
When you earn enough experience, you level up and can pump points into your character’s attributes and skills. Experience is earned by defeating enemies and completing quests. One the masteries and two the world design.

I think there’s two things that make Titan Quest a little different than its counterparts. As one would expect from a game like this, you slay monsters for experience and loot, level up, and become more powerful. Things like structures and buildings in the environments can sometimes obstruct your view whether you’re zoomed in or out and it can be nuisance but I didn’t encounter it very often. You can assign potions and skills to the quickbar for easy access and can zoom the camera in and out. Like many games in the genre, you click around the screen to move your character, kill enemies, and interact with things. If they are not, you start at the beginning of the base game. If they are, you will start at the beginning of the Ragnarok expansion. Finally, you have the option to decide if your hero is accomplished or not. You can choose the gender and tunic color and then name your character. Before you can begin slaying monsters, you have to create a character. Epic and Legendary have to be unlocked so I played through the game on Normal. Titan Quest does support multiplayer and includes three difficulties Normal, Epic, and Legendary. I can’t say the story is incredible but the different locations and mythologies are certainly highlights. The game takes you through mythological Greece, Egypt, and Orient. What is impressive is the different cultures represented. The game plays out in Acts and in each act the ultimate goal is to get to the end and slay the big bad boss. They summoned monsters to terrorize the world as they prepared for the release of the Titans. Before the events of the base game, a trio of Telkines broke the communication conduit linking Olympus with the mortal world. Some time ago there was a war between the Olympian Gods and Titans and the latter was eventually imprisoned. Furthermore, as of this review, Anniversary received two expansions, Ragnarok and Atlantis. The Anniversary Edition was also ported to the Xbox One, PlayStation 4, and Switch in 2018. The following year, an expansion titled Immortal Throne was released, and in 2016, Titan Quest Anniversary Edition, which includes the base game, expansion, and support for modern systems was released.
#TITAN QUEST RAGNAROK SPELL PIECES PC#
Developed by Iron Lore Entertainment and published by THQ, Titan Quest was released for PC in June, 2006. But then I read that the Titan Quest engine is the foundation for it so I decided to play that first. I recently started looking into some action RPGs to play and chose Grim Dawn. I wanted to play it before the Anniversary Edition released but just never got around to it.

I put off playing Titan Quest for a while.
