1. Galactic Civilizations IV
  2. News

Galactic Civilizations IV News

Dev Journal #93 - An Essay of the History of the Galactic Civilizations Universe

My office has a lot of printouts in binders regarding the history of the universe (The Mithrilar Cycle) that both Galactic Civilizations and Elemental come from. I once had the opportunity to write a book, Destiny's Embers and that was quite an adventure. My original story was 300 pages but my publisher, Del Rey, wanted it fleshed out and had an editor greatly expand the exposition of it. One of these days, I hope to publish the original manuscript which, I should add, has no references to how charactered dressed or other, in my view, frivolous descriptions.

We have a lot of new content being developed here at Stardock that will be tapping into this lore. To that end, I thought I'd share some of the background today.

[h2]Era 1: Of the Mithrilar[/h2]
Let's start in the past. A past—so distant that “time” scarcely had meaning—the Mithrilar watched over the cosmos from a vantage beyond mortal reckoning. Their charge was the Talananth, an artifact of immeasurable potency. Like a loom weaving threads of destiny, the Talananth gave shape to our three-dimensional universe, lending order to the infinite possibilities of existence.

Among these ancient stewards walked Draginol, a Mithrilar who stood apart from his kin by choice and by temperament. Where others moved serenely through the timeless void, Draginol felt the rhythmic pulse of past, present, and future. Impatient with the slow unfolding of the cosmos, he employed the Talananth to craft a sentient people known collectively as the Arnor. In doing so, he hoped they might hasten the grand design he alone seemed to sense.

Draginol’s vision took two forms. First came the Dred’nir—the “First Ones,” in the Arnorian tongue—endowed with a heightened sense of time and a share of Draginol’s own far-reaching perspective. Second came the Elas’nir—the “Second Ones”—slower to grasp the urgency of fleeting moments. While the Dred’nir varied widely in power—some possessed abilities bordering on godlike, others only marginally beyond that of future humans—the Elas’nir were largely placid, drifting through the ages as though tethered to an eternal present.

[h2]Draginol’s Impatience[/h2]
While many of the Mithrilar seemed content to observe the universe’s natural unfolding, Draginol sensed a storm of trouble on the horizon. He believed the Arnor needed to feel the swift crack of mortality—like the ticking of a clock—to galvanize them into action. Yet most Elas’nir remained detached, drifting across the centuries in tranquil ignorance. Only a rare few, like Tandis and Amandara, developed the keen sense of passing time that Draginol valued. They stood out among their kin, capable of grasping the significance of change.

In time, Draginol’s designs took on a darker edge. He conspired with the more powerful (and often more ambitious) Dred’nir to harness the very essence of the Elas’nir. From their essence he meant to fashion an object—the Orb of Draginol—that would grant him unrivaled dominion over the Talananth. Each harvested Elas’nir increased the Orb’s cosmic potency, bringing Draginol closer to directly shaping reality as he saw fit.

But it was not a quietly kept secret. The culling of their ranks roused the Elas’nir from their habitual placidity, and in their resistance, the seeds of conflict took root.

--------------------------------------------

[h2]Of the Arnor[/h2]
Though wrought in the same primordial forge, the Arnor were anything but homogeneous. The Dred’nir—Talax, in particular—became legends, known for raw might or cunning. Meanwhile, the Elas’nir shaped the culture, philosophy, and broader civilization of the Arnor. Their societies thrived on knowledge gleaned from eons of observation. It was in these societies that figures like Tandis rose to prominence, forging alliances and offering hope to countless new races springing up across the nascent galaxy.

As rumor of Draginol’s designs spread, the Arnor found themselves divided between loyalty to their creator and rebellion against his twisted project. Once revered like a distant but benevolent deity, Draginol now seemed a tyrant holding the fate of an entire universe in his hands.

This was the beginning of the Dred'nir and Elas'nir wars and where the Dred'nir became referred to as the Dread Lords.

--------------------------------------------

[h2]The Shattering of the Talananth[/h2]
Believing the Orb of Draginol had absorbed sufficient cosmic essence, Draginol moved to seize the Talananth for himself, presumably to reorder creation to his vision. Yet the raw forces unleashed could not be contained. The Talananth shattered, unleashing a cataclysm that annihilated all but two of the Mithrilar—Draginol and Mascrinthus. Both vanished from known reality, for a long while, taking with them any guiding hand the Arnor might have had.

