This asymmetry extends to victory conditions. While a Domination victory (eliminate all rivals) is standard, many factions chase unique goals: the Warlock builds a planar gate, the Troll King seeks the three magical cauldrons, the Senator aims to control the capital. Version 5.31's tweaks to AI behavior mean computer opponents now pursue these objectives with more focus, turning a sandbox into a genuine race against time. Most strategy games treat randomness as a spice. COE5 treats it as the main course. A random event in Civilization might give you a free tech. A random event in COE5 might: spawn a dragon that burns your capital to the ground, turn your best hero into a frog, open a portal to the Void that spews horrors across the map, or gift you a mysterious amulet that doubles your gold—or curses your bloodline.
Version 5.31 is the definitive way to play. It respects the original vision—a digital adaptation of the chaotic, solo tabletop wargames of the 1980s—while sanding off just enough rough edges to make the experience accessible to the persistent newcomer. Conquest of Elysium 5 (v5.31) is not a game you win. It is a game you experience. Each campaign is a short story, often tragic, sometimes hilarious, and occasionally triumphant. You will rage when your level 10 hero is killed by a random goblin arrow. You will cheer when a desperate ritual summons a Phoenix that saves your capital. You will learn to fear the sound of a spider moving through the fog of war. Conquest of Elysium 5 v5.31
Version 5.31 has done little to tame this chaos, and thank the gods for that. The "RNG" (random number generator) is not a flaw; it is the narrative engine. One game, your ambitious Necromancer might find a graveyard on turn two, fueling a death march. The next, that same Necromancer might step into a haunted ruin, get possessed, and immediately die. The game laughs at your "strategy." This asymmetry extends to victory conditions