The Kingdom Rush series has been a staple of iOS tower-defense fans' diets for about four years now, thanks to its cartoonish artwork with an intuitive battle system, numerous humorous nods to other media, and an ever-increasing rewarding set of challenges.
The latest entry in the series, Kingdom Rush Origins, further sharpens the enchanted blade--giving players more maps, heroes, and towers to unlock. Not much has changed from the last go-around-- 2013's Frontiers--except the focus has narrowed, giving the units and the level-design a more streamlined, organic feel. While it feels like more of the same, developer Ironhide Studios proves they've learned a thing or two in the last three years. Not convinced Here are three reasons why you should stick with the series and play on.
Dragonfire is just a click away: The biggest change the series has undergone in this release is the increased focus on heroes and special abilities. The Kingdom Rush series started out as a fairly conventional tower-defense game: you build your towers, upgrade them, and hope to hold off the enemy waves. But Rush introduced heroes--singular units you could upgrade (and buy, using real money) and deploy that could swing a battle if deployed at the right choke point. Frontiers gave you more heroes, and the gameplay increasingly relied on them (somewhat overly so).
With Origins, the balance seems much more reasonable: heroes are important and have different abilities, but a good economy and selection of towers will do just as much. In Origins, the controllable powers the hero grants you are now situated next to your own powers, giving you a much more intuitive interface for controlling your troops. Now, casting lightning or your hero's arrow-storm is only a click away. And Origins has a new set of obscure, ridiculous-but-clever bonuses you can buy using in-game currency (have enemies go back in time, unleash dragonfire, etc). Go to town.
Original story No. But origin story Yes: Instead of telling a high-fantasy story complete with humans, dwarves, goblins et al, Origins instead focuses mainly on one race of the JRR Tolkien tradition: elves. While not exactly groundbreaking in its story, characters from the earlier games make cameos and the campaign doesn't have a weak stage.
Instead of playing the aggressor, you're tasked with defending the falling elvish empire from gnolls and dark elves. The gnolls play like standard baddies in the Kingdom Rush lineage, while the dark elves behave like the lizard people in Frontiers: you'll have to deal with their teleporting, curse-inducing, arrow-slinging villainy. The elves have some great new towers to tinker with: stone throwing trees, high elven magicians, and of course, the best archers in fantasy lore.
Having fun, just elfing around: Ironhide Studios has proven that they know how to make a great level while also having a lot of fun. Origins features some of the best levels in the series, from a serpent-inhabited lake to a tree-hut city. Certain enemies trigger certain stage effects, including opening new paths that could expose your flank. Allies and enemies can appear and completely change a map's flow, making you alter your tactics in seconds.
Responding to these new challenges, just when you thought you were safe, is part of what makes the series so fresh. And if you have a breather, you can find little Easter Eggs throughout the levels. Nods to media as diverse as the Smurfs, the board game Simon, and the band Twisted Sister litter the landscape. Finding these references, and accomplishing the myriad of obscure (and difficult) challenges is what keeps players coming back after completing the initial, six-to eight- hour campaign. And if Origins is anything like its previous entries, you can expect Ironhide to later release an extended campaign for the game for free as an app update.
Origins may not be a reinvention for the series, but it's so sharp and interesting in just the right places that this might be the best Kingdom Rush to date.
Developer: Ironhide Game StudioPlatform: iOS (Universal)Price: $3