
If you still have troubles receiving the emails, please contact EA. You’ve already signed up for Dragon Age newsletters with the above email. Unsubscribe at any time by changing your email preferences. You've successfully signed up to receive emails about Dragon Age and other EA news, products, events and promotions. You must sign in and sign up for Dragon Age newsletter before you can redeem your items.

Sign up today to receive the latest Dragon Age news, updates, and more by email. I think it’s time for Dragon Age to evaluate its position in the gaming landscape anyway, with over ten years likely to have passed by the time Dreadwolf finally comes around.I can unsubscribe at any time by changing my email preferences, contacting privacyadmin.ea.com, or writing to Electronic Arts Inc., ATTN: Email Opt-Out, 209 Redwood Shores Pkwy, Redwood City, CA, 94065, USA. No longer will I have to contend with pages of lore I don’t understand or foes only downed through lightweight melee attacks and campy magic, instead a more approachable take on Western fantasy that unfamiliar fools like me can pick up and fall in love with. Even Inquisition feels archaic today.īut with recent gameplay leaks for Dreadwolf teasing a more action-based combat system (fans at TheGamer tell me this is a return to Dragon Age 2) and a timeless yet contemporary aesthetic, part of me is already tempted to see what all the fuss is about.


Features Editor Ben Sledge has beaten me to the punch when it comes to revisiting past games from a modern perspective, and I still don’t think they’ll hold up in ways that will keep me invested. BioWare’s beloved RPG series is talked about in the same delighted tones as Mass Effect, Final Fantasy, and The Witcher - fans holding fond memories of moments I have absolutely no context for.

To be honest, I’ve never really gotten that far into any of them, with Inquisition only holding my attention for a few hours until my attention was diverted elsewhere.
