Gratuitous Space Battles Walkthrough

  среда 18 марта
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Gratuitous Space Battles is back! And it's approximately 50,000 times more gratuitous than before. A completely new ground-up rebuilding of the custom 'Gratuitous Engine' gives the game a completely new look, with beam-lasers 10x as 'beamy' as explosions 10x more gratuitous.

One the surface, from developer, looks like your run-of-the-mill space RTS, something in the vein of the Homeworld series or Star Wars: Empire at War. But when that glance turns into a longing stare, you'll realize it's very different from both of those series and isn't really, in fact, a real time strategy game at all. Gratuitious Space Battles has a whole new system of gameplay going for it that, in many ways, feels more like a tower defense game than anything else.The basic goal of Gratuitous Space Battles is to create an armada of ships capable of taking out the enemy fleet.

This sounds simple enough until you realize what's missing from the equation: player control. You don't actually participate in the battles.

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Once you set your armada loose, it's up to your starship design, placement, and initial orders to decide the outcome. It's like the old table-top games where once the battle has commenced, you roll the dice and hope for the best. No reinforcements if things look grim, no chance to take other ships and force an end-run in the middle of the battle. Once you set things in motion, all you can do is sit back and enjoy the show. And what a show it is.Once you've gotten a handle on the basics of gameplay with the included tutorial ships, it's time to get down and dirty with your own designs. You start out with a number of hulls, each with its own base power requirements and costs.

Each hull has a fixed number of slots into which you can insert various offensive and defensive technologies. Some slots will allow for the placement of weapons, while others will only allow defensive and operational technologies, such as shield generators, crew quarters, or reactors for powering the ship. The key will be to create a balance between the amount of power required, the number of crew members required, and the amount and type of weapons and defensive technologies you want on-board.Gratuitous Space Battles really lives up to its name. The visual feast to be had while combat is being played out is superb. Imagine the space battles from Stargate or the recent Battlestar Galactica series. Now imagine that you can view any part of the battle, zoom in on any ship, see anything in the skirmish that you want to see.

You can focus tight in on one of the enemy battle cruisers, ready to buckle under the heavy fire of your battalion of gunships, or watch as a squadron of small fighters swarm a larger enemy vessel like wasps slowly picking at their prey. Beam weapons slice through starship hulls like a hot knife through butter, and concussion missiles rock the area with blasts that would rip a hole through anything but the toughest of armor plating.

There's more explosions here than the Fourth of July in Washington, D.C. It is truly a sight to behold.With the visuals go some very powerful audio elements, as well. Now, one may argue that, 'in space, no one can hear you scream,' but that's just no fun. We want bangs and pows and zaps with our space battles. Gratuitous Space Battles delivers on this front, as well.

Concussive explosions, electrifying bolts of ECM impacts, the piercing sound of pulse weapons ripping through shields, they're all there. The sound effects are actually interactive to a point. If you are zoomed out on the battle, the effects from the entire area sort of meld together and are quieter. But, once you zoom in on a piece of the action, the sound effects for that region become amplified.

All of this is accompanied by a fully orchestrated background score that completes the gratuitously epic nature of the experience.There are two types of battles for the single player to work through. The main skirmishes start with a pre-defined enemy armada placement which you have to match with your own ships. You are limited by the number of honor points available for any particular scenario. The more honor points you have left over after placing ships, the more you will gain if you win the battle. Honor points are used, in turn, to unlock new technologies and upgrades to old ones. There are also two endurance levels that pit your armada against a constant onslaught of enemies of unknown configurations and numbers. Defeat for these levels is a certainty.

The question is, how long can you last?There is also a form of multiplayer gaming available with Gratuitous Space Battles in a sort of play-by-mail kind of way. Users can post various armada configurations to the online boards and from there you can pick any configuration and attempt to beat it with your own armada. The results for each battle are then uploaded back to the boards and displayed with every entry, allowing you to see which armada configurations seem unstoppable, and which ones crumbled under the slightest pressure.Analysis: I really cannot say enough good things about Gratuitous Space Battles. I've been playing with it ever since it went into public beta a number of months ago, and have watched it mature into an excellent, deep, seriously fun space battle game. There is so much more than appears on the surface, and that's what makes it so great. It's more than just throwing some ships into the mix and watching what comes out in the end, although you can do that just to see some quick action. For those who want to master the game, it goes much deeper.Not only do you have to concern yourself with proper balance when creating your ships, you also have to take into account how those ships will operate when on the battlefield.

