Author Topic: No Man's Sky Official Megathread  (Read 128627 times)

I think it's cool that the mining laser beam changes color the more you upgrade it. Though I think the progression should be red -> green -> blue instead of starting with green

You do realize that in real life blue lasers are the strongest, right?

This isn't a fancy imaginary color thing, it's based off real concepts.

Yeah and the weakest are red, so that's why I was saying it should progress from red and end with blue

But you said change blue to green.

Red, blue, green


I read it wrong, lol.

rally you never responded to my angry presumptuous rant
I'm gonna assume this is playing at the review in the OP. Sorry if I'm an idiot lol

Are you seriously telling me that 5 hours isn't enough time to form an impression of a game? I have to be bored for 5 hours, but then the game gets REALLY good? I imagine it would only drop, since I was bored out of my mind by the time I stopped playing.

You're acting as thought I said there was serious repetition in the environments, but I did no such thing, repeatedly praising it's diverse environments and wildly different examples of terrain and flora.

Also, what the hell? "It didn't run well on my MacBook." My PC was custom built and cost almost $2000 in individual parts. I'm running a 980t so I don't know what the hell you are talking about when you mock my bad performance. It's clearly the fault of terrible game optimization. When I adjusted the settings (setting fps to max, making it borderless) and restarted it would run flawlessly at 90fps, before randomly crashing to 4 fps upon entering my ship.

It's not worth $60 because the amount of playtime and fun you'll get out of it is dwarfed by that of an actually good game costing $60, like XCOM 2.

edit: Also what the hell kinda stingy theater charges $20 for a movie ticket. Here they are like $8 to $13 if you get it in IMAX 3D with the super nice reclining seats.

You're discovering planets for the human race, derp.

If you haven't noticed there is no other humans you can interact with in space stations or anywhere. Every real player is a human.

What has been discovered by an alien has not been discovered by a human, why is this concept so hard to grasp?
We are not a human. The devs confirmed this
« Last Edit: August 17, 2016, 09:34:22 AM by McZealot »

You're definitely not a human.
Humanoid, sure. Resembling a human, probably. You are not from "the human race," though.

Then your species hasn't found this stuff.

rally you never responded to my angry presumptuous rant

Because it was a joke

except it's clearly parody...

which is at heart a criticism of something? right?

Oh yeah it was definitely a parody, but not specifically of you, so there's not much point in responding to your anecdotes


ive got so much beef with this game
my roommates bought it (they were expecting something different, hadnt heard anything about the game) so i played it for a good 3 hours. was very dissapointed. totally not worth $60 unless theyre adding a lot of content. its like they put all of their focus in the procedural generation and then just put down some npcs and called it good. a randomly generated universe isnt exciting if you can only do the same thing everywhere you go



who needs cargo space when you can have  r a p i d   f i r e


hey, IGN agrees with me. they gave it a 6/10.

i was worried they'd give it an inaccurate review to capitalize on the hype. glad they were honest. the dude pretty much summarized exactly what was wrong with the game.

everyone hates ign for some reason but I've never seen a review that really bugged me. Yeah they give Call of Duty games good reviews because those are obviously reviews for people considering buying the next Call of Duty game.