ex Origin)USAYes?catfood (#1)
Seven Kingdoms1997-11EnlightHong KongYes?Runciter (#1)
War Wind 21997-11DreamForgeUSAYes?markec (#1, #2), Gaznak (#1)
Earth 21401997-12Reality PumpPolandYes?Blutwurstritter (#1)
Battlezone1998-02ActivisionUSAYes?Blutwurstritter (#1), gerey (#1)
Dark Omen1998-03MindscapeUSANoFinitemarkec (#1)
Starcraft1998-03BlizzardUSAYesFiniteVlajdermen (#1, #2, #3), Reality (#1), markec (#1), luj1 (#1)Nutmeg (#1), Zboj Lamignat (#1), rado907 (#1), JarlFrank (#1), SomeGuyWithAnOpinion (#1)
Dune 20001998-09WestwoodUSAYes?Gaznak (#1), Naraya (#1)markec (#1), Alpan (#1)
Myth 21998-12BungieUSANoFiniteVlajdermen (#1), markec (#1)
Warzone 21001999-04PumpkinUKYes?gerey (#1)
Dungeon Keeper 21999-06BullfrongUKYes?Gaznak (#1), Hag (#1)
Total Annihilation: Kingdoms1999-06CavedogUSAYesInfiniteGaznak (#1)luj1 (#1)
Tiberian Sun1999-08WestwoodUSAYesDiminishingmarkec (#1)Nutmeg (#1)
Age of Empires 21999-09EnsembleUSAYesDiminishingNutmeg (#1), JarlFrank (#1, #2), Gaznak (#1), Reality (#1), Mr. Pink (#1), luj1 (#1)
Homeworld1999-09RelicCanadaYesFiniteReality (#1), markec (#1, #2)Nutmeg (#1),
Seven Kingdoms 21999-11EnlightHong KongYes?Runciter (#1)
Thandor2000-01InnonicsGermanyYes?Lucumo (#1, #2)jebsmoker (#1), flyingjohn (#1)
Majesty2000-03CyberloreUSAYes?Gaznak (#1)
Earth 21502000-05Reality PumpPolandYes?Keshik (#1)Blutwurstritter (#1)
Star Trek: Armada2000-05ActivisionUSAYes?Blutwurstritter (#1)
Metal Fatigue2000-05ZonoUSAYes?Gaznak (#1)Blutwurstritter (#1)
Ground Control2000-06MassiveSwedenNoInfiniteKeshik (#1), Lucumo (#1), Mr. Magniloquent (#1)
Submarine Titans2000-06EllipseAustraliaYes?Gaznak (#1)
Tzar2000-06HaemimontBulgariaYes?rado907 (#1)
Warlords Battlecry2000-07SSGAustraliaYes?markec (#1), Gaznak (#1)
Homeworld: Cataclysm2000-09Barking DogCanadaNoFinitejebsmoker (#1)
Red Alert 22000-10Westwood PacificUSAYesDiminishingmarkec (#1)Nutmeg (#1), Zboj Lamignat (#1)
Cossacks2000-11GSCUkraineYes?Joggerino (#1), Lucumo (#1), ValeVelKal (#1)
Sacrifice2000-11ShinyUSA??Blutwurstritter (#1), Alpan (#1), Lucumo (#1)
Kohan2001-03TimeGateUSAYes?L'ennui (#1), Gaznak (#1)rado907 (#1)
Emperor: Battle for Dune2001-06WestwoodUSAYes?Gaznak (#1), vota DC (#1)Nutmeg (#1), Naraya (#1), markec (#1)
Original War2001-06AltarCzechiaYes?thesecret1 (#1), gerey (#1), ValeVelKal (#1)
Conquest: Frontier Wars2001-08Digital Anvil (ex Origin)USAYes?Black_Willow (#1), RaggleFraggle (#1), Lucumo (#1)
Stronghold2001-10FireflyUKYes?Blutwurstritter (#1), Reality (#1), Lucumo (#1)
Empire Earth2001-11Stainless SteelUSAYes?Lucumo (#1)Nutmeg (#1)
Battle Realms2001-11LiquidUSAYes?Lucumo (#1), luj1 (#1)Wassersäufer (#1)
Star Trek: Armada 22001-11Mad Doc (ex Activision)USAYes?Blutwurstritter (#1)
Blitzkrieg2002-03NivalCyprus (Russia)Yes?ValeVelKal (#1)rado907 (#1)
Dark Planet2002-03Creative EdgeUKYes?RaggleFraggle (#1)
Warlords Battlecry 22002-03SSGAustraliaYes?markec (#1, #2), Gaznak (#1)Lucumo (#1)
Warrior Kings2002-03Black CactusUKYes?Black_Willow (#1)
Sudden Strike 22002-05FireglowRussiaNo?rado907 (#1)
Port Royale2002-06AscaraonGermany??Gaznak (#1)
Warcraft 32002-07BlizzardUSAYesFiniteVlajdermen (#1, #2), markec (#1, #2), luj1 (#1)Nutmeg (#1), rado907 (#1), JarlFrank (#1)
Celtic Kings2002-08HaemimontBulgariaYes?rado907 (#1)
Stronghold Crusader2002-09FireflyUKYes?Blutwurstritter (#1), Lucumo (#1)
Age of Mythology2002-10EnsembleUSAYesDiminishingNutmeg (#1), Gaznak (#1), luj1 (#1)
Impossible Creatures2003-01RelicCanadaYes?gerey (#1), luj1 (#1)
Command & Conquer: Generals2003-02Westwood PacificUSAYes?d1r (#1), Nutmeg (#1)
Warrior Kings: Battles2003-03Black CactusUKYes?Black_Willow (#1)
Rise of Nations2003-05Big Huge GamesUSAYesInfiniteL'ennui (#1)Nutmeg (#1)
Homeworld 22003-09RelicCanadaNoFinitemarkec (#1)
War of the Ring2003-11LiquidUSAYes?luj1 (#1)
Port Royale 22004-04AscaronGermany??Gaznak (#1)
Warlords Battlecry 32004-05InfiniteAustraliaYes?markec (#1, #2), Jack Of Owls (#1), Gaznak (#1)
Ground Control 22004-06MassiveSwedenNo?Mr. Magniloquent (#1)
Dawn of War2004-09RelicCanadaYesInfiniteNutmeg (#1), markec (#1, #2, #3), luj1 (#1)Blutwurstritter (#1), Heroic Liberator (#1)
Armies of Exigo2004-11Black HoleHungaryYes?RaggleFraggle (#1)Blutwurstritter (#1),
Nexus: Jupiter Incident2004-11MithisHungary??markec (#1)
Battle for Middle Earth2004-12EA Los Angeles (ex Westwood and Westwood Pacific)USAYesInfinitemarkec (#1)Blutwurstritter (#1)
Act of War2005-03EugenFranceYes?Blutwurstritter (#1)
Earth 21602005-05Reality PumpPolandYes?Blutwurstritter (#1)
Rising Kingdoms2005-06HaemimontBulgariaYes?RaggleFraggle (#1)
Battle for Middle Earth 22006-02EA Los AngelesUSAYesInfinitemarkec (#1)
Star Wars: Empire at War2006-02Petroglyph (ex Westwood)USAYes?Blutwurstritter (#1)
Rise of Legends2006-05Big Huge GamesUSAYesInfiniteIbn Sina (#1), Nutmeg (#1)
Glory of the Roman Empire2006-06HaemimontBulgariaYes?rado907 (#1)
Company of Heroes2006-09RelicCanadaYesInfiniteNutmeg (#1), Reality (#1), markec (#1)
Heroes of Annihilated Empires2006-10GSCUkraineYes?rado907 (#1)markec (#1)
Mark of Chaos2006-11Black HoleHungaryNo?Wassersäufer (#1)
Supreme Commander2007-02Gas Powered Games (ex Cavedog)USAYesInfiniteVlajdermen (#1, #2), Alpharius (#1), Reality (#1)Nutmeg (#1), Johannes (#1), L'ennui (#1), Zboj Lamignat (#1)
Tiberium Wars2007-03EA Los AngelesUSAYesDiminishingReality (#1), markec (#1)
World in Conflict2007-09MassiveSwedenNoInfinitegerey (#1)Nutmeg (#1)
Sins of a Solar Empire2008-02Ironclad (ex Barking Dog)CanadaYes?Nutmeg (#1)
Red Alert 32008-10EA Los AngelesUSAYesDiminishingmarkec (#1)
Starcraft 22010-07BlizzardUSAYesFiniterado907 (#1)
R.U.S.E2010-09EugenFranceYes?Wassersäufer (#1)
Beyond All Reason2010N/AN/AYesInfiniteJohannes (#1), L'ennui (#1)
Zero-K2010N/AN/AYesInfiniteJohannes (#1), L'ennui (#1)
Wargame: European Escalation2012-02EugenFranceNoFiniteRunciter (#1)
Wargame: Airland Battle2013-05EugenFranceNoFiniteRunciter (#1)
Wargame: Red Dragon2014-04EugenFranceNoFiniteRunciter (#1), ValeVelKal (#1)
Planetary Annihilation2014-09UberUSAYes?L'ennui (#1)
Deserts of Kharak2016-01Blackbird (ex Relic)CanadaNo?gerey (#1)
They are Billions2017-12NumantianSpainYes?Alpharius (#1)
Nordic Warriors2020-06Mashmashu?Yes?gerey (#1)
It Stares BackTBDLight Arc?Yes?RaggleFraggle (#1)

