Author Topic: Gratuitous Space Battles  (Read 887 times)

NOTE:i got this from the site the link is www.GratuitousSpaceBattles.co m                                                                                           


there is also a expansion  called TRIBE

GSB is the new game from UK indie developer 'Positech Games'. It's a strategy / management / simulation game that does away with all the base building and delays and gets straight to the meat and potatoes of science-fiction games : The big space battles fought by huge spaceships with tons of laser beams and things going 'zap!', 'ka-boom!' and 'ka-pow!'. In GSB you put your ships together from modular components, arrange them into fleets, give your ships orders of engagement and then hope they emerge victorious from battle (or at least blow to bits in aesthetically pleasing ways).
   "You know how the space combat scenes in Battlestar Galactica were terrible and epic and oddly serene, all at once? This game is like that. It has lovely graphics, a lot of depth, an alarming amount of replayability, and a great sense of humor, to boot" = Tom Chick    
gsb screenshot    gsb screenshot    gsb screenshot
Gratuitous Space Battles aims to bring the over-the-top explodiness back into space games. The game is for everyone who has watched big space armadas battle it out on TV and thought to themselves 'I could have done a much better job as admiral'. This is not a game of real-time arcade twitch reflexes. GSB is about what ships you design, and what you tell them to do. Your individual ship commanders have total autonomy during the chaotic battle that unfolds. This is not a tactical game, it is a strategic one. These gratuitous space battles are not won by plucky heroes with perfect teeth, but by the geeky starship builders who know exactly what ratio of plasma-cannons to engines each ship in the fleet will need.
   "Thoughts of the greatest Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episodes like "Sacrifice of Angels" passed through my mind the second I've tried one of these battles." = games32.com    
GSB has both a singleplayer mode, and a cunning 'asynchronous' multiplayer mode, where you upload a 'challenge' containing your fleet (complete with your custom ship designs and each ships orders of engagement) either to openly challenge all other GSB players, or aimed at a specific player you know. The game has a challenge browser (see screenshot below) and history which shows you who accepted your challenge, and whether they won or lost, and players can rank each others fleets for both fun and difficulty.
gsb screenshot    gsb screenshot    gsb screenshot
   "Prettiest 2D game to come along in some time. Battles are actually gratuitous." = GameShark.com    
If fighting against a fixed fleet of enemy ships (either the default game missions in three difficulties, or player-made challenges) isn't your thing, then GSB also has two 'survival mode' maps. In these battles, your fleet is helplessly outnumbered by wave after wave of enemies that warp in and attack you. Your fleets final defeat is certain, but how many enemy ships will you blast to atoms before you go down with your ship? Check out the scores to see how other players have fared.
   
We keep getting questions about the minimum spec of the game. The game was developed on an Intel Core 2 Duo Vista machine with 2 gig of ram and a geforce 8800 GTS video card. The min spec is certain to be much lower than that.
Fill out your e-mail address to receive our newsletter!
   
Gratuitous Space Battles PC game
GSB is likely to appeal to any lovers of big space battles or people who enjoyed space strategy games such as starfleet command, battleships forever, the star fleet battles board game and 4x games such as galactic cvilizations, masters of orion (MOO), imperium galactica, sins of a solar empire or the space empires games.
Follow the dev blog for GSB here
Gratuitous Space Battles torrent gratuitous space battkes warez rapidshare megaupload hotfile despositfiles

   
« Last Edit: January 08, 2010, 06:04:29 PM by joseph »

Should be interesting. Let me try this out.

Thats pretty fun!
« Last Edit: January 08, 2010, 02:44:40 PM by Choneis »

I tried the demo a while back.  I didn't really have fun with it.  To me building ships isn't really fun if you don't actually control them and a get a feel for how they do, I don't get that feel when I'm not in control, and am merely watching.

This sounds like fun although i would enjoy taking my giant spaceship for a spin.

Viral marketing?

Mmm, just downloaded the demo and I found it alright.
Not good, but not bad.
« Last Edit: January 08, 2010, 03:35:46 PM by A.R.C. »

The thing glitches for me and switches from full screen to window every second. Dam you laptoppp!

This is the definition of "Pew Pew Pew!"
:O


Broken eye candy game is broken.