Despite countless sequels, Team 17's turn-based strategy series has struggled to better 1999's Worms Armageddon. The developer knows it, too; Worms WMD is based on the fan-favourite game's source code, and the Steam release of Armageddon has been consistently updated, most recently with a major patch in 2020. Now, Worms Armageddon: Anniversary Edition celebrates 25 years of wiggly warfare, and it's still lots of fun.
This version essentially brings the modernised PC build to consoles and throws in some extras. The Game Boy version is included and fully playable, while a War Stories section takes you through the origins of Worms. It features interviews with key figures, interesting asides, design documentation, and more. If you like your industry history, Digital Eclipse has provided a decent Worms lesson here.
But what of the main event? Well, it's Worms Armageddon, only with a significantly higher resolution, online multiplayer (sadly not crossplay), and a modest set of Trophies. The single player is still relatively robust but the structure and difficulty spikes mean it really shows its age. Similarly, the menus throughout can be a little confusing to navigate, and the controls can be initially tricky to work out, and the presentation is broadly quite archaic.
However, once you're over those hurdles, this remains a highly entertaining strategy game with lots of ways to play. Its big strengths are its friendship-making/destroying multiplayer and thorough customisation options, letting you make your own rulesets, teams, and procedurally generated maps. However you choose to engage with it, the game's short turns, cartoonish physics, and wide array of weapons all contribute to a good time, whether it's in small bursts or long multiplayer sessions.
When you're in the thick of a match, using a baseball bat to smack a worm into the water, blowing up a cluster of enemies with a well-placed sheep, or expertly crossing the map with a ninja rope, only to botch the landing and start a chain reaction of mines and exploding barrels, all the rough edges erode away. Worms Armageddon: Anniversary Edition is a warts-and-all revival of a game that, 25 years later, still has it where it counts, and there aren't too many titles that can make that claim.
Comments 20
Worms is one of my favorite series, so can't wait to play it!
Have been looking forward to this game but don't know if the $25 price tag is worth it especially since there is no cross-play which is very unfortunate.
I wish Worms Rumble still had an active fan base but alas it doesnt...
Nintendolife gave Armageddon a 9, interesting! Curious about the difference between the 2, maybe Stephen is still relatively young / missed the nostalgic aspect of it all?
"and difficulty spikes mean it really shows its age."
Thats a modern gamer sentence if I ever heard one lol. Games used to get more difficult as the levels went on, it was called progression.
"and the controls can be initially tricky to work out".
They're not. They're really not. This is your classic "press X to do anything" kind of game. Aim joystick up, press X, worm dies. Aim joystick forward, hold X, worm dies.
@LifeGirl Difficulty, what's that?
The original game is far from easy but it's rewarding when you master it and damn you're a beast when you played against your friends haha!
They should have reviewers who have played the original games, just saying!
@LifeGirl I played the original and hated the difficulty spikes. One level would be easy, then the next one would be tough as hell, rinse and repeat. If it gradually got harder sure, but not being interchangeable.
@LifeGirl I dunno, one of the best selling games of this generation, Elden Ring, is extremely difficult.
I will pick this up, love the Worms series but what I would really like is a new or remaster of Hogs of War!!!!!!!
Don't know why they didn't use Worms 2: Armageddon (PS3) which was probably the best of the lot.
Press X to action, square to jump, circle to bring up weapons - not that difficult is it?
@Mostik Well I have great news for you! There is a team working on the remaster as we speak, should be out next year!
@Hogs-of-War-General @LifeGirl I'm not talking about the difficulty curve; of course, games broadly become more challenging as you get better/unlock more powerful abilities etc. I'm saying there are one or two missions that feel too difficult for where they're positioned. I think that's a reasonable thing to point out. It's something games have gotten better at, generally speaking.
The controls here are different from what I remember back on PS1, but I played this a lot growing up so I was able to adapt pretty quickly. However, I recognise that, for newcomers, the controls are not that straightforward (definitely not as simple as you suggest), and are poorly explained in tutorials. The game is a lot of fun, but only once you're familiar with how it all operates, and in this regard it definitely feels 25 years old.
I'm not saying it's bad, far from it! In many ways I think it's impressive how Armageddon stands the test of time.
@NielsNL I'm 34 and played Armageddon (and World Party) a lot on PS1 I have a lot of love for it, but that's not to say it's immune to criticism. As for the two point difference, I am a different human being from the lovely Ollie, so have different viewpoints and opinions and all that. It's really crazy stuff.
@Hogs-of-War-General User name checks out π That is the best news I have heard all day thank you sir, hope it retains the original voices/audio including Rick π
'Prince Andrew'...nice.
@Mostik Hahaha I love Hogs of War, what can I say!
You are very welcome and it's funny because the past decade there were always rumors of a Remake/Remaster and nothing coming to fruition. Then I heard a year or so ago there was a kickstarter for it which didn't meet the goal which was disappointing but understandable as it has a very small following.
Then a week ago I decided to look into it again and lo and behold, I found a channel on youtube where the people working on it have videos and such! The remaster is called Hogs of War Lardcore!
From what I read and watched the remaster will have the original voices and audio!!! I was worried they wouldn't have it and that is a huge factor for the overall Hogs of War experience.
Just like the general in the PS1 video game intro, I got a little carried away with this reply haha! Hope this helps
I love Worms. I even love Worms Forts on PS2 despite knowing itβs dogsh*t, incredibly buggy and on one of those weird blue discs that makes my PS2 make funny noises.
Too bad the game doesn't have crossplay. WMD didn't have it either and for me at least, the online play died sooner than it should have.
@Hogs-of-War-General Thank you buddy, great info, like you I am really pleased to hear this and sounds like a labour of love rather than a cash in which is always a good start, see you on the battle field
@LifeGirl To be real as a older game difficulty was a way to pad shorter games. And making a game difficult does not mean it done well. Difficulty put in a game in a good way makes a game better.
@BIG3 That's my biggest concern as well and the main reason why I'm not buying it until it goes on sale. Unfortunately in my experience Team 17s track record for their online gaming has been pretty poor. They don't maintain the games very well and there are usually a lot of bugs.
@Mostik At ease soldier! We will acquire all the swill we can carry with our hooves soon...
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