Ambitious modding projects are a bit like baby fish, in that millions of them spawn, but relatively few survive to [[link]] adulthood. Hence, it's always worth celebrating when one makes it through to full release. Such is the case with the, which launches into 1.0 today after 13 years of development.
Middle-earth: Extended Edition first arose in the east way back in 2012, aiming to give Danger Close's beloved RTS The Lord of the Rings: The Battle for Middle-earth the same embiggening treatment Peter Jackson applied to his film trilogy. Over the course of the last decade plus change, it has added new maps to the game like Moria and Lothlorien, added new playable factions such as the Elves and the Haradrim, expanded existing factions like Rohan and Isengard with new units, and much more.
Ultimately though, the main event here is that the mod is now, for all intents and purposes, complete. The mod's creator, Rohirim91, has been consistently involved with the project throughout its long gestation. Indeed, it's fascinating to read back through the game's updates. In 2017, for example, Rohirim was working on the mod while studying for university entrance exams. "During the spring of this year I have made a significant progress on the mod and was close to releasing it," he wrote at the time. "However, due to a mistake on my part and the upgrading of the PC I use, the mod files were
lost." Haven't we all been there?
Rohirim91 doesn't specify whether the 1.0 release represents the end of work on the mod. Indeed, the update is rather matter-of-fact given the milestone. Rohirim opens the update with a succinct summary of the mod's features before diving straight into the changelog "Middle-earth Extended Edition returns with an expanded set of playable maps, new features, polished campaigns and AI, balance changes and bugfixes."
However, right at the bottom of the update, Rohirim writes "Feel free to post your suggestions and report any bugs you encounter via comments or private messages on this site", which seems to leave [[link]] the door open for potential future updates.
Either way, you can download Middle-earth Extended Edition. Rohirim notes that the mod requires patch 1.6 of the Battle for Middle-earth, and of course a copy of the game itself. This latter requirement may be tricky as Danger Close's game isn't for sale digitally anywhere, although you might be able to find it on a certain site for abandoned wares. There is currently a vote in progress on to bring the game onto the platform, so perhaps add your support to that if you want to see this lost RTS treasure more easily purchasable.