2006: Interstellaria

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I’d made a promise to myself not to get suckered into trying any more endearingly retro-styled 2D pixel-art exploration-centric games, because the last few I’ve tried (Terraria and Starbound spring immediately to mind) ended up being enormously disappointing and pretty boring to me. (I’m not necessarily saying they’re bad, mind, more that the Minecraft model of “here’s a world, do stuff in it” just doesn’t really appeal to me any more.)

However, I happened to see Interstellaria on Steam earlier today, and for just £7 I felt I had to take a look at it. And, for once — so far, anyway — I wasn’t disappointed.

Interstellaria is perhaps best described as a successor to the old late-’80s/early-’90s space exploration games like StarflightStar Control II and Space Rogue. You get a ship, you recruit a crew, you upgrade your ship, you explore the galaxy, you fight things, you discover treasures, you uncover a galaxy-spanning mystery and (perhaps) save the universe in the process.

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Interstellaria throws you straight in to its world from the outset. Thrown out of your erstwhile home by your flatmate who is no longer content to have a scrounging, unemployed wastrel living rent-free under their roof, you take to the streets in search of gainful employment. After dismantling a robot for the nice man who lives just over the road from you, you find yourself recruited into the slightly shady-seeming crew of a starship that is about to take off. The starship begins its grand adventure and fends off a pirate attack in a thinly-veiled combat tutorial, then is ripped to pieces by an unknown enemy craft, but not before your former captain runs away, leaving you in charge of the crash landing from which you are ultimately the only survivor.

Fortunately, it seems, you’ve crash landed on a planet where there’s another starship that’s almost in working order. You come across a fellow survivor and team up to get the elderly ship back into space again, and from there it’s up to you to start discovering the truth behind the mystery of the “Abductors”, a race of aliens who appear to be giving the galaxy a certain degree of grief.

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From here on, you have freedom to explore and do stuff around the galaxy, though you’re nudged pretty strongly in the direction of following the plot. Gameplay is split into a few different areas: managing your ship, space combat and planetary exploration.

Managing your ship is a little like FTL: Faster Than Light in that you have to assign crew members to stations according to their skills (which develop over time). You also have to take care of your crew’s needs — hunger, boredom and fatigue — by providing them with facilities to relieve these issues whenever necessary. The ship you start with has both limited space to include modules — there’s pretty much room for basic navigation, sensors, engineering and tactical stations and one of each of the “needs” modules and not much else — and power to devote to them, so you have to juggle power around according to your ship’s needs at any given moment.

Get into combat and you’d better hope you remembered to put some power into the weapons systems and charge them up, because you’ll need them. Unfolding on a small tactical display (which provides more information if you have someone manning the sensors) you can move your ship around in real time as well as see incoming missiles, cannon fire and other projectiles. In this way, you can dodge and avoid enemy fire while attacking your foe; it’s an interesting, slow-paced take on “bullet hell” in some ways, and it’s a nicely unconventional take on space combat that is in keeping with the 2D pixel art aesthetic.

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Head down onto a planet and you’ll have the option of visiting one or more different landing sites, assuming the planet has a breathable atmosphere. Each landing site is a few screens wide (rather than a never-ending procedurally generated world) and usually features some enemies, some resources to harvest and, occasionally, interesting artifacts, characters and plot-related shenanigans. Controlling each of your crew members independently (or as a group) you can direct them to explore, harvest materials, enter into combat with enemies and interact with the locals. Each planet has a distinctive look, feel and soundtrack (the music is by chiptune artist Chipzel and is really rather good) and manage to feel relatively “organic” without falling back on random procedural generation. (At least I don’t think so.)

The game’s not without its flaws — the interface is a bit clunky in places, the keyboard inputs aren’t as responsive as they could be, camera controls on ground missions are bugged and combat is… lacking in depth, to say the least — but all these issues are more than made up for by the fact that it’s the first game in a very long time that I feel has proven to be an adequate successor to the classic space exploration sims I mentioned earlier. It has a lot of potential to improve over time, and is already an interesting, charming game that is well worth your time, particularly if you’re feeling nostalgic.


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