Compara los precios de Age of Wonders 4: Rise from Ruin en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Triumph Studios. Publicado por Paradox Interactive. Lanzado el 9/3/2026. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Strategy.

If you thought you had Age of Wonders 4 figured out, Rise from Ruin is the DLC that will punish that confidence - the Cataclysm meter alone forces a total rethink of how aggressively you throw spells around.

I'll be straight with you: I came to Age of Wonders 4 from the action side of strategy, the kind of player who builds a hammer army and swings it until something breaks. Rise from Ruin is the first DLC that made me sit up and actually reconsider that approach, because the moment you stop paying attention to the Cataclysm meter, the map punishes you hard. The core addition here is the Devouring Winds mechanic and its Echoes of the Fracturing realm trait. Every time any ruler on the map casts a world-map spell, the Cataclysm bar ticks up. When it fills, a batch of provinces gets struck by wild magic, resources get wrecked, and everyone on the map eats 20 Grievances against whoever triggered it. That is a long-overdue layer of consequence for spell-spamming, and it lands well. You still want to cast - enchantments are a core economy tool - but now there is a real cost to burning through your casting points on turn one. The Astral Barrens terrain type compounds this: inside those tiles, magic-origin units cannot regenerate, mana generation from provinces shuts off entirely, and spells risk backfiring. Playing aggressively into that territory without the right unit composition is a fast lesson in humility. The new Nomad culture is the headline addition, split into two subtypes: Scavengers and Conquerors. Scavengers can overharvest resource nodes and wonders for a stacking combat buff - Defense, Resistance, and a 20% damage and healing bonus, up to five times - but strip the land bare in the process. Conquerors get Momentum damage bonuses when units move at least three hexes before acting, and pillaging enemy provinces rewards extra food and production. The pack-up-your-city mechanic is the most novel thing in the expansion: the Nomad culture can literally move a settled city to a new location in a few turns, which breaks the usual calculus of city placement and opens up aggressive mid-game repositioning that the existing cultures simply cannot replicate. On the battlefield, Wind Warriors can swap places with threatened allies in a single action, which makes positioning decisions feel genuinely tense in a way the base game's combat sometimes lacks. The three new tomes - Tome of the Warband, Tome of the Sand Stalkers, and Tome of the Warlord - round out the combat options. Sand Stalkers lets you terraform provinces to desert, blind enemies, and summon desert guardians; it pairs tightly with the Nomad playstyle and is more strategically layered than it sounds. Turning a rival's mana node into barren sand without triggering a diplomatic incident is exactly the kind of bloodless sabotage that makes 4X games fun past the opening expansion phase. Fractured Infestations - corrupted remnant armies scattered across the map - are handled better here than in past expansions. They are strong enough that clearing them feeds into your overall campaign strategy rather than being optional side noise. On the downside: performance dips during large combat encounters are a known issue, especially on older hardware. Some players have also noted the game feels marginally heavier with each successive DLC stacked on top - a small UI hiccup here and there that was not present at launch. The Cataclysm system also lacks in-game tutorial clarity; the first time one fires, you might not realize your casting points usage was the trigger, and that is an easy fix Triumph has not yet shipped. Veteran players dropping in from the earlier DLC packs should also note that the Scorpion Update, which shipped the same day as Rise from Ruin for free, includes a significant Defense and Resistance overhaul - so your stacked-defense builds are going to face a rude awakening from the new Magic Fighter unit class before you adjust. Bottom line: this is the kind of expansion that makes you reinstall a strategy game you put down six months ago. If you are already in the Age of Wonders 4 ecosystem and even remotely comfortable with 4X mechanics, Rise from Ruin delivers 30-plus hours of genuinely fresh systems that interact in ways most DLC packs simply do not bother with. Fred, Scout Team

Age of Wonders 4: Rise from Ruin

Age of Wonders 4: Rise from Ruin

Complemento / DLC de Age of Wonders 4 — ver juego completo
9 mar 2026Triumph StudiosParadox Interactive
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If you thought you had Age of Wonders 4 figured out, Rise from Ruin is the DLC that will punish that confidence - the Cataclysm meter alone forces a total rethink of how aggressively you throw spells around.

