

#Civilization vi dlc full#
In the past we’ve seen the Iroquois, the Shoshone, the Sioux and a generalized Native American empire Civ VI could go with any of them or wrangle up somebody new. The Civilization VI Anthology includes all of the Civilization VI content released, including the Sid Meier’s Civilization VI game, six DLC packs, the expansions Rise and Fall and Gathering Storm, and the full New Frontier Pass.

That basically means the Maya or (more likely) the Inca for the former and a native American tribe for the latter. The game should add, in either a DLC or as an expansion, two more New World native civilizations, one from Central or South America and one from North America north of Mexico. The only native New World civilization in the game is the Aztec Empire and they were only available as a preorder bonus / free time-locked DLC. Civilization VI is required to play add-on content and some features of the New Frontier Pass require either the Gathering Storm or Rise and Fall expansion to work. Only available on Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, and Xbox. Immediate access to the Aztecs could be obtained by pre-ordering the game. The Aztec civilization is a free DLC that became available to everyone 3 months after the game's release. Civ VI needs to round out its roster I’d vote for Ethiopia, since we haven’t seen them all that much and they’re more interesting.Ĭivilization 6 really needs more New World civilizations-and not colonial empires like the United States and Brazil. Back to Civilization VI DLC (which is short for downloadable content) is available for Civilization VI through Steam. Civ V did Songhai and Civ IV had Mali and eventually Ethiopia. Both the Mediterranean African region and the sub-Saharan area could use another civilization, and the most obvious choices are Carthage in the north and Mali or Ethiopia in the South. Africa is still pretty lightly represented, though, with only Egypt and Kongo.
#Civilization vi dlc series#
In Civ VI, Africa got a bright new star in the Kongo, a civ we haven’t seen before and one much more refreshing than the tired Zulu, a series perennial. Carthage's greatest moment Photo: Henri Motte