In the aftermath, the bulk of the Dred’nir and Elas’nir lay broken. The once-proud Arnor teetered on the brink. Those who survived rose from the ashes to fight anew, and the wars between Arnor and the Dread Lords—were waged in earnest.

[h2]Arnor / Dread Lord Wars[/h2]
From this cosmic upheaval emerged an epoch of conflict. The Dread Lords, shaped by the most relentless Dred’nir, carried out Draginol’s dark legacy—though now seemingly without his direct guidance. Their power and wrath knew no bound, a threat to any world that drew their gaze.

Across the stars, the mortal races rose—Iconia, Altaria, and countless others—and became battlefields or pawns in the Dread Lords’ cosmic game. This is the period in which Tandis the Arnorian took up the cause of these younger species. He fought with a measured patience, marshaling the strength of mortals whose wills could not be so easily subsumed. This era of war and uneasy alliances persisted, shaping the fundamental tapestry of galactic history.

It was also during this time that both Mascrinthus and Draginol had their final showdown. A moment witnessed by Tandis on the world of Altaria. In that final battle, Draginol was defeated by a young mortal who had found the Orb, now known as the Bane. Tandis would take the Bane and place it beyond the reach, or so he thought, of mortal beings believing it safe to do so with Draginol now vanquished beyond ever being a threat again.

At length, the Dread Lords were entrapped in a pocket universe, quarantined from reality. Their reign of terror appeared ended. Or so it was told in half-remembered stories among the surviving Arnor and the nascent star-faring species that would come later.

--------------------------------------------

[h2]Deep Time[/h2]
In the distant future, a human named DL Bradley stumbled across echoes of this primeval conflict. While his full story is yet to be woven in the records available to most, rumors speak of a tragic destiny—how a single mortal life became intertwined with an eternal cosmic loop. The torment of “unlimited time” is said to be both a boon and a curse, an endless burden for any soul truly aware of time’s relentless drumbeat.

Time, after all, is the great predator. It stalks gods and mortals alike, offering no respite to those who can sense its every pulse. Perhaps that is why Draginol feared complacency, or why Tandis and Amandara strove to uphold hope across the stars. Even the mightiest Mithrilar could be undone by the jaws of eternity.

For now, the legacy of the Arnor and Dread Lords stands as a testament to what comes of cosmic ambition and mortal resilience. The tapestry they wove—and tore asunder—enfolds our galaxy still, from the oldest lore of Iconia to the newest ventures of Earth. Indeed, much of that story remains untold, drifting like stardust in the corridors of eternity, awaiting those bold (or foolish) enough to seek it.

...

And that is, my friends, a general outline of the story. Of course, this is condensed beyond all reason. But hopefully it helps provide some semblance of sense to the overall story that Galactic Civilizations and Elemental draw from.

Dev Journal #92 - Of the Nyx

With the benefit of hindsight, Tales of the Arnor should have been handled as a full expansion pack. It just has such a massive scope of changes in it.

For me, personally, it's the first GalCiv IV DLC I've got to work on since Tales of Centauron which I thoroughly enjoyed. But this one...this one is just so much bigger.

This will probably not be the last post I make on Tales of the Arnor so I will probably miss some things here.

[h2]Of the Nyx[/h2]
So as some of you know, I've been writing the lore on Galactic Civilizations since the late 1980s. 4X strategy games don't make very good vessels for getting that lore out obviously.

Some of you probably noticed that the Yor changed the way they looked a lot between GalCiv II and GalCiv III. I mentioned in another post how the first Yor were created by the Iconians and then those Yor creatred more Yor which are the ones depicted in GalCiv III and GalCiv IV. The Nyx that are the subject of Tales of the Arnor look like the Yor from GalCiv II.

[h2]The Campaign[/h2]
So the Nyx will be introduced in the new Mission called Tales of the Arnor. But you will also be able to play them in a normal sandbox game as well.

[h3]The Nyx get their own completely unique tech tree:[/h3]


[h3]This turned out to be a bit of a crazy decision because a unique tech tree means they have their own unique ship components too:[/h3]


[h3]It also means they have to have their own leader types:[/h3]


...and their own leader powers.

The Nyx don't have ministers. They have Primes and they have a very different philosophy how their government should be handled and what traits matter.

[h3]It also means they get their own unique improvements including a new one called Aid Ship Production:[/h3]



And that's just the start.

What you will learn is that the Iconians aren't necessarily blameless.

Dev Journal #91 - The Yor and the Arnor Thoughts

So I'm working on the upcoming DLC called Tales of the Arnor and it's going to go pretty hard into the background on the Yor.

