[Star Citizen News]Chris Roberts announces new Space Sim "Star Citizen"
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NOT being a SMART A$$ I can tell only one thing.
Can’t wait to see this game how ever it may look like in the end !
After all, this game will be slightly (I believe) adjusted by players and their mass demands (which maybe some will not like) by the fact they support its development.
Shame I have no option to donate any cash from my country (even I had some), and most likely, in beginning, youtube will be my experience how it feels like playing itAfter all, dont see a reason why we all cant be happy that its moving, after years of waiting, in some direction, either good or bad - doesnt matter!
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Oh hey look a thread on the Starport with OP posting in it, and suddenly everyone is at each other’s throats.
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Gentlemen, get at my throat now, for I am about to throw controversial things in here.
The space sim genre is very unpopular, inactive, and to many players even unknown. Now, that there are still space sim games produced doesn’t change the fact that the genre is more or less dead.
On the other hand, realising this may sure indicate a healthy perception, but only as far as the facts go. To say there is no chance of revival is a self-fulfilling prophecy and not one of those any of us would be happy to face.
As to Freelancer: It is about time we grow up and stop working toward any gain. We may drag about a hundred players into it, we may bring some back or hold some for a few more years. Expecting more is futile and if the expectation is our reason to work, than we either should start looking for a better reason or stop working.
That being said, thank you, Why. And while I disagree with what Bob implies with his latest post (there was trouble with this thread sure before OP jumped in), I think I can extract a secondary message there. We probably wouldn’t be at each other’s throats if those of us who do make the difference would be here because they still (or at all) enjoy it.
I tried to restrain myself from posting in here. I just couldn’t bear looking at it going down that dirty old road again.
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Crowdfunding pretty much ensures anyone can have a crack at making anything they want anytime they want now. I’ll back this game, but I wont be doing it cos I’m scared it might mean the death of a genre, I could care less, I’ll do it because I think I might like to play it. This is business, and he’s lucky enough to be doing a job he likes, he’s not doing anyone any favours.
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this is a large Community - faced mainly on one Space Sim and it is (in my eyes) a successfull Community which covered a lot of things which went worse to the good of those who likes to play FL.
Also after many years this game is still active.
Now their seems to be someone bringing a wake up call into the genre again. If i remember correct, when i first started to play FL in 2003, it technically wasn’t the best Space Sim but it survied - until now.
There was a few Games lately trying to start a space sim, which failed but having a look to eve shows an example of a really successfull Space Sim - shows: their is a base of potential customers and even a base of loyal players (everyone of us for example).
Pointless imO to crashtalk an attempt for doing something down instead of helping to keep it upgiving a chance to it.
Better:
Let’s have a look,
offer help if wanted,
try to promote it on your sites
and with luck we have a follower of our game.Additional to this Chris Roberts is on it - the chance of a better start for this Game Type.
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Chris Roberts gives details on instances:
http://www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/12grru/i_am_chris_roberts_creator_of_wing_commander/c6uwbl1
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I’m going to make a new topic. Hopefully someone will read this to.
Perhaps many still haven’t received the news. Star Citizen has now more than $3 million in crowdfunding. But it is stil a bit far from what Chris would want to have. $4 million would open up a lot more options.
For starters much better mod tools.
I was a very active Freelancer player and if anythings user created mods are what has made this game live long past it’s “dated” graphics.
This community still exists because someone had the vision to do some things right. That someone was Chris RobertsWe don’t talk about it but he was responsible for making the first open universe multiplayer space sim. Freelancer to be in fact.
It’s because of him that we have a space sim game where space does not fell empty. It has “terrain” so to speak.And he wants to make yet another more ambitious space sim.
With everything that made Freelancer popular. Mods, multiplayer, open universe and so on.Their making a real effort. So much so that companies like NVIDIA, Alienware and so on have given them some “toys” for him to offer us.
We get a chance of winning NVIDIA GTX 680, a top of the line Alienware computer, Oculus Rift and so on the more people we get to pledge.So come on guys. Help this project. It is not called “Freelancer 2”. But it is the spiritual successor of Freelancer.
