Compare The Settlers® : Rise of an Empire - History Edition prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Ubisoft Blue Byte. Published by Ubisoft. Released on 1/22/2019. Available on PC. Genres: Strategy.

If your idea of unwinding is watching a medieval anthill run itself while you occasionally tell people to build a bakery, this relaxed city-builder scratches that itch. Hardcore strategists will bounce off its shallow end within an afternoon.

I came at this one sideways. Strategy isn't my usual lane, but I know a game that respects your time from one that wastes it, and The Settlers: Rise of an Empire - History Edition sits in an interesting, if narrow, sweet spot. Originally a 2007 Blue Byte release re-packaged here with Windows 10 compatibility and Ubisoft Connect multiplayer, this is a city-builder with light RTS trappings, not the other way around. The combat is optional for long stretches, the campaign's sixteen missions play out across four climatic zones (cold, mild, warm, and hot), and the whole thing reads like a slow Sunday afternoon rather than a ranked ladder grind. The core loop works like this: you plant resource huts near their matching terrain icons, goods flow automatically to a central storehouse, and from there they trickle out to butchers, weavers, dairies, and candlemakers to keep your settlers fed, clothed, and entertained. Buildings upgrade in tiers as new settlers physically carry materials to the site and move in, which is a neat visual touch. Settlers even have escalating needs tied to your knight's rank, starting at basic food and scaling up to clothing, cleaning goods, and entertainment demands as you promote. The hero system adds a small tactical wrinkle, with named knights like Marcus, Alandra, and Thordal each carrying special abilities that can swing specific campaign missions. If a knight drops to zero HP they retreat and respawn from the castle, so you won't lose hours of progress to a bad skirmish. The Eastern Realm expansion, included here, adds a second campaign against a new antagonist and extra maps for both modes. Here's the honest problem: the thing is soft. Critics back in 2007 called the gameplay undemanding even for genre newcomers, and that assessment aged accurately. The economic model was deliberately stripped down from earlier Settlers titles to reduce micromanagement, but Blue Byte went far enough that your settlement basically runs fine regardless of what you do. Diplomacy is nearly non-existent. The single-player campaign is linear and repetitive enough that even fans of the series have flagged it as the weakest entry. The multiplayer, which runs through Ubisoft Connect, is functional, but active player counts are extremely low at this point, so finding a live match against a human opponent is a coin flip on a good day. For what it is, the History Edition is a fair package. You get the base game plus The Eastern Realm expansion, a Windows 10 fix that addresses some legacy GPU issues, and a warmer visual presentation than most competitors from the same era could manage. The four climatic zones do change how you plan, since cold maps shut down fishing and harvesting in winter and can even freeze rivers to open new combat routes. The free-settlement skirmish mode, where you build in peace without objectives, is genuinely calming in a way that appeals to a specific kind of player. If you want Anno 1800 complexity, look elsewhere. If you want to watch a small medieval town animate itself while you loosely direct traffic, this delivers that without friction. Fred, Scout Team

The Settlers® : Rise of an Empire - History Edition
Strategy

The Settlers® : Rise of an Empire - History Edition

Jan 22, 2019Ubisoft Blue ByteUbisoft
GamerScout Says

If your idea of unwinding is watching a medieval anthill run itself while you occasionally tell people to build a bakery, this relaxed city-builder scratches that itch. Hardcore strategists will bounce off its shallow end within an afternoon.

PC
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $

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.

Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About The Settlers® : Rise of an Empire - History Edition

I came at this one sideways. Strategy isn't my usual lane, but I know a game that respects your time from one that wastes it, and The Settlers: Rise of an Empire - History Edition sits in an interesting, if narrow, sweet spot. Originally a 2007 Blue Byte release re-packaged here with Windows 10 compatibility and Ubisoft Connect multiplayer, this is a city-builder with light RTS trappings, not the other way around. The combat is optional for long stretches, the campaign's sixteen missions play out across four climatic zones (cold, mild, warm, and hot), and the whole thing reads like a slow Sunday afternoon rather than a ranked ladder grind. The core loop works like this: you plant resource huts near their matching terrain icons, goods flow automatically to a central storehouse, and from there they trickle out to butchers, weavers, dairies, and candlemakers to keep your settlers fed, clothed, and entertained. Buildings upgrade in tiers as new settlers physically carry materials to the site and move in, which is a neat visual touch. Settlers even have escalating needs tied to your knight's rank, starting at basic food and scaling up to clothing, cleaning goods, and entertainment demands as you promote. The hero system adds a small tactical wrinkle, with named knights like Marcus, Alandra, and Thordal each carrying special abilities that can swing specific campaign missions. If a knight drops to zero HP they retreat and respawn from the castle, so you won't lose hours of progress to a bad skirmish. The Eastern Realm expansion, included here, adds a second campaign against a new antagonist and extra maps for both modes. Here's the honest problem: the thing is soft. Critics back in 2007 called the gameplay undemanding even for genre newcomers, and that assessment aged accurately. The economic model was deliberately stripped down from earlier Settlers titles to reduce micromanagement, but Blue Byte went far enough that your settlement basically runs fine regardless of what you do. Diplomacy is nearly non-existent. The single-player campaign is linear and repetitive enough that even fans of the series have flagged it as the weakest entry. The multiplayer, which runs through Ubisoft Connect, is functional, but active player counts are extremely low at this point, so finding a live match against a human opponent is a coin flip on a good day. For what it is, the History Edition is a fair package. You get the base game plus The Eastern Realm expansion, a Windows 10 fix that addresses some legacy GPU issues, and a warmer visual presentation than most competitors from the same era could manage. The four climatic zones do change how you plan, since cold maps shut down fishing and harvesting in winter and can even freeze rivers to open new combat routes. The free-settlement skirmish mode, where you build in peace without objectives, is genuinely calming in a way that appeals to a specific kind of player. If you want Anno 1800 complexity, look elsewhere. If you want to watch a small medieval town animate itself while you loosely direct traffic, this delivers that without friction. Fred, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayerpvponline-pvplocal-multiplayertier:indieCity-BuilderSupply Chain LiteKnight Hero SystemSeasonal MechanicsCampaign IncludedExpansion IncludedUbisoft Connect RequiredLow Active PlayerbaseCasual Strategy

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Originally released for Windows 7, the game can be played on Windows 10 and Windows 11 OS
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
8 GB available space
Graphics
256 MB DirectX 11–compliant card with Shader Model 4.0 or higher
Processor
64-bit CPU
Sound Card
DirectX 11-compliant sound card

Recommended

OS
Originally released for Windows 7, the game can be played on Windows 10 and Windows 11 OS
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
8 GB available space
Graphics
256 MB DirectX 11–compliant card with Shader Model 4.0 or higher
Processor
64-bit CPU
Sound Card
DirectX 11-compliant sound card

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Ubisoft Blue Byte
Publisher
Ubisoft
Release Date
Jan 22, 2019

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

More from Ubisoft Blue Byte