EVERSPACE is a beautiful space combat game that's had a Linux beta for a while and it looks like they're nearly ready to give it official status.
Speaking in their latest announcement about an upcoming patch, the developer noted that in two to four weeks patch 1.2.3 should be out with Unreal Engine 4.18 and they said they hope to announce the official Linux release then as well!
You can see my previous thoughts on the game here. It's still a game I happily load up here and there to have a few more runs, I did so today in fact and as usual I didn't get very far, but damn it's fun. It has some seriously striking visuals, intense action and does perform quite well. The one thing that constantly trips me up, is how sensitive changing weapons is with the scroll wheel, I ended up scrolling to the weapon I want and back again too often.
Here's a fresh video of it on Linux:
Direct Link
The Action Freeze system is certainly still a favourite feature of mine. The ability to freeze the game at any exact moment, really does make for some interesting shots like these I took today:
If you act fast can grab it right now from Humble Store (Steam key, affiliate link) or Steam as it's on sale on both stores for another few hours.
Quoting: LeopardF12 is giving black screen with this game.A common problem with the Steam Screenshot feature and Unreal Engine games on Linux.
Quoting: liamdaweQuoting: LeopardF12 is giving black screen with this game.A common problem with the Steam Screenshot feature and Unreal Engine games on Linux.
I don't think that the problem is only linked to Unreal Engine games, SOMA (HPL engine, in-house OpenGL engine from Frictional) has the same bug (and the same "green screen" over SteamLink bug if I remember correctly). :S:
Quoting: ShmerlHopefully we'll see GOG release once it's out. Does it offer some exploration missions too, or it's about combat only?
Sort of, there are missions where you are supposed to search for and scan various life-forms. There's also a fair bit of exploration involved in gathering resources for manufacturing weapons/shields/devices as well as searching through ship wrecks for stashes that contain valuable loot.
However, combat is very much the main focus of the game.
Quoting: GuestBuying it now, would it still count towards a Linux sale?Yes it will count. If it has a Linux build, they will see Linux sales.
As I think it's important for the developer to see how many people
bought it on Linux release.
Quoting: FeistQuoting: ShmerlHopefully we'll see GOG release once it's out. Does it offer some exploration missions too, or it's about combat only?
Sort of, there are missions where you are supposed to search for and scan various life-forms. There's also a fair bit of exploration involved in gathering resources for manufacturing weapons/shields/devices as well as searching through ship wrecks for stashes that contain valuable loot.
However, combat is very much the main focus of the game.
Chiming in with my experiences here too. There's definitely an element of exploration in that a sector is made up of nodes that you don't know the contents of (unlockable perks let you see a danger rating, whether the node contains a shop, etc., but beyond that, it's up to you to explore), but everything generated and you can't move backwards, so while the game always has new things for you to find (whether that's ancient alien structures, outlaw bases, solar storms, a node that's too close to a star, etc.), you're not exploring a universe the way you might in say, Pulsar, nor are you learning to navigate environments the way you might in Sublevel Zero.
I'm about 73 hours deep in the game now, and it's still showing me new things. I've recently started doing "no violence runs" as an extra challenge and made it to sector 6 last night. Not having access to resources from enemies you kill is definitely a handicap, and I don't think the finale can be completed without killing everybody, but generally speaking the game can definitely be played without combat being a primary focus.
Quoting: Cheesenessbut everything generated and you can't move backwards, so while the game always has new things for you to find (whether that's ancient alien structures, outlaw bases, solar storms, a node that's too close to a star, etc.), you're not exploring a universe the way you might in say, Pulsar, nor are you learning to navigate environments the way you might in Sublevel Zero.
Ah, I see. I thought it's something similar to Freelancer where you can travel anywhere in the sector back and forth. Still sounds interesting, though I'd prefer a fully "sandbox" type of experience.
Last edited by Shmerl on 3 April 2018 at 2:36 am UTC
See more from me