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By giving certain ships orders to either protect other ships of the armada, or to stay in formation with other ships, you can start to combing the forces of certain ships to make a mightier armada. Design a gunship with beam weapons and ECM pulses for taking out the shields and systems of an enemy ship, and group it with a cruiser loaded with missiles and missile tracking systems to obliterate the enemy once the shields go down.For all of the detail that there is in the design of the ships, there is even more involved in the orders that can be given. You can give orders for ships to stay in formation with other ships. You can give attack orders, telling your ships to retaliate against ships that are attacking them, or to go to the aid of another ship if it gets attacked. You can tell certain ships to retreat from battle if they take too much damage, or even give multiple orders to ships arranged in order of importance. You can literally spend more time designing the perfect armada than the ensuing battle will take.

And, truth be told, in order to get really good at this game, that is what it takes. It is an extremely tactical experience.There is a lot of fun to be had here for fans of space battles, and strategists looking for a unique outlet. The addition of the play-by-mail multiplayer works quite well for how the game is laid out. And silly touches like the names of the ships (Monetarism makes the world go round) and the communications chatter going on throughout the game ('Hull breach on decks four and six. How about lucky deck five?'

) make this game a must-have for fans of those huge space battles from the movies. Just remember the words of a wise old smuggler: 'Good against remotes is one thing. Good against the living, that's something else.' Windows:Download theGet theMac OS X:Not available.Try. I just tried the demo and won't be purchasing the game.It has very pretty graphics, but the lack of interaction during battle is sort of boring.Ship-building is an exercise for people who love to min/max values of weapons/shields/engines/etc.

As a casual player, the ships I designed were quickly destroyed. I don't want to have to create a spreadsheet in order to design a ship.I also found it frustrating to try to watch the battle because the battles are laid out horizontally, with ships often outside the maximum view of the window. It would have made much more sense to lay out battles vertically, which would play much nicer with the aspect ratio of monitors these days. After buying this game I was struck by how frequently it crashes. At the time of writing I'd class it as an alpha release, not the quality you would expect in a commercial game. I'd avoid running it fullscreen.The graphics and sound design are excellent. I eventually found the lack of in-fight interaction to be frustrating.

There is some depth and subtlety to be found in good ship and fleet builds, but the same basic approaches start repeating quite quickly. As a casual strategy game it is a lot of fun. As a full-on strategy game it is a bit disappointing.

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Contents.Gameplay Gratuitous Space Battles challenges players with defeating opposing space fleets through careful pre-battle planning. For each skirmish or engagement, the player has a fixed budget and a maximum number of (pilots), as well as various other limitations or rules which influence the outcome of the battle.

For example, a given environment may reduce the effectiveness of ship, or may reduce weapon ranges. Players must take this information into account when selecting and positioning the ships that form their own fleet. Once players have selected their ships and issued orders to the ships concerning how to engage the enemy fleet, the battle begins. The battle itself proceeds completely without human interaction, with the outcome being determined entirely based on the data, rather than on player reflexes or mid-battle decisions.

Honor Gratuitous Space Battles encourages players to win battles using as few resources as possible by awarding honor for any unspent funds. That is, for each point of budgetary allocation which a player could have spent but did not, a point of honor is awarded upon victory. The game tracks the maximum honor previously awarded per battle at each difficulty level, so players can continue to earn more only by beating their previous best. After amassing a sufficient quantity of honor, it can then be traded (spent) to unlock new ship modules, new ship hull configurations, and new playable alien races.Ship design As Gratuitous Space Battles consists solely of combat in space (foregoing any of the other elements of a traditional game), it gives players a great deal of flexibility in how ships are designed. For a given playable race, players have a number of hull configurations from which to choose, made up of three different sizes of ships (fighters, frigates, and cruisers).

Different ship hulls have different numbers of mounting points for modules and weapons, as well as having various inherent characteristics (in the form of overall bonuses in specific areas). Players must balance ship cost, weight, speed, power, crew, and offense/defense capabilities in deciding what combat role a given spacecraft will fulfill.Development Gratuitous Space Battles began as a 'dictator simulation' in late 2008 when Chris 'Cliffski' Harris was starting on his next game after. After only several weeks of work on the initial concept of a 'Virtual ' game, the title went in an entirely different direction and instead became a space strategy game.As with many, development cost was a significant issue. After an initial experiment spending several hundred dollars to purchase stock spaceship models, Harris eventually solicited quotes from 3 different artists and selected the most expensive one. The was constructed by Chris Hildenbrand, a UI expert, leaving Harris to do his own special effect and user module graphics.To maximize performance and minimize texture swapping, the graphics engine used for GSB was an entirely new 9 engine that was custom-developed for the game. It includes a variety of special case code to deal with the requirements of rendering ship and weapon graphics during battles. References.