Friday, May 22, 2015

Galactic Civilizations 3 review


need to know


What is it? A turn-based 4X strategy game with some of the snarkiest aliens around and a big enough toybox of ships and technology to leave you in control.

Reviewed on: Core i7, 8GB RAM, GeForce GTX 970

Play it on: 2.4 Ghz Core i5, 6GB RAM, DirectX 10.1 video card

Price: $50 / £30

Release Date: Out Now
Publisher/Developer: Stardock Entertainment 

Multiplayer: Yep, with six-plus players.
Link: Official site




There’s often a fine line between revolution and evolution, and which side is ‘right’ varies dramatically from game to game. Sometimes we want the next best thing. Sometimes we want a thing we like, simply done better. That’s what GalCiv 3 offers—not so much picking up where the last game off as returning to its template with a stern expression, some better technology, and a few years of lessons well learned.



Stardock’s series is pretty much unique in the 4X genre—a space conquest game that sits alongside Master of Orion instead of simply in its shadow. It’s not just a game of rules and strategy, but of quirky charm—witty descriptions to take the harsh edge off the technologies, an attempt to make the aliens you encounter feel like they have personalities instead of simply being a rendered face on some stats, and enough wrapping to feel like there are could actually be people/aliens somewhere behind your comma-filled population figures.



The biggest two differences between this version and the last, aside from a graphical polish, is that GalCiv 3 now supports multiplayer and demands 64-bit. The former speaks for itself. After years when the characters themselves would occasionally mock the idea, you can now have multiple players fighting over a galaxy. The 64-bit side of things is more interesting, though for the future rather than now. Much like a Civilization game, GalCiv is intended to have a long life. For the moment, it allows for crazy things like having a map with a hundred empires on it (though good luck actually doing that, never mind playing the result). It does however mean that future expansions, and player mods, have far more room to breathe than they once did, which bodes well. From another company, it would be hard to take that on the nod. Stardock though has proven form in this regard, both in improving its good games, and fixing up the originally dreadful Elemental.



Original post: Galactic Civilizations 3 review




Galactic Civilizations 3 review

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