Codex RTS games mentioned or recommended histogram by year:

1992: *
1993: *
1994: *
1995: ***
1996: ***
1997: *** *** *** **
1998: *** **
1999: *** *** *
2000: *** *** *** *** *
2001: *** *** **
2002: *** *** *** *
2003: *** *** *
2004: *** *** *
2005: ***
2006: *** *** *
2007: ***
2008: **
2009:
2010: *** *
2011:
2012: *
2013: *
2014: **
2015:
2016: *
2017: *
2018:
2019:
2020: *
202x: *
 
Last edited:

Nutmeg

Arcane
Vatnik Wumao
Joined
Jun 12, 2013
Messages
24,073
Location
Mahou Kingdom
Chronologically, here are the RTS games I've either completed the campaign(s) of, played a bunch of multiplayer of, or at least sunk a reasonable amount of time into before dropping:

Dune 2 (1992)

I played this one well after it was released, completing the Ordos and Atreides campaigns, IIRC, while on a Dune kick after I had finished Emperor Battle for Dune and wanted more Dune. In retrospect, both this game (1992) and Emperor (2001) are lacking compared to RTS games released between those years, with only the former having the good excuse of being the first in the (mouse driven RTS) genre.

And, IMO, as the first, it laid a shaky and flawed foundation for all RTS games to come (as far as single player is concerned), the early popularity of which, looking back, completely rode on the novelty of said mouse control, hiding the fact that the problem of how to make an interesting game from it, given AI limitations, would never really be solved, despite some promising initial attempts.

Warcraft (1994)

One of the first PC games (along with Doom and Bomberman) I remember playing, and the very first RTS I played. I finished both Human and Orc campaigns back in the day, and upon revisit as an adult.

