Starsector Review

Fractal Softworks' Starsector (formerly Starfarer) is a top-down space combat game. As the player, you directly control your own ship, while issuing orders to other ships in your fleet. The game is currently under heavy development, and many planned features are not yet implemented - however. Starsector is primarily a space combat game about directly controlling a single ship, fighting in a fleet environment. The combat mechanics have both excellent depth and a good complexity to depth ratio, driven by a general game design philosophy of many soft interactions between many mechanisms.
Starsector (formerly “Starfarer”) is an in-development open-world single-player space-combat, roleplaying, exploration, and economic game. The player is a space captain who can seek out fortune and glory however they choose.You can purchase Starsector through and check out the old.Rules:. Follow. Be nice. Dont post or comment direct download links for mods - Link to the forum page or refer to the discord instead. Do not provide resources to acquire game through any means other than the official website.
Piracy, torrents). Report wrongdoers. He has a tendency to do that.It's one if the huge reasons I like Sseth. He brings much needed exposure to real gems in the world of video games. Which are like a light in the darkness for someone fed up to hell and back with the endless insufferable bullshit of the AAA games industry with its bullshit microtransactions, gambling mechanics, unfinished glitchy messes and pre-rendered trailers that lie about the end product.
(Why yes I do also watch the jimquisition what ever gave off that impression?)Because of him i discovered Kenshi and Rimworld, which are now 2 of my absolute favorite games. And, in a few days (gonna give it some time before getting it, let the Sseth flood die down a bit first) I'll bet this'll be a new favorite too.
Starsector is leading me down a path towards psychopathy, disingenuousness, and a general disregard for law and lifeThirty bright and promising lives, cut short in a hail of autocannon fire and spite. Well, “bright and promising” might be an overstatement: after all, they took a gig on my rust bucket). Still, while I never actually met any of them — having made a point of never leaving my command cabin unless absolutely necessary — I’m confident at least some of them were, you know, not complete garbage fires of humanity maybe.Hey, don’t look at me like that! Just because my only contact with them was as numbers on a screen doesn’t mean I didn’t care about their well-being. Sure, I only opened up the roster because I needed so many crewmen and the station had warm bodies to spare, but I cared about those numbers, damn it!
I mean, my ships don’t run if they’re too low, so.So I think I’ll blame Fractal Softworks. Yeah, it’s Starsector that’s ultimately leading me down a path towards psychopathy, disingenuousness, and a general disregard for law and life.
Just, selling so many drugs that, like, I can’t drive home hard enough how unconscionable is the sheer volume of drugs I have. In fact, I sold so many drugs that I may have kind-of-sort-of reduced the stability of the local government. I’m sure it won’t be an issue. My slide into degeneracy does showcase one of the more interesting features of commerce in Starsector, though. Colt has always been a PC gamer first and foremost. His grandfather worked as a supervisor for the city mechanic's shop, and he would always bring home new computers and bits from his friend in the tech department.
Narcosis diving. Where most of Colt's friends cut their teeth in the gaming world in the arms of Nintendo or Sony, he got his first taste with Commander Keen, Cosmo's Cosmic Adventure, and even Doom (when he could sneak it in). So it continued until he got a computer of his own, and with it a shiny new copy of Age of Empires. Ever since, his love of real time and turn based strategy has never waned.

These days, that love shares a place in his heart with a wide swath of different games across almost every conceivable genre, from first person shooter to MMORPG, but he always return to my strategy roots. When he's not burying his head in games and gaming content he like to work on art and teach himself to program.