It’s no great secret that the Dragon Age series has been a contentious one. From the early days of the critically acclaimed Dragon Age: Origins to the more recent, much less widely loved, Dragon Age: The Veilguard, BioWare’s high-fantasy extravaganza has constantly experimented with new narrative styles and gameplay frameworks, leading to an exciting, if complicated, franchise legacy.
One of the downsides of this ever-changing design and writing philosophy is how fans have become split on Dragon Age as a whole. As early as Dragon Age 2, players were lamenting the changes BioWare made over the original’s more gritty worldbuilding and traditional RPG systems. Opinions have softened on Inquisition over the years, but its quality is still debated, and Veilguard is easily the series’ most controversial release yet. Whatever one thinks about Dragon Age in general, whether they love the series or hate it, it’s hard to deny that it’s been inconsistent, and a hard reset might be the best way to keep the ball rolling post-Veilguard.

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The Best Path For the Dragon Age Series After The Veilguard May Not Be a Sequel
While Dragon Age: The Veilguard may have seen a decent amount of success, a follow-up title may not be the best move for the franchise.
Why a Dragon Age Reset Might Be for the Best
Dragon Age: The Veilguard Demands a Change of Course
Though welcomed with open arms by both day-one Dragon Age fans and new adopters, Dragon Age: The Veilguard was not a success for BioWare. Per recent financial reports, Veilguard didn’t hit its sales targets, and despite positive buzz around its launch, opinions have proven to be extremely mixed. Critics point out shortcomings like unnatural and immature-sounding dialog, uninspired level design, and overly simplistic combat mechanics as reasons to give the game a pass, even as others hail it as a masterful continuation of the Dragon Age saga.
But the thing is, BioWare didn’t need Veilguard to be an “okay” game, or even a “good” one whose quality is contested; Veilguard needed to be a home run. In the wake of Mass Effect Andromeda and Anthem, the beloved RPG-maker’s reputation was wanting for a shot in the arm, and Veilguard‘s mixed reception won’t suffice. Thus, to keep the franchise moving forward in an exciting direction, it could be best to wipe the slate clean for Dragon Age 5, tackling the series from an entirely new angle.
What a Dragon Age Reboot Could Look Like
Dragon Age: The Veilguard is a direct continuation of the Inquisition story, but the franchise’s previous entries didn’t take continuity as seriously. The stories do link together, but more so from a world-building perspective than with respect to plot or character elements. As such, it would be relatively easy for BioWare to start from square one, as it were.
Still, some fundamental stylistic changes from Dragon Age: The Veilguard would be welcome. This theoretical reboot may not need to be as dour as Origins, but a more mature, less colorful tone, with characters who are more complex and less frivolous, would be a great change of pace. The series has historically been marketed to adults, after all, so such a shift would be appropriate.
As for gameplay, perhaps BioWare could walk back the slow crawl toward action-RPG mechanics and go back to more strategic RPG combat. Dragon Age: Origins‘ gameplay is rather hard to stomach these days, but a turn-based RPG like Baldur’s Gate 3 could serve as good inspiration for a more modern take on a tactical gameplay formula, which Dragon Age‘s developers could then shape however they saw fit. In short, a radical rebranding of Dragon Age, one that focuses on the mature storytelling and RPG foundations that made it so popular in the first place, would probably be better than doubling-down on what Veilguard introduced.
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