Unlike Dune 2 whose gameplay specifics I found completely forgettable, here I remember particulars in both the large and the small. In the small, for example, I remember managing match-ups between the human archer (more range, less damage) against the orc spearman (vice versa), or economizing spell caster MP between buffs, recon and summons, a genre first, AFAIK. In the large, I recall positioning carefully constructed defensive formations at key choke points (usually bridges). Larger still, I remember being very careful with the order in which I exploited mines, and also being somewhat careful not to expose my flanks through wood chopping. The latter mechanic also featured in the later Age of Empires games, where it found rare but indeed deliberate use in multiplayer, However, like many other potentially strategically or tactically interesting mechanics throughout the genre, it would sit firmly in the background during single player play, both in the case of Warcraft, and later games that featured it.

Compared to Dune 2, the player could now select multiple units at a time with the mouse, although they'd still have to press a keyboard button followed by a mouse click to get them to move.

I like the art and aesthetic of the first Warcraft the most out of all games in the series.

Command & Conquer (1995)

The second RTS I played, and one that made a huge impression on me due to it being (as interactive media), in part, an allegory for the break up of Yugoslavia. It really captured the zeitgeist of the 90s unipolar moment and in particular its relationship to the consequently lost and confused "third world". Later entries in the C&C series would have less geopolitical focus and move to sci-fi and parody, with the only two exceptions being the first Red Alert and Generals, the latter of which I have not actually played. Anyway, I completed both the GDI and Nod campaigns, both back in the day, and upon revisit as an adult.

The game introduced four, maybe five, important innovations.

First, the convenience of clicking just once to issue a move order, along with, IIRC, arbitrarily large unit selections.

Second, the choice of alternate levels during the campaign.

Third, missions that put the player in charge of a small composition of troops and vehicles with the only way to gain more by reaching scripted points on the map. Actually, Warcraft had these as well, IIRC, but they were much more frequent in C&C, and unlike Warcraft, in some of these the player would reach a base at some point, (albeit sometimes without a construction yard) gaining the ability to (at least) construct units mid-mission. This is, arguably, single player RTS at its finest i.e. when it's not RTS at all, but RTT and the focus is on using limited resources to assault hand placed enemy fortifications, with perhaps some choice in reinforcements and a brief base building skirmish to finish things off. The commando missions, which are Westwood's (surprisingly competent) attempt at a mouse driven clone of the Mega Drive Rambo 3 game, showed, through a level design extreme, the similarity between good RTS single player and action design. Full circle, given the lineage from Thunder Force to Dune 2 via Herzog Zwei.

Fourth, a varied air game consisting of callable air strikes, controllable flying units, and infantry transports.

Finally, tiberium. A toxic, infinite, and modal resource. Modal in the sense that although never depleted, it is harvested faster than it replenishes, so once the accumulated stock disappears, income slows to a trickle. The subtlety of these resource mechanics were lost to the single player, as would be the case with most resource related mechanics in all other RTS games which I've played since. The issue is the AI either cheats so its supply lines don't matter, or it doesn't cheat and its supply lines matter but its a cakewalk regardless as it's not cheating.

As for multiplayer, the asymmetric GDI vs Nod match-up was too imbalanced, tenuously fixed 25+ years later in OpenRA. Tiberian Dawn is my favorite OpenRA mod and, IMO, underrated.

Warcraft 2 (1995)

I played it when fresh, and also revisited it as an adult, finishing all campaigns, including those in Beyond the Dark Portal.

A good sequel, best in its refinements to the original Warcraft, from which it doesn't deviate much, and also innovations lifted from C&C (better mouse control, flying units and more fixed resource missions). Its own more ambitious innovation - the naval aspect - on the other hand, feels disjointed and the game might have been better without it.

Red Alert (1996)

Played it fresh, but never revisited. Finished both campaigns, but not the expansion's.

Like Warcraft 2, it added gimmicky, but less disjointed (in single player), naval play. Unlike Warcraft 2, Red Alert was more of a variation than a refinement on its predecessor. The most important variation on paper being that resource fields no longer automatically damaged harassers, but again, this didn't change much at all in single player, while multiplayer, which I did attempt over LAN with friends, remained broken for the asymmetric match-up.

Age of Empires (1997)

Played fresh and revisited a few years later in my late teens around the time Rome Total War was released, although I don't remember if I completed all the campaigns (I definitely completed Egyptian and Greek campaigns, and at least part of the Japanese campaign).

An RTS with all the features from the games above, now "standard" in 1997, but also adding more opportunity for efficient play through economic micromanagement and strategy. This is due to having 4 resources to gather, 1 of them infinite, the rest finite, and the ability to exchange one for the other at unfavorable rates via a "market" building, or with other players. Again, I only found this truly mattered when playing the sequel in multiplayer (I never played the first game multiplayer), and could otherwise be completely ignored in single, as after a certain point throughout the course of any given scenario, the player would be free to gather resources at their leisure. I suppose though, the market could act as a crutch for players who managed to consume all their finite resources, but didn't want to restart the scenario.

Another innovation was the wonder, ruin and artifact victory conditions. I don't know if these precede timed base defense missions, which definitely featured the following year in Starcraft, or if some other game did those earlier, but they are very similar - the difference being the former are player triggerable. Of course, if an opponent builds the wonder (or collects the artifacts etc.), before the human player does (rare for the AI), it would turn into a timed offense mission - an obvious way to add welcome challenge to RTS single player, but for some reason generally hated by PC gamers.

In this chronology, Age of Empires is the first game where the terrain was height mapped (cliffs in C&C and RA were just impassable tiles, and Warcraft 1 and 2 didn't even bother with an attempt at the illusion), but actually, it was released a month after Total Annihilation, the legendary engine of which simulated a fully 3D battle space, albeit with terrain also sensibly limited to a height map (so no tunnels or the like).

