Compare Anno 1701 History Edition prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Ubisoft Mainz. Published by Ubisoft. Released on 4/22/2024. Available on PC. Genres: Simulation, Strategy.

The cleanest on-ramp into the Anno series sits right here, and it still holds up as a colony-builder with a satisfying supply-chain loop - just budget time for the Ubisoft launcher tax on launch day.

I came back to Anno 1701 History Edition expecting pure nostalgia and left with a renewed appreciation for how much this 2006 city-builder actually teaches modern colony-sim fans. Where Anno 1800 can feel like managing a spreadsheet that occasionally catches fire, 1701 strips the supply chain down to its fundamentals: settle an 18th-century island, satisfy your population tier by tier, push production into goods like chocolate, perfume, and colonial trade items (Ivory, Jade, Furs, Talismans), then watch your pioneer settlement slowly become a city of aristocrats. The per-tier tax slider and the central town square happiness meter are proto-systems that Anno 1800 players will immediately recognize as the DNA behind tiered workforces and unrest mechanics. Here, though, they are transparent and readable, which makes 1701 the best Anno entry to start with if you have been bouncing off the heavier modern titles. The History Edition brings real technical substance. The engine was rebuilt as 64-bit, so the RAM ceiling that caused crashes in the original is gone. Resolution support scales to 4K and the UI adapts cleanly, including three distinct multiscreen layout options (Compact, Split, and Stretched) that are a genuine quality-of-life win on wide setups. Multiplayer is fully functional again after years of dormancy caused by the deprecated GameSpy middleware, now running over Ubisoft Connect with desync recovery borrowed from Anno 1800. The included Sunken Dragon expansion adds an 11-mission campaign in an Asia-inspired setting that the base game never had, new opponents, and ornamental buildings, so the package is complete. On the strategic layer, 1701 does not pretend to be deep by modern grand-strategy standards, and that is fine. The two core modes - open-ended continuous play and ten escalating scenarios - give you sandbox freedom and structured objectives respectively. Warfare is split between sea combat, where your warships can strangle enemy trade routes, and land operations, where you transport artillery, infantry, and cavalry to enemy islands and take territory by destroying market buildings. The lodge system, unlocked through schools and universities, adds covert options: deploy a poisoner to introduce plague to a rival's colony, or send a demagogue to pull workers off the job. These tools give you decision nodes that go beyond production ratios. Natural disasters - hurricanes, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, plague outbreaks - also randomly disrupt your best-laid plans, which keeps late-game sessions from becoming a passive economy watch. The two complaints worth flagging are real. First, Ubisoft Connect is mandatory and several players have reported a rough initial activation experience, including key-detection hiccups. If launcher friction is a dealbreaker for you, know that upfront. Second, compared to Anno 1404 or Anno 1800, the complexity ceiling is noticeably lower. Veterans of the series looking for dense resource chains and extended late-game pressure will hit the edge of 1701's systems inside 20-30 hours. The Steam community sits at a healthy 85 percent positive rating, with the most consistent praise landing on its accessibility and the quality of its orchestral soundtrack. For anyone new to the Anno series, or for a returning player who wants a focused session that does not demand a wiki open in a second window, this History Edition is the correct version to own. The combination of the base game, the Sunken Dragon expansion, 4K support, functional multiplayer, and a shipped World Editor for community scenarios makes it the definitive way to play 1701 in 2024 and beyond. Diego, Scout Team

Anno 1701 History Edition
SimulationStrategy

Anno 1701 History Edition

Apr 22, 2024Ubisoft MainzUbisoft
GamerScout Says

The cleanest on-ramp into the Anno series sits right here, and it still holds up as a colony-builder with a satisfying supply-chain loop - just budget time for the Ubisoft launcher tax on launch day.

