MadMaxHellfire
Arcane
nope. space engine has more gameplay than no man's shit.
Does every single planet has life in this game? One reason I like messing around in Space Engine is clicking on random stars until I find one with life, even if as of now that life is only represented by colored rocks. Also I like to explore barren rocky worlds too and asteroids around gas giants. NMS doesn't have any of that?
Does every single planet has life in this game? One reason I like messing around in Space Engine is clicking on random stars until I find one with life, even if as of now that life is only represented by colored rocks. Also I like to explore barren rocky worlds too and asteroids around gas giants. NMS doesn't have any of that?
That's this game in a nutshell. It was, at best, a $15-20ish download title little different than the slew of early access shit you see on Steam today. Got overly hyped at some video game awards, Sony swooped in, more hype and $60 price tag.I don't see any reason to get NMS based on how disappointing it was and how they're only implementing features that should've been in the game in the first place months after release, while some other similar games are still in Early Access and yet have more features than this, AND even have a lowe price point than this.
Like, seriously. This genre is overflowing with early access titles that cost 20 bucks (and are reduced to 10 bucks on a sale, like right now) and have more content than NMS.
I don't see how the devs can salvage this thing.
Does every single planet has life in this game? One reason I like messing around in Space Engine is clicking on random stars until I find one with life, even if as of now that life is only represented by colored rocks. Also I like to explore barren rocky worlds too and asteroids around gas giants. NMS doesn't have any of that?
Just out of curiosity, how much time do you spend playing Space Engine, doing whatever you do in it?
I ocassionaly mess around with it for an hour or so. First month I installed it I used to spend full afternoons with it though, falling into black hole with a VR headset on is surreal...
As someone wrote, rotten fish stays rotten fish even if you pour vanilla sauce over it.
Ok, but it's still amusing to see people on Steam defend the latest updates .. Stockholm syndrom affects people in strange ways.
I recently ended up enduring the new DeusEx game despite being bored to death. Gotta squeeze that little entertainment out of it (I was over the refund time limit ). That's what people with NMS are doing. They know it's shit, but might as well dive into it one last time. They paid for it after-all.
There is an actual game here now. It's not worth sixty dollars but I got a copy for half that and I've been playing the shit out of it.
A forest moon.
A paradise planet.
A radioactive planet.
A paradise moon.
A Toxic Planet:
A porcupine-shark trying to eat me. This was the first hostile fish that I've encountered; I wasn't expecting it to attack as all the fish I had found previously were timid.
A plant eating tyrannosaur Though I have encountered the mean variety before as well.
There is still alot of stuff that is clunky as hell, like the galaxy map. There needs to be more stuff to do, but if they keep working on it, it might actually live up to the hype.
If you like pretty landscapes, you can download Space Engine for free.How long does it take to get bored by looking at the pretty landscapes? I really like the aesthetics of it, so i might grab it when it becomes cheap.