Age of Empires was also very symmetric, a step back towards Dune 2 and Warcraft 1 for 1997, with "civilizations" being only minor variants of each other. Perhaps a multiplayer centric concession in the game's design, though I wouldn't know how effective, as my experience with Age of Empires multiplayer would be reserved for the sequel.

Starcraft (1998)

Played it fresh, but didn't complete the campaign, instead spent a lot of time in online multiplayer. I revisited the game for single player as an adult, finishing the the Terran and Zerg campaigns, but stopping somewhere towards the end of the Protoss campaign.

Starcraft completely embraced Warcraft's tactical mechanics, including unit selection limits, while at the same time trivializing one (mostly unrealized) aspect of the resource game. Minerals (formerly lumber) now exist as structures of size proportional to their wealth, usually arranged in arcs around other affordances for a base, rather than as forests of player choppable tiles of trees. A minor loss of a mechanic that never lived up to its potential, more than made up for by trading the two tier, disjointed, water and land terrain system of Warcraft 2, for a superior, two height, but entirely land based one. Also, in comparison to Warcraft's 2 warring sides, there are now 3 different species, all playing very differently to each other, with "equivalent" units varying wildly, instead of only subtly.

My own, controversial opinion here is that Warcraft "micro", made even more pedantic in Starcraft due to smaller tile sizes and increased pace, does not lead to the most enjoyable tactical play. Or rather, I should say I enjoy the tactical play in later RTS titles more. That said, I very much appreciate the high skill ceiling Starcraft has, and the local optimum in game design which Starcraft is.

Age of Empires 2 (1999)

Played it fresh, completing the tutorial and Joan of Arc campaigns, while also sporadically playing multiplayer (LAN) with friends. Never revisited, although I could and maybe should, especially for the internet multiplayer, which is very active at time of writing.

Now, by 1999, the fundamentals of RTS single player were fully established (mostly by the original C&C, really) as a number of (usually low challenge) mini-games embedded in what was essentially a multiplayer format. Due to the rising accessibility of online and LAN multiplayer (where an RTS game's mechanics could fully shine) the PC gaming culture's aversion to non social challenge altogether, and the game industry wide emphasis on "immersion" and story-telling starting around this time, players would never again see any real improvement to single player RTS that would make games in the genre more challenging, which is just another way of saying tactically or strategically interesting. Instead, as a sort of trickle down effect from multiplayer design concerns, or for their own sake, later titles would offer improvements to moment to moment tactical play, that could make for a more enjoyable single player experience as well.

One such example is Age of Empires 2's unit formations. Even though most players, myself included, barely ever make use of all the available options, the behavior of units in the default formation, whereby they march in a well formed square with ranged units behind infantry, alone is enough as a partial solution to Starcraft's "problem" (feature for some) of mandatory unit positioning pedantry.

Tiberian Sun (1999)

I bought this not long after it was released, but it sat in its box till a few years later. In fact, I played it after Red Alert 2, which shared the same excellent engine. I completed both Nod and GDI campaigns, and at least part of Firestorm.

The engine featured deformable height maps, projectiles, tunnels (and overpasses), and a host of other potentially interesting things, all relegated firmly to the background, possibly going completely unnoticed in single player. Nevertheless, as later RTS games would prove, enough cool things in the background can improve the general experience.

A more immediately palpable first (in this chronology) in Tiberian Sun was the addition of veterancy, a (mostly psychological, as far as single player is concerned) incentive for players to keep their units alive.

Homeworld (1999)

I remember being absolutely charmed by this game BitD, but due to life circumstances, I never finished the campaign, saving it for a future revisit. However, upon revisit, the LARPer in me was long dead, and even e.g. my music taste changed - I see Samuel Barber as a hack now. As a result, much of the game's charm over me had dissipated. That's not to say I found the game no longer aesthetically appealing, as it very much so is. The backgrounds, the ships designs, the visual effects, the voice work, and most of the music are all incredibly well done. It's just that over time I've put less value on this sort of thing, and more value on the game in the game, so to speak.

Anyway, even when you put close to zero value on immersion and story-telling, Homeworld still remains a very interesting RTS mechanically. Full of potential, but hilariously broken in single player, and possibly multiplayer as well. The player just needs to max scouts and put them in sphere formation to trivialize ~90% of what the campaign throws at them. Alternatively salvage everything with salvage corvettes.

As a result, I dropped the campaign second time through as well, despite wanting to find some redeeming perspective on the play. I guess I could always try playing with a laundry list of self imposed restrictions, or modding out the most obvious broken strategies. Anyway, it's a real shame the game's innovative and still rarely seen mechanics, such as 3D unit positioning and formations (but also things like simulated ballistics and fuel), find zero game built around them, just LARP.

Red Alert 2 (2000)

Played fresh, but never revisited. I must have completed both campaigns given the amount of time I sunk into this game, though I can't say for sure. I also remember playing a bunch of skirmish in lieu of human vs human multiplayer, as I only managed to organize LAN with friends a handful of times, again due to life circumstances.

Starcraft allowed some player constructed buildings (e.g. Terran bunkers) to be garrisoned as fire bases, as did Age of Empires 2, but this is the first game I played where you could garrison buildings which were just part of the environment.

Also, it kept the naval aspect, lost in Starcraft and Tiberian Sun, and did a good job of it, as controlling the seas meant invulnerable naval artillery ships blanketing large swaths of land too.

Classic C&C distinguished itself from Blizzard's *craft series namely by the simplicity of its units' actions - there was no unit selection specific menu of special abilities. Instead, some units were "deployable", something Red Alert 2 used to great effect even for literally the most basic troops (allied GIs).

Emperor Battle for Dune (2001)

Played fresh. The second RTS game with completely 3D graphics I played, after Homeworld. Completed all three campaigns.

