Phew! This yearâs Opening Night Live was kinda exhausting, what with the plethora of new trailers and âworld premieresâ host Geoff Keighley showered us in. While the two-hour broadcast may be over and done with, one moment from the show is now living in my mind rent-free: a short message from European Space Agency astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti applauding the abundance of upcoming space games. Because if you didnât know, there are a lotta games dropping in the next few years that are set in the cold expanse just above us.
Cristoforetti, whoâs currently flying at 27,000 kilometers per hour (approximately 17,000 mph) and 400 kilometers (roughly 250 miles) above our heads on the International Space Station, popped up to give a quick âbravo to the games industryâ for hardcore repping space. She said, as she floated in zero gravity while wearing a grey ESA polo and some green cargo pants, that the National Aeronautics and Space Administration is stoked about developers highlighting the âlove of space explorationâ with various recent games such as No Manâs Sky, Stellaris, The Outer Worlds, and the like.
âI come to you to say bravo to the gameâs industry,â Cristoforetti said. âWe see how many space games youâve been creating recently. Those missions you send your players on arenât just great fun. They create curiosity, interest, and a love of space exploration in gamers around the world. As we look towards returning to the moon and onto Mars with our ambitious Teranova program, humanityâs space flight capabilities will be in part thanks (sic) to the gameâs industry.â
While itâs easy to point to recent games, including Elite Dangerous and Outer Wilds, as being partly responsible for fueling spaceâs popularity as a playground for this interactive medium, there are a ton of upcoming games thatâll send us to space, as well. Thereâs the horror adventure The Callisto Protocol, which looks incredibly nightmare inducing. Youâve got the anime JRPG and Monster Hunter-like Star Ocean The Divine Force. Thereâs also Dune: Spice Wars and Star Trek: Resurgence and the Dead Space remake. Of course, you canât forget about Bethesdaâs Starfield, probably the most anticipatedâand biggest?âspace exploration game, with a reported 1000 or more planets. And these are just the first six games that come to mind. Iâm sure thereâs more on Steam. Hell, the Microsoft Storeâs got a whole page dedicated to them. PlayStation does, too.
Thatâs what Cristoforetti is celebrating here. That though space can be cold and intimidating, itâs also fascinating because thereâs so much we donât know about it. I mean, NASA just published some audio this week of a real-life black hole that sounds like a Mass Effect reaper. Talk about the final frontier I donât wanna explore. Still, Cristoforetti believes stuff like this will âlead us all closer to the stars.â Then she backflipped like a boss. Itâs cheating cause sheâs in zero gravity, but still. I wanna see you do a double backflip as effortlessly as her.
âWho knows? Perhaps even you will be among us here at ESA for the journey. Exploring space virtually isnât just great fun. Itâs having real-world impacts that leads us all closer to the stars. So on behalf of everyone at ESA, bravo. Keep creating. Keep innovating. And keep playing.â That we will, Cristoforetti.
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