Elite Dangerous

From Virtual Reality, Augmented Reality Wiki
Revision as of 00:41, 16 September 2016 by Neo222 (talk | contribs)

Jump to: navigation, search
Information icon1.png This page is a stub, please expand it if you have more information.
Elite Dangerous
Information
VR/AR VR
Developer Frontier Developments
Publisher Frontier Developments
Director David Braben
Producer Michael Brookes
Platform SteamVR, Oculus Rift (Platform)
Device HTC Vive, Oculus Rift
Operating System Windows, Mac
Type Full Game
Genre Action, Adventure, Massively Multiplayer, RPG, Simulation, Strategy, Space Sim, Space, Open World, Exploration, Sci-fi, Multiplayer, First-Person, Sandbox, Online Co-Op, Trading, Singleplayer, Difficult, TrackIR, VR
Input Device Gamepad, Keyboard / Mouse
Play Area Seated
Game Mode Single Player, Multiplayer, Co-Op
Language English, French, German, Russian, Spanish
Rating Teen
Review Mixed
Release Date Apr 2, 2015
Price $29.99
App Store Steam
Website http://www.elitedangerous.com/
Infobox Updated 09/15/2016
Elite Dangerous is a VR App.

Review

Elite Dangerous has been out for a rather long time to relatively mixed user reviews – with consumer versions of VR headsets now out in the wild, will the game be revitalized?

Frontier Developments’ Elite Dangerous is a rather difficult game to review, especially for someone with fond memories of older multiplayer spaceship-based games, such as Freelancer.

A lot of people may bounce off due to its complexity and the rather perplexing lack of direction. While the former is perfectly fine, I feel more could have been done to help players choose the direction they want to take their game in. Indeed, there are a lot of things to do, but little in the way of helping you discover them. That is not to say that Elite Dangerous should hold the hands of its players at all time, but even series such as Dark Souls, touted for its difficulty and hardcore nature gives you more hints and direction than Elite does sometimes.

Being told you can go anywhere you want and do whatever you want can be very liberating, but, ironically, it can also feel restrictive and the game certainly suffers as a result.

What is more – the 1.0 release back in December 2014 was plainly unfinished. A lot of promised mechanics were missing and the ones that were there often did not work properly. A promised offline mode was scrapped (although you can play solo – but must be always on), much-hyped features such as the galactic economy and evolving politics were broken. All this was not helped by the fact that the learning curve was more akin to a “learning cliff”, a lot of people were frustrated, and understandably so.

Frontier Developments has, however, taken the game a long way since then, and is apparently planning much more. One of the biggest problems was indeed the lack of meaningful player interaction. Things such as multi-crew ships and proper alliances are exactly what people have been asking for. While one shouldn’t expect Elite to suddenly turn into an EVE-like affair, it remains a step in the right direction. And yet, Elite Dangerous remains a fascinating experience. Yes, an experience. Wherever the game and its mechanics might fall flat, the experience of actually flying a starship through space holds up beautifully. It would be hard to think of another game that sells this experience quite so well. From the visuals to the sound assets, everything feels authentic.

What about VR headsets then? This is certainly one of the games people dream up when they think of VR. Being in a cockpit bypasses any of the usual problems of seated VR – after all, your character is also seated. If you combine the headset with a HOTAS Flight Stick and some voice commands, Elite Dangerous turns from an interesting but flawed space game into ”Oh my god I am flying my own spaceship!”.

The sense of scale of the space stations, the vast emptiness of space, the stars and planetary bodies that you fly by and land on, the way your character’s hands on the flight stick mimic your own moves, all of these things were already impressive before – with an Oculus or Vive, it becomes the dream of anyone who ever imagined something like this back when the original Elite was out in 1984.

Elite Dangerous has occasionally been described as “Euro Truck Simulator in space” – and it is true. You could be a peaceful trader, carrying cargo across the stars, avoiding any of that dogfighting nonsense that some people seem to be into, and it would be a very similar experience.

There is a lot that remains unsaid here. None of Elite Dangerous’ mechanics are terribly deep, but the range of things you can do is quite impressive. From the way power management works, to how you smuggle illegal goods into stations, ship choices, outfitting, and do forth – to not even mention the more recent Horizons expansion which introduced the ability to land on planetary bodies.

