StarForge
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StarForge | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | codeHatch |
Publisher(s) | codeHatch |
Engine | Unity |
Platform(s) | Microsoft Windows, Mac OS |
Release | Alpha access Beta access |
Genre(s) | Action, RPG, Simulation[1] |
Mode(s) | Multiplayer, Single-player, Co-op[1] |
StarForge is an upcoming video game in development by indie game developer, CodeHatch for Microsoft Windows and Mac OS. It is a Voxel-based Sandbox game that allows for customization of guns and building of bases. It is a game about gathering resources, building bases, crafting and surviving on an alien planet. The game is currently in the alpha Development stage, and available for purchase on Steam.[2]
Plot
The Sun is dying due to a sudden black hole formation in its decaying orbit and humans have transferred as much technology and resources as possible and left on a one way mission to populate another planet. It borrows elements from RTS, FPS, RPG, Voxel builder, Tower defense and Physics sandbox genres. The game is about life on the planet of Atlas where the gameplay character is living.
Lore
During the years 2073-2253, there was relative peace on earth and most funds were diverted to exploration and small bases were set up on the Moon and Mars. However, a new problem arose when earthquakes started to occur, not just on Earth, but on the Moon and Mars as well. It was later discovered that a rogue black hole had entered into a decaying orbit with the Sun. The estimates in the game show that in less than a thousand years, the gravitational tidal forces would become too great for any planet in the solar system to be habitable.
To deal with this harsh reality, the citizens of Earth created the New Space Initiative. Observatories scanned the galaxy for new habitable planets while archives of ones currently known were rechecked.
Finally, one planet was found and deemed habitable. It was named Atlas. At that time, scientists discovered how to make objects travel at almost the speed of light. However, even with the relativistic effects of near light-speed travel and medical advances in longevity, the planet was still too far away for any human to reach in one lifetime.
So, for the next 1000 years that were left, Earth sent resources to this new planet in hopes of one day sending humans there. Every corporation on Earth was required to send large quantities of equipment and weaponry. They were sent in freighters along with the sum total of human knowledge so that nothing would be forgotten. To help prepare the planet for habitation, robots were sent to seed the land with common trees, grasses, food, and shrubs.
After some time it was determined via the superluminal communicators carried by the freighters, that many of the supplies which had been sent were disappearing. Details were sparse on what was occurring, but it appeared that they were being taken by creatures that were acting in an intelligent way and these were the ones that arrived to begin with, many were lost on the way there due to unknown reasons. Despite this fact, supplies continued to be sent as too much had already been invested to turn back. Finally, warp drive was invented, allowing man to travel into the depths of space within an instant.
In the year 3085, the gameplay character will have already left Earth, chosen through a lottery system to be part of Humanity's new home. With him aboard the Lifeships, countless others travel in their cryopods, sleeping with the dream that they will be able to wake up and have a second chance. He has been chosen as one of the advance scouts that will prepare the way for the others.
After being sent ahead of the massive Lifeships, contact with them was soon lost and to make matters worse, most of the advance scouts were hit by unexpected atmospheric turbulence on the way in, scattering everyone and everything and wrecking most of what you carried. The game starts right after the lore.[3]
Modes
Minimum | Recommended | |
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Windows[4] | ||
Operating system | Windows XP 64-bit | Windows 7 64-bit |
CPU | Intel Celeron E1600 Dual Core 2.4 GHz or AMD Athlon 64 X2 Dual Core 5400+ | Intel Core i5 750 Quad 2.66 GHz or AMD Phenom II X2 565 |
Memory | 4 GB | 4 GB |
Free space | 900 MB | 2 GB |
Graphics hardware | DirectX 9–compliant Nvidia GeForce 8800 GT or AMD Radeon HD 3830 | DirectX 11–compliant Nvidia GeForce GTX 560 or AMD Radeon HD 7750 |
Single-player
Survival
A sandbox game mode where the only objective is to survive on Atlas. The player may craft weapons, tilesets, and vehicles. The player can kill aliens and other players, find loot and explore the terrain. Players get spawn in the Vat.
Multiplayer
Fort Wars
In this mode, two teams create and defend their vat from the opposing team. The vat is the location that respawns players when they die. The game is over when one team wins by destroying the opposing team's vat.
Co-op
Fort Defense
In the fort defense mode, players must construct a base around a single vat and defend it from attacks by aliens. The attacks are in the form of waves and purely strategic. Waves, in strategy games, refer to batches of enemies. The aliens in the waves will increase in number and strength as the waves progress. If the vat is destroyed, then the game is lost. The player can craft weapons and tilesets but vehicles are yet to be confirmed.
Reception
Player reception of the playable Alpha stage, which began on May 30, 2012 and continues as of June 2014, has been overwhelmingly negative, with the reasons cited by users ranging from dissatisfaction over update times, performance issues, a lack of progress, and frequent changes in prices, planned features, and what some users feel are misleading product descriptions.
As of 4/6/2014, the game has mostly thumbs-down reviews from Steam Early Access community reviewers.[5]
References
- ^ a b c "StarForge on Steam". Steam Store. Valve Corp. Retrieved 16 December 2013.
{{cite web}}
:|first=
missing|last=
(help) - ^ Forge, Star. "StarForge - Gameplay". codeHatch. codeHatch. Retrieved 16 December 2013.
- ^ Forge, Star. "StarForge - Lore". codeHatch. codeHatch. Retrieved 16 December 2013.
- ^ Debate, Game. "Starforge [PC]". Game-Debate. Retrieved 19 January 2014.
- ^ http://steamcommunity.com/app/227680/reviews/?l=english&p=1&browsefilter=toprated
External links
- Action video games
- Articles created via the Article Wizard
- Cooperative video games
- Multiplayer video games
- Open world video games
- OS X games
- Simulation video games
- Single-player video games
- Survival video games
- Unity (game engine) games
- Upcoming video games
- Video games developed in Canada
- Multiplayer and single-player video games