To do that, I really need to explain a bit about the background of this game which, since it's a 30 year old series there's a lot of bits involved. No pun intended.

In the beginning...

So at the start there were the Mithrilar. These were beings that we would consider to exist outside our universe. One of them, called Draginol (which is where I stole of my user handles from) was different from the others in that he could sense time despite existing outside time as we think of it. He was concerned over the linear development of the universe and used the cosmic Talananth, the primary tool that the Mithrilar had, to create in universe beings that came to call themselves the Arnor.

The Arnor themselves were split into two groups. The Ele'nir and the Dre'nir. The short version is that Draginol focused the most effort on the Dre'nir to be most like him in that they could sense time and thus have a sense of urgency. The Ele'nir were less, by his standards, sophisticated and didn't experience the passage of time in a meaningful way.

Now, lots of things happen in between leading to the end of the Mithrilar presence within the universe. However, the Ele'nir and Dre'nir persisted and watched life develop and evolve. By this time, the Arnor's Ele'nir had accepted the branding the Ele'nir had given them "Dread Lords". From the Dread Lords point of view, the rest of the Arnor were basically mindless cattle. The Arnor thought the Dread Lords were vicious and dangerous.

The Dread Lords had uplifted a species called the Iconians and in time, the Iconians developed their own artificial servants called the Yor. (They obviously didn't have Terminator of BSG shows in their stories). The Yor weren't sentient though. They had strong AI but they had no self-motivation. They just did as told.

Eventually, the Dread Lords and Arnor had their massive civil war which ended with both of them disappearing. But in this mix, the Dread Lords gave the Yor self-motivation which made them truly alive. And the rest is history.

However, within the Yor there's a lot of history there. The Yor had many iterations and we have shown these in the GalCiv games over the years with the most famous being the Nyx series:



and there was also the D-deries (Dark Yor):



In Tales of the Arnor, we will be revisiting the Nyx series of Yor who we haven't seen since GalCiv II. They will be a playable civ with their own tech tree (as in, a completely new tech tree).

Release Date Announcement for Tales of the Arnor

"Tales of the Arnor" DLC Launching February 27, 2025

[h3]Discover the secret history of the Arnor along with enhanced gameplay updates, new technologies, and Crises to overcome[/h3]


Uncover mysteries from the darkest reaches of the galaxy in “Tales of the Arnor,” a new DLC for 4X grand strategy game Galactic Civilizations IV available on Feb. 27, 2025. This new content allows players to explore the history of the Arnor civilization, introducing new narrative and gameplay elements. In Galactic Civilizations IV, players build empires and engage in space battles, and "Tales of the Arnor" will add new content to create new opportunities for players to gain valuable knowledge and all new tech to gain galactic supremacy.

"Tales of the Arnor" features several key additions, including the campaign "Legacy of the Arnor," which provides background lore on the development of various civilizations. Players will encounter new content, including anomalies, relics, and artifacts to discover, as well as late-game crisis events tied to the unfinished projects of the Arnor. The DLC also introduces a unique tech tree for the Cybernetic phenotype, featuring exclusive planetary improvements, ship components, and early-game events. Additionally, the Civilization Creator now lets players to select their desired tech tree, allowing custom Civilizations to match preferred playstyle.

"With 'Tales of the Arnor,' we’re providing players with additional lore and gameplay options, allowing players to engage with the history of the Arnor while making choices that affect their civilizations,” said Brad Wardell, CEO of Stardock. “With new challenges and new experiences for our players, Galactic Civilizations IV continues to be one of the best 4X experiences available."


[h2]Key features of Galactic Civilizations IV: Tales of the Arnor include:[/h2]
[h3]Explore the Legacy of the Arnor Campaign[/h3]
Take on the Legacy of the Arnor campaign to uncover the history of the Arnor and the foundations of galactic civilizations. Discover how different species and empires evolved through distinct paths shaped by their environments and cultures.
[h3]Investigate New Anomalies, Relics, and Artifacts[/h3]
Unearth hidden treasures and challenges that add depth to exploration. These discoveries provide opportunities to gain valuable resources, expand your knowledge, and trigger unique events.
[h3]Address Late-Game Crises[/h3]
Face new late-game crisis events tied to the unfinished projects of the Arnor. These challenges will test your leadership skills as you navigate the consequences of their actions and the ripple effects across the galaxy.
[h3]Develop Unique Technologies[/h3]
Access a distinct tech tree for the Cybernetic phenotype, unlocking exclusive planetary improvements, ship components, and early-game events. These advancements reflect the unique characteristics and strengths of your civilization.
[h3]Enhanced Civilization Creator[/h3]
The updated Civilization Creator now allows players to select a specific tech tree for their custom civilization, offering greater flexibility and strategic depth in designing unique civilizations.