PC
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Historical low: $5.21

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Screenshots & Media

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About Anno 1701 History Edition

I came back to Anno 1701 History Edition expecting pure nostalgia and left with a renewed appreciation for how much this 2006 city-builder actually teaches modern colony-sim fans. Where Anno 1800 can feel like managing a spreadsheet that occasionally catches fire, 1701 strips the supply chain down to its fundamentals: settle an 18th-century island, satisfy your population tier by tier, push production into goods like chocolate, perfume, and colonial trade items (Ivory, Jade, Furs, Talismans), then watch your pioneer settlement slowly become a city of aristocrats. The per-tier tax slider and the central town square happiness meter are proto-systems that Anno 1800 players will immediately recognize as the DNA behind tiered workforces and unrest mechanics. Here, though, they are transparent and readable, which makes 1701 the best Anno entry to start with if you have been bouncing off the heavier modern titles. The History Edition brings real technical substance. The engine was rebuilt as 64-bit, so the RAM ceiling that caused crashes in the original is gone. Resolution support scales to 4K and the UI adapts cleanly, including three distinct multiscreen layout options (Compact, Split, and Stretched) that are a genuine quality-of-life win on wide setups. Multiplayer is fully functional again after years of dormancy caused by the deprecated GameSpy middleware, now running over Ubisoft Connect with desync recovery borrowed from Anno 1800. The included Sunken Dragon expansion adds an 11-mission campaign in an Asia-inspired setting that the base game never had, new opponents, and ornamental buildings, so the package is complete. On the strategic layer, 1701 does not pretend to be deep by modern grand-strategy standards, and that is fine. The two core modes - open-ended continuous play and ten escalating scenarios - give you sandbox freedom and structured objectives respectively. Warfare is split between sea combat, where your warships can strangle enemy trade routes, and land operations, where you transport artillery, infantry, and cavalry to enemy islands and take territory by destroying market buildings. The lodge system, unlocked through schools and universities, adds covert options: deploy a poisoner to introduce plague to a rival's colony, or send a demagogue to pull workers off the job. These tools give you decision nodes that go beyond production ratios. Natural disasters - hurricanes, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, plague outbreaks - also randomly disrupt your best-laid plans, which keeps late-game sessions from becoming a passive economy watch. The two complaints worth flagging are real. First, Ubisoft Connect is mandatory and several players have reported a rough initial activation experience, including key-detection hiccups. If launcher friction is a dealbreaker for you, know that upfront. Second, compared to Anno 1404 or Anno 1800, the complexity ceiling is noticeably lower. Veterans of the series looking for dense resource chains and extended late-game pressure will hit the edge of 1701's systems inside 20-30 hours. The Steam community sits at a healthy 85 percent positive rating, with the most consistent praise landing on its accessibility and the quality of its orchestral soundtrack. For anyone new to the Anno series, or for a returning player who wants a focused session that does not demand a wiki open in a second window, this History Edition is the correct version to own. The combination of the base game, the Sunken Dragon expansion, 4K support, functional multiplayer, and a shipped World Editor for community scenarios makes it the definitive way to play 1701 in 2024 and beyond. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayercooptier:indieColony BuilderSupply ChainAge of SailNatural DisastersCovert OpsPer-Tier TaxationOpen-Ended SandboxScenario ModeWorld Editor SupportUbisoft Connect Required

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck UnsupportedProtonDB Gold

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Unsupported. Runs great on Linux after minor tweaks. Based on 7 ProtonDB community reports.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
8 GB available space
Graphics
GTX 660, R7 265
Processor
FX 4130 – 3.9 Ghz, I3-3220 – 3.3 Ghz

Recommended

OS
Windows 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
8 GB available space
Graphics
GTX 770, RX 470
Processor
I5-4460 – 3.2 Ghz, Ryzen5 1600

Community Discussion

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
Ubisoft Mainz
Publisher
Ubisoft
Release Date
Apr 22, 2024

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Price History

2026-06-105.21(lowest)

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Frequently asked questions about Anno 1701 History Edition

How much does Anno 1701 History Edition cost?

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What platforms is Anno 1701 History Edition available on?

Anno 1701 History Edition is available on PC.

When was Anno 1701 History Edition released?

Anno 1701 History Edition was released on 22 April 2024.

Who developed Anno 1701 History Edition?

Anno 1701 History Edition was developed by Ubisoft Mainz and published by Ubisoft.