Unlike Homeworld, despite the graphics being 3D, the game was spatially even simpler than Tiberian Sun, lacking any height mapping, opting instead for 2 height levels like Starcraft, IIRC.

Like the first C&C, the campaign proceeds by selecting territories on a map, but it's more dynamic i.e. procedurally generated, than the branching paths through handcrafted levels in Tiberian Dawn. An interesting concept, but as others have noted in other threads, feels a bit like the campaign consists of just playing skirmish games i.e. multiplayer against bots. Not entirely true, as I think three or four levels in every campaign were actually hand crafted, but the point stands.

Also, like Homeworld, the game was broken by a few units the AI had no answer for, and the levels weren't designed around, as they weren't really designed in the first place.

Empire Earth (2001)

Played fresh, finishing all the campaigns.

Highly forgettable, and broken, skin over AoE2, which I played more as a lulzy sandbox, back when such things were novel.

Warcraft 3 (2002)

Played fresh, finishing only the first, human campaign. I was interested in the multiplayer, but barely anyone was playing the base game at the time, rather various mods (of which DotA would become king, effectively killing the RTS genre).

Heavy emphasis on hero units and special abilities - an increasingly salient aspect of the original Warcraft design with each iteration in the *craft series. Also heavy emphasis on fighting neutral units guarding loot. Come to think of it, the game might have borrowed somewhat from Heroes of Might and Magic.

High level multiplayer matches, in this case, seem no different to how I remember the single player, which was all about getting a powerful hero to lead a small, but well balanced composition of units to micro its way through the enemy, even in maps where you could build a base and additional units - a nod to the superiority of tactics over strategy in single player RTS. A departure from other RTS games, even Starcraft, where a large part of the enjoyment and frenzied play comes from having to manage multiple fronts not visible from the same camera location.

Age of Mythology (2002)

I had this on my backlog since close to release, but only got around to it in the mid 2010s, when I completed the campaign. I imagine Age of Mythology is absolutely fantastic multiplayer, but by the time I was finally putting time into the game, there was no convenient and easy way to play a match online.

My favorite game in the Age of series. Replaces stone with favor, which is used to cast spells (basically artillery, buffs, or summons), and also adds a lot of very welcome variety between what are now called "cultures". My favorite are the Norse, whose ox carts (replacing the usual mining camps, lumber camps etc.) keep their economy highly mobile.

Interestingly, the developers chose to allow map designers to heavily constrain base building by only allowing players to build towns over predefined "settlement" spots, IMO a welcome bit of opportunity for design in an otherwise highly free form genre.

Rise of Nations (2003)

I short-listed this game after looking for classics that I might have have missed BitD, and was quite eager to spend time with it. However, I dropped it after spending about 10 hours in the Alexander campaign and also playing a few skirmish matches.

The problem I had was that the moment to moment play, fundamentally, felt like a casual city builder game for phones. It was all about clicking on things when a certain bar (resource number) filled up (reached some required cost), in a certain optimal order for the "strategy" you were pursuing. Very little of the play was actually positional, I found, and certainly not at the tactical level.

On the plus side, battles in the (interestingly, but ultimately pointlessly, dynamic) campaign were timed, meaning the player had to actually have a decent strategy. A welcome challenge, but not enough to make up for the rather boring and busy-worky way in which you'd execute the strategy.

I must say though, I feel as though these negative initial impressions could be overcome with more experience, or spending some time in multiplayer. I might yet return to Rise of Nations.

Dawn of War (2004)

Played for the first time last week, completing the space marine campaign. Haven't played multiplayer yet.

The second game appearing in this list where a single unit of control consists of multiple individuals, but the first to be really built around "squads" (Rise of Nations' infantry units also consist of multiple individuals, specifically 3). Firstly, squads are customizable weapons platforms, and how you equip your various squads forms is large part of your strategy. Secondly, only squads, not vehicles or heroes, can capture "points" on the map, which are also resources. Lastly, squads are self microing in combat. The player simply needs to be careful with where they position their squads in the large (well, medium really), and maybe retreat them from unfavorable melee engagements, but otherwise there's little pedantry to be had.

The campaign in Dawn of War is very basic - almost all missions are simply skirmish games where the AI is given a head start with some fortifications and a few pre-built bases, and proceeds no differently from a Warcraft 1 game where first the player must fortify against AI attack vectors, then throw resources at the enemy till inevitable victory. Not very appealing, but better than it sounds due to the strength of the core tactical play, and the squad customization aspect of the strategic play. Also, the AI attacks from many directions, so early on it can indeed feel quite frenzied mounting a defense to win some breathing room.

The above mentioned core tactical play consists of "deep strikes" (i.e. air drops), various infantry weapons, morale management, jump pack assault squads, artillery, melee tanks, anti-tank tanks and Blizzard like special abilities, made easier to manage through the attach feature (where you can integrate a hero or special unit into a squad).

Company of Heroes (2005)

My favorite RTS game. I got a copy of the first stand-alone expansion - Opposing Fronts - bundled together with a graphics card I purchased in 2008. So really I only played it by complete accident, at a point where I had given up on the genre. I went straight to multiplayer, only completing the Normandy campaign a few days ago on a revisit.

Why is it my favorite? The moment to moment play emphasizing broad tactical strokes via vehicle physics, arcs of fire, turret movement speeds, and squad autonomy. Micro consists of reversing vehicles with shift clicks, and satisfying use of timed grenades. It is very much so an improved Dawn of War, so much so that it really doesn't replace the former, as there's a bit of magic to DoW's comparative simplicity.

I particularly like the strategic play where, like in DoW, resources are tied to capturable points, but now it's all resource types, and they belong to territories, which must be connected to your base for the player to actually receive those resources. This opens up a whole dimension of play which successfully abstracts the operational concept of supply line ambush and security, especially so in multiplayer, but also serves to make AI harassment more potent in single player.

