All SMITE 1 and SMITE 2 differences, explained

If you want to know all the ways SMITE 2 is different than SMITE 1, read on.

It’s been 10 years since SMITE 1 came out in March 2014, and now, in 2024, we’re getting SMITE 2. In hopes that this isn’t an Overwatch 2 situation, I’m going to detail all the differences between SMITE 1 and SMITE 2 that warrant the sequel.

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What are all the SMITE 2 changes?

SMITE 2 takes the beloved action MOBA formula forged in SMITE 1 to the next level. For those that want the TL;DR, here are the main bullet point changes that SMITE 2 brings:

Related: How to sign up for Smite 2 Alpha playtest

  • General
    • Camera movement improvements
    • Ability animation improvements
    • Revamped visual FX for every ability
    • Snappier character animations
    • Redesigned UI
    • Unreal Engine 5
    • DualSense integration
  • Gameplay
    • Gods aren’t classified as physical or magical. All Gods can purchase Strength or Intelligence items to customize their playstyle.
    • Active Abilities, or Relics, are becoming items. Any God can buy an Item to equip any Active Ability.
    • The Conquest map has many new twists. These include backdoors, defeated jungle objectives granting your team special powers, stealth grass, siege minion waves, an evolving jungle, and more.

Will SMITE 1 become SMITE 2?

Hi-Rez Studios took a page from the Overwatch 2 launch and decided that SMITE 2 will not replace SMITE 1. SMITE 2 is a full sequel, meaning when it launches, people can still play SMITE 1 because it’s a separate game.

Everything from SMITE 1, including gems, skins, and achievements, will transfer over to SMITE 2, but SMITE 1 will remain a standalone game people can enjoy. It’s important to Hi-Rez Studios that every hour and dollar spent on SMITE 1 transfers over to SMITE 2, which is refreshing.

Is SMITE 2 a true sequel?

While SMITE 2’s marketing is being called a “true sequel” — and yes, by definition, it is a true sequel — SMITE 2 seems like SMITE 1 but with a shiny new paint job. There’s not much that is fundamentally different from SMITE 1 to SMITE 2. More information about SMITE 2 will come down the pike with time, but at first glance, SMITE 2 doesn’t feel all that different.

Noah Nelson

From his early days of blog-style music, movie, and game reviews to working as the Esports Writer at Coastline Community College, Noah Nelson now works fulltime as a Staff Writer for Attack of the Fanboy and PC Invasion. He has been helping gamers everywhere with Destiny 2 god rolls, Warzone 2 DMZ missions, and collectibles in any indie game for over a year and a half. His Bachelor's Degree in English Rhetoric and Composition with a minor in Journalism from CSULB has shaped him to be a strong writer and editor. His fondest gaming memory is playing Sly Cooper 2 after begging his mom (for hours) to play it before his birthday and he still cries myself to sleep remembering the time he accidentally saved over his 99% completion save file in Kingdom Hearts 2.