|
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Wow! This one is worth having!, July 16, 2001
.... The Game: In Startopia you are the manager of a torus shaped space station. Your responsibilities start out with some simple constructions and progress to more demanding arrays of resource management and defense/attack strategy. Concurrently, you must see to your alien's needs for love, fun, nourishment and rest. Your station has three levels: the tech-deck, entertainment deck and biodeck. The tech-deck is where you build your industrial, medical and research structures and your most important item, your energy collector. Energy is the galactic currency and everything is traded in terms of energy value. The entertainment deck is where your aliens will go for fun and recuperation. There you will want to build pleasant diversions such as discos and casinos for your aliens to enjoy. Better entertainment facilities will attract more visitors. On your biodeck you determine the shape of the landscape, temperature and soil-moisture with a sweep of your all-powerful hand. Your workers will plant trees, bushes and cattails to name a few. You can harvest your plants for supplies that you can use or sell at a nice profit to a passing trader. Every plant yields different goods so there is plenty of experimenting to be done. In addition to roaming the station to fill their needs, your aliens will provide you with an endless stream of humor. Security guards play asteroids on the security center screen and monks walk on water, to name a couple. Also, if you see a criminal being escorted by a security robot, do click on him to view the details of his crime, they are terribly funny! Once the missions are completed, the gameplay doesn't stop but begins. The sandbox mode presents unlimited replay-ability and allows you to play against AI opponents. In both sandbox and multiplayer modes, you determine what the game's goals will be. You can opt for technologic advancement, total station segments, money or total score. You can pick one goal or a combination of goals. Truly, it is a very smart design. Graphics: Startopia allow you to move the viewpoint anywhere in 3d space or view through the eyes of a roaming alien. There is a lot of detail on the stations' structures and creatures. Startopia's aliens are very smooth, colorful and detailed. Startopia lets you decide how much detail your pc can support with an array of video toggles and, you can run Startopia in any resolution from 640x480 to 1600x1200! The image artistry and video controls are superb making the views in Startopia delicious and smooth-flowing, simultaneously. Sound: The sound is excellent. Sounds are localized to a region and fade outward allowing you to tell how far you are from an event by its volume. Position yourself in the middle of the busy entertainment deck for a moment and listen: nearby, love nest visitors receive a transcendental love experience, disco dancers boogie to a dance beat, the din-o-mat cranks out dinners for the hungry with vending machine precision, passing aliens converse, hilarious sounds radiate from the lavatron(restroom), and a bomb explodes on the tech-deck below you. In Startopia you get as much information from the sounds around you as you get from the sights in front of you. Interface: The interface is smooth and attractive. A mini-station map in the upper left corner allows you to move to about the station with one click. You can view and interact with your staff and visitors from this menu. All the game menus are easy to use and self-explanatory. Startopia also features a brilliant 3 slot autosaving system that cycles through the slots and saves the game every few minutes. Its a great design that gamers will want every game on the market to feature once they have tried it. now for the bad: Fortunately, there is very little bad to mention. There are a couple bugs but, I can't remember a game that didn't have any. The CrashToDesktop bug has affected many players who suddenly find themselves staring at their windows desktop. This has happened to me too but I found that simply turning the sound option down one notch to "medium" reduced the frequency of the CTD bug to very rare. When it did crash it didn't lock up my pc or require any reboot. All I had to do was restart the game and thanks to the brilliant autosave I lost only 1-3 minutes of gameplay. The other bug I found involves the pattern buffer - the place you beam items into for easy transport. Occasionally, an item gets stuck in the buffer and causes a CTD. Again, it didn't cause any grief because I just loaded the previous autosave, avoided the trigger, and carried on with the game. To Mucky Foot's credit: I sent a save game with the one pattern-buffer bug that I experienced to Mucky Foot. To my complete shock and amazement I received a personal response from a real-live Startopia programmer in under 3hrs! .... Making it perfect: A Mucky Foot programmer informed forum readers that the patch due out around July 25th will include the ability to map movement to the WASD keys and fix the couple of bugs known to exist. Overall: In sum, Startopia is a beautiful, witty and original game that will deliver many hours of laughs and great gameplay at a very modest price. It will be very hard for competitors to top this game and very hard for gamers to stop playing it. With all its virtues, I can without reserve recommend Startopia with a hearty thumbs-up and a smile. Experienced on an 800Mhz-AMD-Athlon, 256MbRAM, Voodoo5-5500, RoadrunnerCable, Windows98SE and latest drivers for all components.
|