



When I first played Dragon Age 2, I was so conflicted. When its sequel, Dragon Age 2, came out, it was almost like a completely different game, and that jarring comparison initially made it confusing to weigh in on the experience. The world, the intriguing characters, the plot twists? It was an incredible experience still very much celebrated to this day. RPG fans fell in love with everything BioWare had to offer with Dragon Age Origins. But even with those factors working against it, Dragon Age 2 managed to tell an incredible tale in a short amount of time, and that's largely because this game has some of the best characters and character development in gaming history. Hopefully.Dragon Age 2 was released ten years ago today, and even now, you can't even bring up the name of the game without someone saying this was the "death of BioWare" or that the sequel "sucked." Due to a rushed development timeline and a lack of resources, Dragon Age 2 was a hodgepodge of glitches, a short narrative, and repetitive environments. What do you think about this news? Would to like to relive the world of Dragon Age Origins? Tell us in the comments below. Obviously, this does not mean that a Dragon Age Origins remaster is actually in development, but it would seem that BioWare has not completely closed the door to chance. Dragon Age 4 rumor has been in the loop for some time, but at the moment BioWare is focused on Anthem, the company’s next big project, called to redeem the fortunes of the studio after the little reception given to Mass Effect Andromeda. In short, there is a remaster in development or not is certainly not deducible exclusively from these bigwigs.

Dragon Age Origins was released in autumn 2009, could it be possible that a remaster can arrive on the occasion of the tenth anniversary? Nothing that can infer the development of a possible remaster of the game, but the three do not seem to have definitively removed this hypothesis. To a specific question about the possibility of seeing a remaster or a remake of Dragon Age Origins, Mark Darrah (executive producer of Dragon Age and Anthem) responds by using very few words “hopefully”, which is also followed by the comments of Michael Gamble (lead producer of Anthem) and Casey Hudson, general manager of the studio.