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Well, now we’ve been given the info I’ve been waiting for, which was how they intend to handle the multiplayer experience and instancing, I think there’s a fair chance it’s going to suck. Sounds too similar to how they handled it in black prophecy, bubbles of activity with no exploration or manual flight in between.
Screw that, glad I was patient for once and didn’t buy into all the hype and rediculous comments about how this would decide the fate of space sims.
I’m sure I’ll very much enjoy the single player story experience, but really glad I didn’t pledge for a load of multiplayer equipment that I might never appreciate.
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Instancing details:
http://www.robertsspaceindustries.com/chris-roberts-on-multiplayer-single-player-and-instancing/
Oh yeah it’s gonna suck? I think it’s a smart idea. Anybody thinking an MMO game like this would be able to pull off a one-instance persistent world is just unrealistic.
Also, regarding manual flight and exploration:
You will always drop out at jump points and planets, where you will need to either make a jump to another system or land.
Traveling will apparently be done with jumps. But other than that, it is still unclear how exactly exploration will be. I imagine it will be flying around in an area and searching for new jump points. So yes, there is not a lot of manual flight when navigating somewhere but I believe for exploration, manual flight will be required.
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They’ve mentioned that you could actually find new jumps and name them after you. That kinda implies there’s going to be
- A fair amount of exploration;
- A fair amount of systems;
- Finding new jumps will be non-trivial.
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Well, everyone slated black prophecy for using this method, and rightly so considering how boring it became. If you think it will be better simply because it’s being done by chris roberts, then good for you, but black prophecy looked a hundred times better than freelancer, yet still flopped because you couldn’t explore.
FF, think about it, all he’s really saying is that the jump will show up as an anomally or something on your nav map when you jump past it, in other words another bubble or instance which contains a pilotable jump point.
Unless there is a jump point, planet, base, asteroid belt, or something else on your map, the instance will not exist, which is why everyone not in an instance will be on the global server.
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I think Roberts made a mistake in talking about the back-end, really. People are making a mountain of a molehill.
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Timmy51m wrote:
Well, everyone slated black prophecy for using this method, and rightly so considering how boring it became. If you think it will be better simply because it’s being done by chris roberts, then good for you, but black prophecy looked a hundred times better than freelancer, yet still flopped because you couldn’t explore.So Roberts talked about the instancing, what does that have anything to do with how exploration will work?
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instancing means no dynamic solar object creation like player owned bases or other unique objects.
I used a straight forward solution for techdemo: zone server processes some amount of systems which can be adjusted that allows to change environment in any way. Ofcourse such approach wont handle 9000 players at once nor instancing would help much here.
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Why not? Instancing doesn’t preclude syncing static objects across instances. All it means is compartmentalizing players so that the network load is manageable.
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FriendlyFire wrote:
Why not? Instancing doesn’t preclude syncing static objects across instances. All it means is compartmentalizing players so that the network load is manageable.“syncing static objects”
doesnt include destroyable player constructed bases for example, as it wont be possible to sync them across all instances. -
w0dk4 wrote:
So Roberts talked about the instancing, what does that have anything to do with how exploration will work?Because it tells me that they are likely to handle the game in the same way as black prophecy did, which I’ve no doubt you’ve played.
I think that they’ve just done an extremely good job of convincing people to part with their hard earned money for a product that doesn’t even fully exist in the makers eye yet, and they’ve walked straight into it like kids in a sweet shop buying ships and elektro skins without having any idea what they’re getting.
Call me negative, I’m just pissed off that people can milk money out of others just by talking a good talk with added spin.
What I’m pleased about though, is that it should have a great looking single player experience, all that time in the movie business and great artists should make for a masterpiece on the eye.
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That’s the principle of Kickstarter, Timmy. Instead of having to hope and pray publishers will make the game you want, developers can go straight at you and ask “we want to do this, are you willing to fund us?”
Yes, there’s a lot more risk, but also a lot more potential reward. It’s not evil, it’s not milking, it’s a whole new funding method, and I honestly see it in a very good light. Publishers only pump Call of Duty clones, but Kickstarter projects range from everything between SC to new adventure games to Dungeon Keeper spiritual successors to whatever else you can imagine.