Damn, has it been that long already!?
That’s the ‘soon’ I was referring to, I guess. He’d been working on another game in the same universe when he got the rights back.
Mentioned in this thread.
Damn, has it been that long already!?
That’s the ‘soon’ I was referring to, I guess. He’d been working on another game in the same universe when he got the rights back.
Mentioned in this thread.
And I believe the designer got the rights back fairly recently, so I’m hoping for more of this!
I’ve had a lot of fun with Book of Demons, which is a bit more simplified, but really respects whatever amount of time I have to put into it!
Honestly, if I’m seeing more than say two or three currencies or kinds of bits to keep track of, it’s a no for me. I don’t care how much I’m in love with the concept.
Mainly because I don’t have the available real estate at my place to break out every other War & Peace- worth of board game, but especially if it looks like the setup time is will take longer than playing an actual game.
The longest of the redud expeditions so far, it took me over 9 hours to complete, far, far less than the last time it was here.
I managed to do the entire thing in a couple of hours.
Some pointers:
Metal Plates. You’ll need a lot of them so mine a bunch of ferrite dust if you want to speed up some of the base building, specifically for the power grid & mining.
Chromatic Ore. Used in just about everything. Find a copper vein after you get the terrain tool, set the tool to it’s smallest setting, and mine the entire vein. You’ll have just about all of the Chromatic Ore you need after processing it in a refiner. If you dig a tunnel underneath the vein, you’ll also avoid the weather.
Finding water is your best bet for the crystals you need to fix the ship. Floating crystal formations also carry them on occasion, I believe.
Take a look at the other tiers of tasks, doing them out of order is sometimes preferable. One of them grants the magna-gold recipe for another part of the ship repair.
If you have trouble finding Larval Cores, look for distress signals from planetary charts, there’s a <20% chance that they’ll point you to the abandoned building that’s surrounded by the eggs.
you can build a tiny base using the 1/2 size pieces to complete the base building. They cost 1/2 as much so you need less ferrite dust.
build the minotaur as soon as you can (via the expedition task that grants you the recipe). It can keep you safe from the weather and the hostile creatures. Plus, it’ll drastically cut down on on-foot travel time until you get your ship fixed.
Hope this helps!
I did well to start, only died once before I got a decent set up going.
That being said, the hardest task I had was the Larval Cores. I’ve never had such a difficult time finding abandoned settlements before…
The original Homeworld also scaled difficulty based on how well you were doing on previous levels.
I had a game where done other players tried to pull the “shopping episode” stuff twice before I had to put my foot down.
We hadn’t even gone on our first quest yet. We had no Gold to buy anything.
I made the same switch earlier this year. The only real issues I can recall were learning to update flatpak manually because it holds up the other updates if I don’t do that through the Konsole first.
Granted, that might just be my system, but I generally have had far fewer issues with Tumbleweed than I’ve ever had with Mint.
Oh, and my art tablet gets tagged as a game controller for some reason, but it works for what I need it for so I haven’t bothered to fix it.
Not the OP, but here’s a
It doesn’t work that way anymore
"you'll now need to purchase around 18 months of Xbox Live Gold to convert it to 12 months of Xbox Game Pass Ultimate, pushing the price to around $120 instead of the previous $60 "
I eventually gave up, after discovering all animals on a few worlds with 80°C air temps, and just looked up some glyph codes for the ones I was still missing.
I’m going to start calling them Tesla hatchbacks.