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Acerca de Age of Wonders 4: Rise from Ruin

I'll be straight with you: I came to Age of Wonders 4 from the action side of strategy, the kind of player who builds a hammer army and swings it until something breaks. Rise from Ruin is the first DLC that made me sit up and actually reconsider that approach, because the moment you stop paying attention to the Cataclysm meter, the map punishes you hard. The core addition here is the Devouring Winds mechanic and its Echoes of the Fracturing realm trait. Every time any ruler on the map casts a world-map spell, the Cataclysm bar ticks up. When it fills, a batch of provinces gets struck by wild magic, resources get wrecked, and everyone on the map eats 20 Grievances against whoever triggered it. That is a long-overdue layer of consequence for spell-spamming, and it lands well. You still want to cast - enchantments are a core economy tool - but now there is a real cost to burning through your casting points on turn one. The Astral Barrens terrain type compounds this: inside those tiles, magic-origin units cannot regenerate, mana generation from provinces shuts off entirely, and spells risk backfiring. Playing aggressively into that territory without the right unit composition is a fast lesson in humility. The new Nomad culture is the headline addition, split into two subtypes: Scavengers and Conquerors. Scavengers can overharvest resource nodes and wonders for a stacking combat buff - Defense, Resistance, and a 20% damage and healing bonus, up to five times - but strip the land bare in the process. Conquerors get Momentum damage bonuses when units move at least three hexes before acting, and pillaging enemy provinces rewards extra food and production. The pack-up-your-city mechanic is the most novel thing in the expansion: the Nomad culture can literally move a settled city to a new location in a few turns, which breaks the usual calculus of city placement and opens up aggressive mid-game repositioning that the existing cultures simply cannot replicate. On the battlefield, Wind Warriors can swap places with threatened allies in a single action, which makes positioning decisions feel genuinely tense in a way the base game's combat sometimes lacks. The three new tomes - Tome of the Warband, Tome of the Sand Stalkers, and Tome of the Warlord - round out the combat options. Sand Stalkers lets you terraform provinces to desert, blind enemies, and summon desert guardians; it pairs tightly with the Nomad playstyle and is more strategically layered than it sounds. Turning a rival's mana node into barren sand without triggering a diplomatic incident is exactly the kind of bloodless sabotage that makes 4X games fun past the opening expansion phase. Fractured Infestations - corrupted remnant armies scattered across the map - are handled better here than in past expansions. They are strong enough that clearing them feeds into your overall campaign strategy rather than being optional side noise. On the downside: performance dips during large combat encounters are a known issue, especially on older hardware. Some players have also noted the game feels marginally heavier with each successive DLC stacked on top - a small UI hiccup here and there that was not present at launch. The Cataclysm system also lacks in-game tutorial clarity; the first time one fires, you might not realize your casting points usage was the trigger, and that is an easy fix Triumph has not yet shipped. Veteran players dropping in from the earlier DLC packs should also note that the Scorpion Update, which shipped the same day as Rise from Ruin for free, includes a significant Defense and Resistance overhaul - so your stacked-defense builds are going to face a rude awakening from the new Magic Fighter unit class before you adjust. Bottom line: this is the kind of expansion that makes you reinstall a strategy game you put down six months ago. If you are already in the Age of Wonders 4 ecosystem and even remotely comfortable with 4X mechanics, Rise from Ruin delivers 30-plus hours of genuinely fresh systems that interact in ways most DLC packs simply do not bother with.

Fred
Fred · Scout Team

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singleplayermultiplayerpvponline-pvpcooponline-coopcross-platformachievementsworkshopcloud-savestier:aaaCataclysm MechanicsNomad CultureTerrain ManipulationResource DenialTurn-Based CombatDLC ExpansionSpell Risk ManagementCity MobilityPost-Apocalyptic Fantasy

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Triumph Studios
Distribuidora
Paradox Interactive
Fecha de lanzamiento
9 mar 2026

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Age of Wonders 4: Rise from Ruin está disponible en PC.

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Age of Wonders 4: Rise from Ruin se lanzó el 9 de marzo de 2026.

¿Quién desarrolló Age of Wonders 4: Rise from Ruin?

Age of Wonders 4: Rise from Ruin fue desarrollado por Triumph Studios y publicado por Paradox Interactive.