Compare Age of Empires II (Retired) prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Skybox Labs. Published by Xbox Game Studios. Released on 4/9/2013. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Strategy. Metacritic score: 68/100.

A retired HD port of one of the greatest RTS games ever made. The core is timeless. The 2013 wrapper is not, and a strictly superior version exists.

My spreadsheet brain has a hard time recommending this one with a straight face, and I'll tell you exactly why before I tell you what still holds up. This is the 2013 HD re-release of the 1999 original, and it has been officially retired in favour of Age of Empires II: Definitive Edition. No further updates are coming. That single fact shapes every sentence of this review. The underlying game is, of course, a stone-cold genre cornerstone. You manage a medieval civilisation from the Dark Age through to the Imperial Age, collecting four resource types (food, wood, gold, stone), training unit compositions around a rock-paper-scissors counter system, and choosing from 18 civilisations, each with unique bonuses, units, and tech trees. Franks get cheaper castles. Turks unlock gunpowder units ahead of the curve. Huns skip the house-building economy micro entirely. Nine single-player campaigns are present, covering everyone from Joan of Arc to Genghis Khan, and each campaign runs several hours deep. Randomly generated maps and a scenario editor with Steam Workshop support round out the sandbox side. On paper, that is hundreds of hours of content before you even touch multiplayer. The problem is not the game. The problem is the wrapper. Critics at launch landed on a Metacritic score of 68 largely because the update amounted to little more than a resolution increase to 1080p. The menus were lifted unchanged from 1999. Multiplayer used a peer-to-peer netcode that reviewers and players alike found plagued by lag and connection instability. The HD edition spawned three paid DLC expansions (The Forgotten, African Kingdoms, Rise of the Rajas), which added civilisations and campaigns, but none of that patching touched the fundamental netcode problems that made online play a gamble. Steam Workshop integration was genuinely useful and gave the modding community a home, but even that has been superseded: the Definitive Edition ships with its own in-game mod browser, accessible to Steam and Xbox store buyers alike. The Definitive Edition is not just a shinier coat of paint. It redrew every graphical element from the ground up, added server-based multiplayer to replace peer-to-peer, introduced quality-of-life changes like auto-reseeding farms and tech queuing, shipped with a reworked AI that can mimic tournament-level strategies, and bundled all existing DLC plus additional campaigns and civilisations. The graphical gap between HD and Definitive is wider than the gap between the 1999 original and this 2013 HD port. For any newcomer asking where to start with Age of Empires II, the answer is not here. Where the HD edition retains any niche is narrow but real. A small segment of scenario makers and modders prefer it because certain units removed in the Definitive Edition, such as the Heavy Swordsman, still exist here and underpin older custom campaigns. Some players on lower-spec hardware also found the HD version ran lighter at launch, though that gap has closed considerably since. If you own a deep library of Workshop mods or old custom scenarios built specifically for the 2013 version, there is a preservation argument. For anyone else, this listing is a historical artefact of a legendary game, not a purchase recommendation. Diego, Scout Team

Age of Empires II (Retired)

Age of Empires II (Retired)

Apr 9, 2013Skybox LabsXbox Game Studios
GamerScout Says

A retired HD port of one of the greatest RTS games ever made. The core is timeless. The 2013 wrapper is not, and a strictly superior version exists.

PCXbox
Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Gold
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €8.34

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Price History

Historical low
€8.3417 Jun 2026
Keyshops
€7.68€8.12€8.57€9.015 Jun12 Jun19 Jun25 Jun2 Jul
Tracking prices since 5 Jun 2026
Create alert

Screenshots & Media

About Age of Empires II (Retired)