In addition to the Tales of the Arnor Expansion, Galactic Civilizations IV, is also receiving a free update today for all players! Update v2.94 features a map generation update with improved player placement and Fog of War system; better UI for the planet, ship designer, and shipyard screens; and better gameplay balance with improved combat, citizen specialties, colonization, and many other changes. This update is available for all players today!

[h2]Pre-order Now:[/h2]
https://store.steampowered.com/app/2671170/Galactic_Civilizations_IV__Tales_of_the_Arnor/













Free v2.94 Update Now Available
View the full changelog here
Players can look forward to quality-of-life enhancements aimed at refining the gameplay experience based on community feedback.

[h3]Improved Map Generation[/h3]
One of the notable updates is the enhancement of the map generation system. Players can expect better player placement, which should contribute to a more balanced start for each game. Additionally, the Fog of War system has been improved, allowing for a more strategic approach to exploration as players will need to be more mindful of their surroundings.

[h3]Enhanced UI Screens[/h3]
The user interface has also seen some thoughtful updates. Key screens such as the Planet Screen, Ship Designer Screen, and Shipyard Screen have been refined for better clarity and usability. These changes aim to streamline the management of civilizations, ship design, and planetary development, making it easier for players to navigate the various systems within the game.

[h3]Gameplay Balance Adjustments
[/h3]In terms of gameplay balance, update v2.94 includes several tweaks to combat mechanics, citizen specialties, colonization, resource management, research, orbitals, and ship hulls. These adjustments are designed to create a more balanced experience, ensuring that different strategies can be viable without any single approach overshadowing others.









Dev Journal #90 - Balancing GalCiv IV

After several years of post-release development and multiple expansions, Galactic Civilizations IV has a hell of a lot of content. 4X is a relatively complex genre and GalCiv leans pretty hard into the “sandbox” side of things, providing the player with many tools and options to play with when planning their conquest of the galaxy.

This is great for the player, but with such expansive scope and depth, paired with periodic patching to iron out bugs and address various issues that crop up, the overall balance of the game will come under strain. By balance here, I’m not just talking about the relative power levels of the various Civilizations, and the many abilities they bring to bear against one another. This overall balance must also consider how well major (and minor) gameplay elements and individual mechanics interlock and interact with one another too, to ensure that the overall fun factor of the game isn’t bent out of shape.


There’s a lot to consider here: the overall pacing of the game needs to feel good, with a clear and distinct start, middle and end, and the AI needs to be able to play the game in a satisfying way too. All of these things can kind of drift as more features get added, and we always make an effort to tighten things as we go. Sometimes though, you need to stop and make a concerted effort to examine the way the game plays right now and then focus in on those areas that need looking at.

With that in mind, you’ll be happy to note that we’ve got a new patch incoming that helps tighten up GalCiv4’s gameplay from top to bottom. While balance patching isn’t quite as sexy as a big content drop, the game should be a lot tighter and more fun to play as a result of this.

All that said, there are some really cool changes in here too! Here are some of the more noteworthy changes made to the game.

First up, we should talk about the improvements made to map generation.

Firstly, we know that not everybody enjoys playing with multiple sectors, but still want the epic scale of a huge map, to build and destroy civilizations on. For you guys, we’ve increased the size of the very largest single sector map.

As you can see, this is a truly enormous map set to the Gigantic setting. I’ve removed the fog of war so you can get an idea of just how many stars and planets you’ll have in play with Occasional Star Frequency. You can imagine what it’ll be like if you increase Star Frequency!


If that’s a bit much, and if you like very big games with lots of distance between stars, but want less Core World management, you could try it with Star Frequency set to Rare.


This picture is quite misleading, looking like a smaller sector perhaps. Make no mistake, this is still a truly massive map. That said, with less stars populating it, there’ll be a lot more distance to travel between worlds, and you’ll have less colony management to worry about.


Here’s what your starting situation looks like. The outer light-blue circle around Geode there is your starting Ship Range, and you’ll need think carefully about how to get all that way over to your neighbouring stars and get another Core World going!

This highlights just how versatile GalCiv is as a sandbox game: if you play with the map settings, you’ll get some really cool and interesting game variants, often increasing the challenge in interesting ways too!

