And when I say that, I mean â500 new star systemsâ bigger.
You might remember Elite from our very own Kirk âNo, Not That Captain Kirkâ Hamiltonâs two-week-long space odyssey, wherein he did a bunch of things both crazy and mundane. Thatâs kinda the point, though: Elite is a space sim, short for simulator. Itâs not always crazy exciting (or even dangerous, for that matter), but thereâs a whole wide universe of possibility.
https://lastchance.cc/i-just-spent-two-weeks-being-a-space-commander-1622502556%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Oh, and you can do wild, Han-Solo-style stunts like shutting down your enginesâeffectively freezing your shipâto avoid detection while moving at hundreds of miles per hour. Thatâs also pretty neat.
And all of this stuff was possible before. On September 30th Elite: Dangerous is entering the second phase of its lengthy beta process, which means itâs getting all of these things:
Combat ratings from âHarmlessâ all the way up to âEliteâ.
Reputations per system and galaxy-wide that influence attitudes and prices offered to you.
Ability to discover and explore and scan new systems and sell the data on them.
Detailed system maps.
Around 500 additional star systems to explore.
Lakon Asp Explorer ships added.
Much greater variety of upgradable Life Support modules, Engines, Hyperdrives, Power Distributors, Sensors, Shield Generators and Cargo Racks for all ships.
Ships are subject to gradual âwear and tearâ.
New weapons including mines and a new non-lethal missile-deployed cargo hatch disruptor for piracy.
Outposts (small, exposed âroadside cafĂ©â stations in remote locations)
Occelus starports, a version of which can move around for early civilization of new systems and space tourism.
Visibility of other ships in supercruise, and track others through supercruise and hyperspace.
Newsfeeds about events from the rest of the galaxy and player activity in your local system.
All backers names (from the appropriate crowd-funding reward tiers) have been added to the NPC naming database.
500 new star systems? Reputations? Real exploration mechanics? Roadside cafes? Nnnnnnggggh.
Sorry, sorry. Donât mind me. Itâs just, like, when I think of THE video gameâmy Platonic ideal of our magical cyber toysâit sounds a whole lot like what Elite: Dangerous ultimately aspires to be. And the crazy part is that all indications suggest itâs getting there. Itâs not there yet, nor will it be on September 30th, but itâs well on its way.
Thatâs legitimately exciting to me, and these days I donât get legitimately excited over many things that arenât weird ice cream flavors or pictures of dogs. But just, like, I get to go hang out in space, fly to the moon, play among the starsâall that stuff. And itâs all kinda vaguely real, or at least as ârealâ as these things can be. Good job, video games. You can be pretty cool sometimes, you know that?
Elite: Dangerous beta access will run you $75. Itâs a steep price for an unfinished game, soâdespite my praiseâspend wisely. It will eventually become finished (or at least, thatâs the plan), but you never truly know with these things
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