2399: No Man’s Sky and The Game as a Pure Relaxation Aid

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I’ve been playing a bit more of No Man’s Sky this evening and I still like it a lot. It’s a wonderfully dreamy, ethereal experience to play — helped partly by the wonderful electronic soundtrack that accompanies everything you do — but also because it seems to have been designed to be an experience that is pure relaxation rather than the more typical goal-driven affair that most games tend to be.

There is no goal in No Man’s Sky. Well, all right, there’s one: get to the centre of the galaxy, but that’s so vague as to be almost meaningless, and the important thing about playing No Man’s Sky is not a desperate attempt to achieve that goal as quickly or efficiently as possible, but rather to enjoy the journey exactly as you see fit.

Any other goals in the game are entirely of your own making and will depend entirely on how you like to play. One person’s goal might be to fully scan all the planets in a system to receive the hefty payouts you get for “completing” a planetary analysis. Another’s might be to produce as many warp cells as possible as quickly as possible so they can make a large number of jumps rapidly. Another’s still might be to upgrade their ship, or their suit, or their multitool… it really is up to you what you want to do, and No Man’s Sky offers just enough in the way of structure and mechanics to allow you to make these goals for yourself without it ever feeling like you’re following a linear, prescribed path.

It struck me while I was playing tonight that this is what the game is all about. You don’t play No Man’s Sky if you’re a powergamer, seeking the “best” or “most efficient” way to “clear” something. You play No Man’s Sky during a period of downtime, in which you want to just sit back, relax and take part in something that doesn’t demand anything of you, but which has enough in the way of interactivity and structure to distinguish itself from more passive art forms.

In many ways, it can perhaps be regarded as the natural evolution of the “walking simulator”, the subgenre of first-person adventure games that focus not on puzzle solving or other aspects of “gameplay”, but on storytelling and experiencing a world as if you were there. No Man’s Sky differs in some substantial ways, however, the lack of a linear main narrative being the main one, but the “immersive sim” aspect of the “walking simulator” is present and correct. If you are the sort of person who enjoyed Gone Home not for the ’90s teenage lesbian angst but instead for the interesting experience that was just poking around that little world the developers had created, then you might get something out of No Man’s Sky, because the whole game is poking around worlds of various descriptions.

That lack of concrete story might be an issue for some, admittedly, but for those who still have a working imagination, No Man’s Sky puts it to good use by allowing you to interpret what you’re seeing as you see fit. Is that abandoned outpost that’s full of weird slimy gooey tentacly things a sign that something awful happened there, or is it simply a natural product of the passage of time? Are the Gek a race of entreprenurial merchants, or do they hide a darker secret, hoping to enslave the universe to their bidding? How did that planet get those curiously man-made looking pillars of rock everywhere?

One of the most interesting questions No Man’s Sky asks the player is who are you? You never see yourself in the game, and the fact that the game doesn’t have multiplayer (boy, you wouldn’t believe the whining that’s been going on by people who apparently expected this to be an MMO) means that you don’t see others like you, either. Even if you could see other players, though, there’s no guarantee that they’d be exactly the same as you. Are you human? Are you Gek? Are you a construct of the mysterious Atlas? Are you something else altogether? The game doesn’t answer this — at least, it hasn’t in the 10 hours I’ve spent with it so far — and so leaves this rather important question up to the player’s interpretation.

In other words, No Man’s Sky is what you make of it. If you go in expecting some sort of grand space opera with a clearly constructed story, villains to defeat and great evils to stand against, you may well be disappointed. If, however, you go in expecting a game that allows you to pretend to be a spaceman for a few hours at a time, and can extract a certain degree of joy from that simple experience, then you’ll have a wonderful time.

It’s a game to relax and unwind with, not a game to “git gud” at. And I appreciate it a great deal for that. That doesn’t mean that I want to play it all day every day, but it does mean that I can open it up at any time, fly around and explore a bit, and feel like I’ve had my money’s worth. And with the tantalising possibility of future updates adding more and more interesting mechanics to the game as a whole, I can see it being a game I’ll dip in and out of for a very long time indeed.


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