The campaign is slightly more varied than Dawn of War's, but ultimately amounts to the same sort of systematic fortress assault missions (unfortunately) backed by infinite resources and reinforcements, with the exception of a few maps where you're playing defense. Happily, a few maps offer "medals" for managing to complete objectives under a par time, or in a certain order, adding much welcome but ultimately still low, challenge. Unlike Dawn of War, missions employ heavy restrictions on available reinforcements, beyond the usual gradual opening up of the tech tree from early missions to later ones.

Supreme Commander (2007)

I tried to get into Supreme Commander a year or two ago, but didn't find it interesting. Invariably, at some point during a match I'd be playing completely zoomed out, directing resources to waypointed production of units, into what were essentially Dragon Ball Z like beam battles made out of metal. A more apt analogy might be a plate spinning game. You'd spin one plate by directing unit production into a particular axis of attack, but then notice another plate was about to tip over, i.e. your opponent was about to overwhelm your forces on another axis, so you'd spin that plate too, and so on and so forth.

Anyway, playing Supreme Commander put me off playing Total Annihilation too, which I understand is very similar, although I would be happy to learn there are enough differences to warrant giving the latter a try anyway.

Sins of a Solar Empire (2008)

Played fresh. This game, along with World in Conflict, was hyped by one of the writers at Anandtech, a site I read for PC hardware news and reviews. The design (or, more cynically, the marketing) for both this game and Rise of Nations emphasized the 4X aspect and, I must say, from my experience with both these games, I've learned this is a major red flag. I spent about 10 hours with the game, waiting for it to "click", but it never did.

Just like RoN, the play here felt like a mobage city builder, but with Warcraft 3-like special ability centric combat thrown in. Not to my taste, and at this point I simply stopped playing newer RTS.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

ADDENDUM: Some games "on my radar":

Z (1996)

I played the demo BitD, but it played too differently from other RTS games for my pre-pubescent brain to handle. However, I shortlisted it after I discovered it's a proto-CoH, and indeed after vetting it for a few missions, that's exactly what it is. Unit construction is resources is position, a design equivalence which removes, in my limited experience, the systematic approach to all single player RTS levels with base building i.e. fortify against AI attack routes, then concentrate wave after wave of forces against their base in complete safety. The result is highly dynamic play, even against an AI, something to be commended.

KKnD (1997)

Considered by many as the best C&C clone, which is no bad thing, IMO. I played through a few missions together with a friend on their machine BitD, and did like it, but forsook it in lieu of Starcraft and Age of Empires at home.

Homeworld Cataclysm (2000)

Homeworld, to me, has infinite potential, but is unfortunately broken beyond repair, as explained above. Perhaps this stand-alone expansion fixes it? Certainly everyone who recommends it emphasizes that it improves Homeworld's gameplay. On the other hand, the only complaints I hear against it are about non-game, interactive media aspects I care little for. But even there, such opinion is hardly unanimous. I know jebsmoker is quite a fan of Catalcysm.
 
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Nutmeg

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So, what is essential. A number of thoughts have been offered

Gaznak opined:
The list is redundant IMO, too many almost identical games from the same series.
Referring to a simple list that used to appear in this post, but has now been expanded into the table in the OP

Reality rightly wrote:
I think cutting "history lessons" down for essentials is the way to go.
luj1 suggested a "school of design" perspective:
There are 3 great lineages of RTS games

A few people suggested that the same game might be essential for single player but inessential for multiplayer and vice versa

Vlajdermen wrote:
That's right. My fps essentials thread was about campaigns, I did so specifically because I was tired of all the muh competitive peeepeepoopoo, and it's just as much of a problem in rts as in fps. Is it so hard to understand some of us wanna chill by the computer alone, playing vidya?
markec worded the sentiment very clearly:
Now that I looked at it I would make a separate lists for multiplayer and singleplayer RTS. Some like CoH is a S tier multiplayer game but D tier singleplayer.

And the same game can also be better or worse in its single player experience, depending on what you're after.

markec touched on this when he wrote:
This also depends if you want a story heavy like for example C&C, W3, Myth, Homeworld, games like Dark Crusade and Warlords Battlecry 2 that have little story but a strategic layer where you conquer provinces, or game like Warwind which is more like puzzle game with limited resources and ways to win the scenarios.
With the above in mind these are the games I would say are essential, from my experience:

Company of Heroes (2006)

Best multiplayer RTS I've played. Low APM bar to clear, high tactical thinking bar. For single player in a similar vein, and from the same developer, try Dawn of War (2004) and its first two expansions. Both Winter Assault (2005) and The Dark Crusade (2006) have OK to good single player, whereas Company of Heroes and its expansions have very bad single player.

Age of Mythology (2002)

My personal favorite entry in the simulationist "Age of" series. Deviating slightly from the "simulationist" description, I prefer it just slightly to Age of Empires 2 (1999) due to faction diversity and the inclusion of "God powers". Avoid the "extended" edition and play the original release with expansion. I might be embarrassing myself a little here, but I also recall it having a very tough AI opponent on the highest difficulties for skirmish. As an alternative pick, even further from the simulationist path, but still rooted in the "Age of" series, is the very unique and forgotten Rise of Legends (2006).

Command & Conquer Generals (2003)

The most enjoyable single player RTS campaign, for me, all things considered. That said, you can't go wrong with the original Command & Conquer (1995) or its sequel Red Alert (1996), or any other Westwood title -- other posters here have mentioned Emperor Battle for Dune (2001) as particularly notable, and I have to give it an honorable mention too.
 
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Nutmeg

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Command & Conquer Generals (Zero Hour) is missing.
Cause I haven't played it. I'll add it to the second post. It'd be cool if you could write a short description.

