2154: Another Xenoblade X Post

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In conversation with a friend the other day, I realised one of the things I really like about Xenoblade Chronicles X: it feels like a new perspective on a genre of game I liked but was never particularly good at: the strategy/management/”god-game” genre, particularly with a sci-fi focus. Stuff like Alien Legacy, Outpost and its ilk.

The “new perspective” I mention refers to the fact that rather than acting as an overseer to your colonisation efforts, taking a somewhat detached view of everything that is going on and rarely, if ever, getting up close and personal with your colonists, Xenoblade Chronicles X sees you right in the middle of things. You’re not running the colony as such, but everything you do has such a significant impact on the game world that you might as well be.

The feeling of “being inside” a strategy game is further compounded by the game’s FrontierNav system, which uses the Wii U’s GamePad to display a hex-based map of the planet Mira, the game’s setting. Through methodical exploration and completion of objectives, you gradually “conquer” Mira hex by hex, setting up an infrastructure in the process. Placing data probes not only allows you to generate passive income of both credits and the raw material Miranium, it also allows you to collect rare resources from specific hexes, store more Miranium, increase the output of connected probes and all manner of other things. There’s actually a rather deep metagame of chaining probes together to maximise your income between all your sites.

And it’s important, too; this isn’t an RPG where you can just grind out money until you can afford the best equipment in the game. Instead, this passive income is one of the only ways for you to be able to afford things, and Miranium is incredibly important for a wide variety of purposes: investing in arms manufacturers to unlock new gear, upgrading existing equipment, crafting new items and donating to various causes in exchange for credits and other rewards.

Early in the game, this metagame doesn’t seem all that important, since you quickly find yourself with far more money than you know what to do with, meaning you can spoil yourself rotten on gear purely for aesthetic value thanks to the game’s “fashion gear” system. Once you gain the ability for you and your party members to use the giant walking mechs called “Skells”, though, your expenses start to mount up. Miranium is used to refuel them, while credits are needed to purchase frames, armour and weapons for them. Multiply these expenses by all the party members you want to equip with Skells (which is probably all of them eventually) and you’ll be spending a lot of money in total — but these investments are ultimately for the good of the colony as a whole.

What’s really interesting about Xenoblade Chronicles X compared to many other open-world games — and particularly MMOs, which it’s most commonly compared to — is the fact that, as mentioned earlier, your actions have a clear and tangible effect on the game world as a whole over the course of the whole story. For example, one chain of sidequests sees you helping to gather resources to build a water purification plant out in the wilds of Primordia; later, you’re sent there to investigate an incident out there, and it’s actually there on the lake where there was once just a rocky beach. Characters that were once standing around in town are now there, and it has its own little plotline to follow.

You’re not alone on Mira, either; the main scenario introduces you to a few members of other alien races on the planet — both indigenous and extraterrestrial — but there are plenty more sidequests that bring you into contact with all manner of other weird and wonderful peoples, and completing their requests causes them to immigrate to your colony. Once they’re there, they set up shop in a particular area and you’ll see them wandering the streets. Many of them provide beneficial services to the colony as a whole, and so your experience grows.

It’s a really satisfying, organic sense of progression through more than just bars getting longer and numbers getting bigger. There’s a wonderful sense of New Los Angeles becoming a real, living place, with people going about their business and clashing cultures learning to understand one another. It is, by far, the heart and soul of Xenoblade Chronicles X, which doubtless won’t be entirely to everyone’s taste — particularly those who prefer more structured linearity in their RPGs — but, for me, it’s basically created the sci-fi game I always wanted to play: a game where I not only get to build a colony on a new world, but where I get to actually run around inside that colony, meet people, help them, go out into the world and make an impact on said new world as I help humanity spread its wings in its new home.

Did I mention Xenoblade Chronicles X is an amazing game? No? Go buy it now. I want more of this sort of thing, please.


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