Back to the update, the game will now generate more stars overall, on all Star Frequency settings, and if you want more habitable planets, we’ve increased both their number on the Abundant setting and the maximum number of planets that can be colonised at once. This should please players who like to settle and manage very densely populated Civilizations.

Blackholes are also somewhat more common now, which in turn should increase Antimatter and the possibility for more Stellar Gateways, for those of you who own the Megastructures DLC. Also, if you do own this expansion, we’ve increased the amount of Gigamass gained from Gas Giants, which will increase the amount of Gigamass in the galaxy overall.


Civilization Proximity when a map is generated is now more satisfying and coherent to the settings you choose. Players should mostly be placed in their own sector when “Very Far” is chosen, if there are enough sectors spawned on the map, and Civilizations occupying the same sector will be now appropriately separated.

This should address a long held concern about player placement on the map overall, ensuring map generation and Civilization Proximity settings are more intuitive to use, to get a result closer to what you’re expecting to see.


Exploring those maps is important too, and we’ve improved the auto-explore AI system to work faster, smarter and focus on exploring stars, to find the best worlds and orbiting strategic resources, eliminating the fog-of-war in the process. Speaking of which, performance improvements to the fog-of-war system have been made to dramatically reduce the late game turn processing times, and increase the general performance of the FOW system overall.

Moving to the UI, changes have been made to reduce clutter and improve the overall user experience of navigating the Planet Screen, Ship Designer Screen and Shipyard Screens.

One much requested feature to note here: the Planet Screen now has a handy filter to sort Improvements by their output category.


Technology costs scale up a little faster than before, which means players get to enjoy each tech level a bit longer, remembering you can adjust this speed in the game’s settings if you like it even faster, or slower.

The AI now prioritises Culture techs more than before: Culture and Influence have changed quite a bit since the release of Supernova, and being a very powerful mechanic, getting it balanced right is really important. The AI should now be better at keeping up with the player when they’re going for an Culture-based victory, choking their opponents out with rapid Influence expansion!

There have been many tweaks and changes to the game’s economy, particularly in terms of resource generation at the Core World level. There are too many to mention individually but here are the main changes.


Firstly, Citizens and their various Specializations (or Jobs) now have more impact on Planetary Output values for Manufacturing, Research, Income, Food and Influence, which will have the knock on effect of giving a decent economic boost to Civilization’s (and players) that prefer Citizen-based industry over mass industrialisation using Districts and Improvements.

Furthermore, there have been some tweaks made to Crime to make it feel more impactful. We’ve altered the effects of some of the tools you have to deal with it, making some cheaper and more effective, while reducing the efficacy of some of the more overpowered crime reduction abilities.


The end result is that Crime is a more serious issue to deal with, keeping it a relevant threat for longer, but ensuring the player still has options to reduce it if they want to take those extra steps.

Furthermore, taxation is now more infuriating for your Citizens: previously it was a bit too easy to max out your tax-rate and have everybody go about their lives pretending that losing 75% of their income to the taxman was just fine and dandy. You can still do that, but it’ll require a bit more coercion, bread and circuses, or outright mind control to achieve.


There have been some significant changes made to the game’s resource economy: Strategic and Luxury Resource costs in the Bazaar are now much more market-driven, meaning that the prices will change more dramatically depending on supply and demand than before.

Furthermore, Luxury Resources (that’s the really exotic stuff like Helios Ore, Techapod Hives and so on) are much rarer now, and more valuable as a result.


Moving onto the ship designer, Ship Hulls, from Medium upwards, are now generally larger and can take more components, meaning more choice in how you build the larger warships and non-combat vessels in the game.


In combat, weapon ranges have been increased overall, with missile weapon systems getting an extra shot in each time they fire, and extra damage added to boost their power a bit more.

There’s some exciting news for Diplomacy: players can now trade Colonies and Starbases with one another in the Trade screen. This will open up some interesting strategic options, where you may want to trade away a planet you’re likely to lose to an Influence push and get something in return for it. Another option might be to capture a Core World in a raid and gifting it to another Civilization in return for an alliance, or perhaps to put that Civ’s new holding between you and your foe and potentially drag them into the war too…

Finally, we’ve improved the formatting and translation for non-English languages, improving the game for our international GalCiv fans too.

I think that’s enough for now! I hope you can see that these balance changes are actually pretty exciting and will change the game for the better in a big way.

Let us know what you think in the comments below, and I’ll catch you next time!

Cheers!