EDIT: I did end up playing it, and it indeed is amazing. See my posts later ITT, and the edited posts above.
 
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JarlFrank

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Age of Empires (1997)


Another innovation was the wonder, ruin and artifact victory conditions.

IIRC those were inspired by Sid Meier's Civilization. The AoE devs took inspiration from Civ's 4X mechanics and decided to implement them in their RTS, including some of the non-conquest victory conditions.
 

Keshik

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Ground Control and Earth 2150 are also games worth playing, although the former may not be a very traditional RTS.
 

Blutwurstritter

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I would add Stronghold and Stronghold Crusaders. They are still outstanding titles, with no other rts game offering the same experience. They fit the bill and can be recommended.

Some other honorable mentions that come to mind are Star Trek Armada games, LotR Battle for Middle Earth, Star Wars Empire at War, Act of War(similar to C&C Generals), Armies of Exigo(similar to Warcraft3). Dark Reign is also fairly well known. Then there's also Earth 2140, 2150 and 2160 where I'd say Earth 2150 is the best of the bunch. Another fun game with an unique mechanic is Metal Fatigue. The tough part is deciding on whether any of them deserves to be called essential.
 

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Great idea for a thread, however as a rabid Rise of Nations hooligan I am contractually obligated to nitpick annoyingly in the game's defense.

Let the record show that there is a wealth of tactical and positional play to be had if you want to win at higher difficulties or against a human opponent, or if you simply opt for a rush or raid-heavy strategy – the game simply doesn't do a good job of informing the player that, for instance, your archers holding high ground will shoot farther than if they were on an open plan, well-placed generals provide armor bonuses that can make the difference between a rout and a victory, and the cavalry charging into the backside of the enemy enjoys generous flanking bonuses. These kinds of things are actually rather rare in an RTS, I think. Mongol light cavalry raids on badly defended hinterlands can be just as micro-intensive as StarCraft, and can turn the game heavily in your favor if done right, yet the other features of the game mean you also, simultaneously, need to have a very "big picture" or even "grand strategy" approach, which is often lacking in war-themed RTS games. *chef's kiss*

There, I'm waiting for my cheque from Big Huge Games.
 
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Johannes

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Anyway, playing Supreme Commander put me off playing Total Annihilation too, which I understand is very similar, although I would be happy to learn there are enough differences to warrant giving the latter a try anyway.
They're quite different. Supreme commander is way more macro focused, in TA you gain way more from properly paying attention to your units. That said, it feels quite outdated playing it today, with me being spoiled my newer versions of the same formula - check out Beyond All Reason and Zero-K for a TA-like games with modern UI, pathfinding and so on. There's also Planetary Annihilation but I never played that, and from what I hear it's not that great a game.
 

L'ennui

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Planetary Annhiliation was a pretty big disappointment in more ways than one. It sometimes felt more like a tech demo than a game, and the minuscule size of the planetary bodies defeats the very purpose of the game (LARGER SCALE THAN EVER, A WHOLE SOLAR SYSTEM WHOOO except all the planets are pebbles and you're stepping on each other's toes five minutes into the game). I haven't played the "expansion" Titans because after messing up the game's launch so bad, it was baffling to me that they would charge as much as the base game for some added content.

Beyond All Reason is IMO the best current Total Annihilation-ish game. Zero-K is very cool too, but it's very much its own thing, with significant changes to the classic formula. Both are free and deserve a try for fans of the genre or RTS-curious gamers.

Anyways, here is a bonus entry for your list, Licorice.

KOHAN: IMMORTAL SOVEREIGNS (2001)

This game was well-received by critics and players alike at the time. Although it didn't turn into a huge commercial success, it did well enough to earn itself a sequel. Contrary to more traditional RTS games, here the player must manage cities with limited building slots, specializing them as the circumstances or strategy demands. Hero units (the titular "Immortal Sovereigns") can be recruited as powerful leaders for your armies. Speaking of which, units are not produced willy-nilly and ordered about individually – rather, your cities can form "Companies" of troops, where you need to insert various troop types into the slots of the new military formation and assign it a leader. Orders are given at the Company level and the individual units more or less handle themselves. Large maps offer plenty of space for maneuvering these formations and all-out war can become a hectic affair. The game was novel for its handling of military formations as the basic building blocks of military maneuvers as opposed to micro-managing swarms of single units, and its introduction of "opportunity costs" into the economy via the restrictive specialization of cities. Both of these pushed the player to consider his moves rather carefully at the strategic level, while the map features, the powerful heroes and the interplay between different unit types meant the tactical side of the game could be rewarding as well.
 

Nutmeg

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Planetary Annhiliation was a pretty big disappointment in more ways than one. It sometimes felt more like a tech demo than a game, and the minuscule size of the planetary bodies defeats the very purpose of the game (LARGER SCALE THAN EVER, A WHOLE SOLAR SYSTEM WHOOO except all the planets are pebbles and you're stepping on each other's toes five minutes into the game). I haven't played the "expansion" Titans because after messing up the game's launch so bad, it was baffling to me that they would charge as much as the base game for some added content.

Beyond All Reason is IMO the best current Total Annihilation-ish game. Zero-K is very cool too, but it's very much its own thing, with significant changes to the classic formula. Both are free and deserve a try for fans of the genre or RTS-curious gamers.

Anyways, here is a bonus entry for your list, Licorice.