My spreadsheet brain has a hard time recommending this one with a straight face, and I'll tell you exactly why before I tell you what still holds up. This is the 2013 HD re-release of the 1999 original, and it has been officially retired in favour of Age of Empires II: Definitive Edition. No further updates are coming. That single fact shapes every sentence of this review. The underlying game is, of course, a stone-cold genre cornerstone. You manage a medieval civilisation from the Dark Age through to the Imperial Age, collecting four resource types (food, wood, gold, stone), training unit compositions around a rock-paper-scissors counter system, and choosing from 18 civilisations, each with unique bonuses, units, and tech trees. Franks get cheaper castles. Turks unlock gunpowder units ahead of the curve. Huns skip the house-building economy micro entirely. Nine single-player campaigns are present, covering everyone from Joan of Arc to Genghis Khan, and each campaign runs several hours deep. Randomly generated maps and a scenario editor with Steam Workshop support round out the sandbox side. On paper, that is hundreds of hours of content before you even touch multiplayer. The problem is not the game. The problem is the wrapper. Critics at launch landed on a Metacritic score of 68 largely because the update amounted to little more than a resolution increase to 1080p. The menus were lifted unchanged from 1999. Multiplayer used a peer-to-peer netcode that reviewers and players alike found plagued by lag and connection instability. The HD edition spawned three paid DLC expansions (The Forgotten, African Kingdoms, Rise of the Rajas), which added civilisations and campaigns, but none of that patching touched the fundamental netcode problems that made online play a gamble. Steam Workshop integration was genuinely useful and gave the modding community a home, but even that has been superseded: the Definitive Edition ships with its own in-game mod browser, accessible to Steam and Xbox store buyers alike. The Definitive Edition is not just a shinier coat of paint. It redrew every graphical element from the ground up, added server-based multiplayer to replace peer-to-peer, introduced quality-of-life changes like auto-reseeding farms and tech queuing, shipped with a reworked AI that can mimic tournament-level strategies, and bundled all existing DLC plus additional campaigns and civilisations. The graphical gap between HD and Definitive is wider than the gap between the 1999 original and this 2013 HD port. For any newcomer asking where to start with Age of Empires II, the answer is not here. Where the HD edition retains any niche is narrow but real. A small segment of scenario makers and modders prefer it because certain units removed in the Definitive Edition, such as the Heavy Swordsman, still exist here and underpin older custom campaigns. Some players on lower-spec hardware also found the HD version ran lighter at launch, though that gap has closed considerably since. If you own a deep library of Workshop mods or old custom scenarios built specifically for the 2013 version, there is a preservation argument. For anyone else, this listing is a historical artefact of a legendary game, not a purchase recommendation.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Tags

Single-playerMulti-playerSteam AchievementsSteam Trading CardsCaptions availableSteam WorkshopSteam CloudStatsSteam LeaderboardsIncludes level editorFamily SharingRetired VersionHistorical RTSScenario EditorPeer-to-Peer MultiplayerLegacy ModdingSkirmish ModeCampaign-Heavy

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
1.2GHZ CPU
Memory
1 GB RAM
Graphics
Direct X 9.0c Capable GPU DirectX®:9.0c Hard Drive:2 GB HD space

Recommended

Additional:900x600 minimum display resolution

Keep exploring

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Age of Empires II (Retired).

Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
68

Game Info

Developer
Skybox Labs
Publisher
Xbox Game Studios
Release Date
Apr 9, 2013

Game Modes

singleplayer
multiplayer

Languages

Audio (7)
EnglishGermanFrenchItalianKoreanSpanish - Spain+1 more
Subtitles (11)
EnglishGermanFrenchItalianKoreanSpanish - Spain+5 more

Features

AchievementsCloud Saves

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

No card? Pay another way

Top up your Steam Wallet or buy crypto with any card — instant delivery, no bank account needed.

More from Skybox Labs

Buy smarter: helpful guides

Looking for more? See games like Age of Empires II (Retired) →

Frequently asked questions about Age of Empires II (Retired)

How much does Age of Empires II (Retired) cost?

Age of Empires II (Retired) pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock offers from trusted key stores like Eneba and Kinguin, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

Where can I buy Age of Empires II (Retired) cheapest?

Compare Age of Empires II (Retired) prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Age of Empires II (Retired) available on?

Age of Empires II (Retired) is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Age of Empires II (Retired) released?

Age of Empires II (Retired) was released on 9 April 2013.

Who developed Age of Empires II (Retired)?

Age of Empires II (Retired) was developed by Skybox Labs and published by Xbox Game Studios.

Is Age of Empires II (Retired) worth buying?

Age of Empires II (Retired) holds a Metacritic score of 68/100, making it one of the standout Strategy titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.