Empire of the Ants Multiplayer Review

Empire of the Ants is striking to look at. For a moment, you might even believe itā€™s real macro-lens footage of ants in a nature documentary, and the level of detail on the textures of the forest floor is extremely impressive. Itā€™s not really what it appears to be, though: this may be a real-time strategy game with swarms of insects on screen at once, but youā€™re never actually commanding more than seven units ā€“ and given the somewhat clumsy way its controls make you cycle through them to give orders, thatā€™s a mercy. You may be capturing and building up nests, but thereā€™s literally nothing beneath the surface. So while it appears vast, Empire of the Ants is actually a pretty small-scale strategy game in most other ways, and the lack of unit variety and multiplayer modes make it feel smaller still.

Multiplayer matches have a fair amount of nuance in how you use your small number of units and build out your nests to tech up, and thereā€™s ample room for skilled players to turn a situation to their advantage with smart use of powers to boost their bugsā€™ damage output and debuff the enemy. Itā€™s not unlike a slimmed-down version of Company of Heroes in the way you capture territory and generate the two resources ā€“ food and wood ā€“ and thatā€™s a good starting point. Ant units get locked into melee combat and canā€™t disengage until one or the other loses, so you can learn to hold off a dangerous Warrior unit until reinforcements arrive or prevent a retreat while you finish off an enemy. And while you can quickly rebuild a lost unit if you have the food available, each ant legion has a home nest theyā€™ll respawn from, which can mean thereā€™s a long hike back to the front lines.

Each nest you capture has a set number of upgrade slots that can be filled by a building or spent to support a unit from that nest, so turtling up isnā€™t really an option ā€“ you wonā€™t even have enough slots to tech up to tier 3, which means youā€™ll inevitably be overrun by ants with better stats. All the building is done from a radial menu that pops up when you interact with a nest and, cleverly, you use your ant as a cursor to select things. Crucially, taking out an enemyā€™s nest disables all the upgrades that were based there, up to and including turning off their minimap. (Fog of war is a thing on the minimap, but because youā€™re viewing the world in third person instead of a traditional RTS overhead view, itā€™s handy that you can spot a moving legion of ants from a long distance even if their icon hasnā€™t shown up on the map.)

Thereā€™s fundamentally only one faction to work with.

However, Empire of the Ants feels thin relative to most real-time strategy games, in large part because thereā€™s fundamentally only one faction to work with. Everyone always has the same set of workers, big-headed warriors, and ā€œgunnerā€ ants as their primary units, and they all counter each other in a straightforward rock-paper-scissors balance. (You canā€™t even play as the visually different termites you fight against in the campaign.) The only variety comes from the ability to customize your loadout by choosing four of eight available powers for your main ant to cast, swapping out your support unit between healing aphids, armoring snails, or troop-carrying beetles, as well as one of three ā€œsuper predatorā€ unit types. Those certainly enable different strategies, but Iā€™m not a fan of the way locking those choices in before a match begins limits your ability to pivot to a different approach if your opponent throws you a curveball. Iā€™d rather be able to switch from the flying wasps to the acid-resistant beetles as my choice of predator if my enemy goes heavy on gunner units, for instance, but thatā€™s not an option.

Another major weakness of multiplayer is that there are only two modes: 1v1 or 1v1v1. That means thereā€™s no option to play cooperatively against the AI (which is very weak even on the highest difficulties and doesnā€™t seem to know how to use powers, which are crucial) with a friend. It does have 21 maps, at least, and thereā€™s a fair amount of diversity there in terms of how theyā€™re laid out and the creeps that guard their resource caches, like huge spiders and praying mantises that are cool to watch your ants take down.

Thatā€™s good, because it soon becomes clear that thereā€™s basically no variety to the bugsā€™ animations. At first, skittering around at high speeds can be entertaining, even when the controls freak out because you accidentally climb a small branch and start spinning around it like an actual confused ant. Watching a swarm flow over terrain is convincing and, since weā€™re up so close, dramatic. Warriors will pick up enemies in their big jaws and shake them around, and dead bodies are flung high in the air like mortarboards at a high school graduation ceremony (which I donā€™t think ants actually do?) and then roll down hills. But when youā€™ve seen one ant-vs-ant fight, youā€™ve seen them all. Beetles in particular get repetitive to watch very quickly because of their lunging attacks. Even so, there are good reasons to play the Empire of the Antsā€™s multiplayer, which cannot be said for the single-player campaign.

VerdictEmpire of the Antsā€™s multiplayer modes have some clever ideas for how insects do battle, having you scurry around as a commander giving orders and casting buffs on your legions of bugs. Managing its deceptively small-scale battles presents some interesting challenges, and the impressive, hyper-realistic graphics are let down only by animations that grow repetitive after a few matches. What undermines it most is the lack of unit variety and multiplayer modes, which donā€™t include multiple bug factions or any options to play as a team or against a competent AI. Without that, itā€™s hard to see this game having a lot of legs.

Empire of the Ants Reviewokay

It’s gorgeous to look at and has some depth to its tiny battles, but a lack of modes and unit variety means Empire of the Ants’s multiplayer isn’t likely to have a lot of legs.

Dan Stapleton

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