KOHAN: IMMORTAL SOVEREIGNS (2001)

This game was well-received by critics and players alike at the time. Although it didn't turn into a huge commercial success, it did well enough to earn itself a sequel. Contrary to more traditional RTS games, here the player must manage cities with limited building slots, specializing them as the circumstances or strategy demands. Hero units (the titular "Immortal Sovereigns") can be recruited as powerful leaders for your armies. Speaking of which, units are not produced willy-nilly and ordered about individually – rather, your cities can form "Companies" of troops, where you need to insert various troop types into the slots of the new military formation and assign it a leader. Orders are given at the Company level and the individual units more or less handle themselves. Large maps offer plenty of space for maneuvering these formations and all-out war can become a hectic affair. The game was novel for its handling of military formations as the basic building blocks of military maneuvers as opposed to micro-managing swarms of single units, and its introduction of "opportunity costs" into the economy via the restrictive specialization of cities. Both of these pushed the player to consider his moves rather carefully at the strategic level, while the map features, the powerful heroes and the interplay between different unit types meant the tactical side of the game could be rewarding as well.
Actually, this game was quite high up my short list of what to play next, but I forgot all about it. Great write up! I'll probably play this and C&C Generals next after Cataclysm.
 

L'ennui

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I hope you enjoy it more than I did, Licorice. I remember being struck by the impression that contrary to its premise, it was actually a less tactically/operationally diverse and expansive game that its Supreme Commander predecessors.

Maybe I was overly critical of it because at the time, I had high hopes that it could have marked a significant step forward in terms of the scope of real-time strategy games. In theory, it had that potential.
 
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Zboj Lamignat

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TA is perfectly playable and very enjoyable out of the box in the current year, its engine is just top notch, no third party solutions needed whatsoever. Supreme Commander was mostly unplayable the last time I checked it as it is a game from those times were graphics were getting p taxing, but at the same time software was optimized for single core processors. Might be some way to fix it, I couldn't be arsed.

In hindsight, it's hard for me to look past either AoE2 (especially with its amazing DE) or TA when it comes to classic rts. There were others games I've enjoyed a lot back then (Dark Reign, W2, Starcraft, RA 1-2, Aoe1, KKND, Dark Colony and some others), but none of them feel like something I want to get back to tbh and I feel like a lot of those run mostly on cool factor and great production values or fun, cheesy cinematics instead of proper gameplay. I was never able to get into any of the newer ones, either. Not that I gave much effort, though.

BTW, this thread reminded me of one game I was intrigued about and never managed to get my hands on - Conquest Earth. Did anyone play it?
 

Zboj Lamignat

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Well, you got the Remastered Collection. I think it's a much better option in current year than counting on a new installment being anything else than disgusting corporate defilement. I think it even sold p well, so hey, maybe there will be more.
 

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If you only count classic RTS that feature base building and dont count the likes of Warhammer Shadow of the Horned Rat, Dark Omen, Myth or games like Settlers. Then I would also recommend Warlords Battlecry and Warwind series.
 

rado907

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Heroes of Annihilated Empires (2006) was an RTS with RPG elements, something like WC3 but with more of everything except balance. All I remember was that the campaign was wacky but enjoyable. Spellforce 3 looks similar but I never tried it.

Another RTS title with a fun single-player campaign was Tzar (2000). This one was WC3 meets Starcraft meets Age of Empires. Was also decent in multi-player. The devs went on to develop a whole RTS engine independent of but similar to Kohan's, with cities and formations. Released a few Roman era-themed games with it. E.g. Celtic Kings and Glory of the Roman Empire.

Starcraft 2 probably also deserves a mention. I thought the multi-player was too similar to the aging SC1 gameplay at that point. DotA was just more fun. But the campaign was ok. Ridiculously cheesy but a wild ride.

Before Company of Heroes we had Sudden Strike 2. Fun game but mechanically unpolished. CoH was less realistic but more playable. Blitzkrieg was a straight up clone of SS2.

Overall RTS games pushed the technology to the max in the 1990s but were exposed as mechanically dull and repetitive in the 2000's. MOBA's completely took over the space.
 

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You missed a few notable games but most of all I'm very sorry you didn't have the opportunity to play Cossacks: European Wars.
 

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Insert Title Here Strap Yourselves In I helped put crap in Monomyth
since you mentioned me, i feel obligated to give a convincing argument for why i think cataclysm (fuck you blizzard, it's still called cataclysm to me) is good

Homeworld: Cataclysm has aged better than most RTS games from the late 90s or early 2000s because it didn't want to play things safe. Most RTS games an overabundance of assets you can throw at the enemy. Cataclysm deliberately avoids this - you have to make due with limited amounts of units and you have to use them effectively. You can replace them, but that costs precious time, so you're more inclined to be more careful with your tactics. You should probably play Cataclysm on the highest difficulty setting to appreciate this design choice.

It's also a pretty good underdog story. Kiith Somtaaw isn't some top dog political player that bullies the other Kiiths, you're just some clan of miners trying to make end's meet. The Kuun-Lan, the ship you command, isn't some massive mothership with a massive logistical support network. It's a mining tug, although it can defend itself and adapt to a wide variety of situations. It's also constantly reinforced until the end of the game that you're at the bottom end of the social latter. Most other Kiiths treat Somtaaw as "those guys" that everyone forgets about. They're an honest sort that's partial to hard work, but they're not above trying to gain some kind of technological advantage they can use for clout. They try to do this when they find an ancient distress beacon that still seems to be largely intact. It seems to be a technological marvel first and then oh fuck, it pulls out the rug from under you and it transitions into a cosmic horror story in a way that's not hamfisted. I'm not gonna spoil the rest, but I like Cataclysm because, again, it went out of its way to be a bit different in a crowded market.
 

Runciter

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What's missing are these RTSs with a twist:
- Seven Kingdoms (esp. 2): Classic formula but more detailed diplomacy / population / economy management.
- Wargame (esp. Red Dragon): Goes beyond rock/paper/scissors, trumping rules are pseudorealistic and contextual, involving terrain / distance / hit direction / visibility. Dumb AI though.
 

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