Overall, Elite Dangerous suffers from the same problems its original 1984 predecessor did. If you are not the kind of person who likes setting their own goals, your experience will suffer. If that does not deter you though, or even if you are simply looking for trucking in space, Elite Dangerous, especially with VR, is the only game that can offer such an experience. At least, the only fully released one.

Elite Dangerous is out now on Steam. It will set you back $30 or your regional equivalent. The expansion will cost an extra $34.

Description

Elite Dangerous is the definitive massively multiplayer space epic, bringing gaming’s original open world adventure to the modern generation with a connected galaxy, evolving narrative and the entirety of the Milky Way re-created at its full galactic proportions.

Starting with only a small starship and a few credits, players do whatever it takes to earn the skill, knowledge, wealth and power to survive in a futuristic cutthroat galaxy and to stand among the ranks of the iconic Elite. In an age of galactic superpowers and interstellar war, every player’s story influences the unique connected gaming experience and handcrafted evolving narrative. Governments fall, battles are lost and won, and humanity’s frontier is reshaped, all by players’ actions.

400 Billion Star Systems. Infinite Freedom. Blaze Your Own Trail.

A Galaxy Of Wonders
The 400 billion star systems of the Milky Way are the stage for Elite Dangerous' open-ended gameplay. The real stars, planets, moons, asteroid fields and black holes of our own galaxy are built to their true epic proportions in the largest designed playspace in videogame history.

A Unique Connected Game Experience
Governments fall, battles are lost and won, and humanity’s frontier is reshaped, all by players’ actions. In an age of galactic superpowers and interstellar war, every player’s personal story influences the connected galaxy and handcrafted evolving narrative.

Blaze Your Own Trail
Upgrade your ship and customize every component as you hunt, explore, fight, mine, smuggle, trade and survive in the cutthroat galaxy of the year 3301. Do whatever it takes to earn the skill, knowledge, wealth and power to stand among the ranks of the Elite.

Massively Multiplayer
Experience unpredictable encounters with players from around the world in Elite Dangerous’ vast massively multiplayer space. Experience the connected galaxy alone in Solo mode or with players across the world in Open Play, where every pilot you face could become a trusted ally or your deadliest enemy. You will need to register a free Elite Dangerous account with Frontier to play the game.

A Living Game
Elite Dangerous grows and expands with new features and content. Major updates react to the way players want to play and create new gameplay opportunities for the hundreds of thousands of players cooperating, competing and exploring together in the connected galaxy.

The Original Open World Adventure
Elite Dangerous is the third sequel to 1984's genre-defining Elite, bringing gaming’s original open world adventure into the modern generation with a connected galaxy, evolving narrative and the entire Milky Way re-created at its full galactic proportions.

Features

System Requirements

Windows

Minimum

  • OS: Windows 7, Windows 8
  • Processor: Quad Core CPU (4 x 2Ghz)
  • Memory: 4 GB RAM
  • Graphics: Nvidia GTX 260 / ATI 4870HD
  • Storage: 7 GB available space

Recommended

  • OS: Windows 7, Windows 8
  • Processor: Intel Core i7-3770K Quad Core CPU or better / AMD FX 4350 Quad Core CPU or better
  • Memory: 8 GB RAM
  • Graphics: Nvidia GTX 770 / AMD Radeon R9 280X
  • Storage: 7 GB available space

Mac OS X

Minimum

  • OS: Windows 7, Windows 8
  • Processor: Quad Core CPU (4 x 2Ghz)
  • Memory: 4 GB RAM
  • Graphics: Nvidia GTX 260 / ATI 4870HD
  • Storage: 7 GB available space

Recommended

  • OS: Windows 7, Windows 8
  • Processor: Intel Core i7-3770K Quad Core CPU or better / AMD FX 4350 Quad Core CPU or better
  • Memory: 8 GB RAM
  • Graphics: Nvidia GTX 770 / AMD Radeon R9 280X
  • Storage: 7 GB available space

Setup Instructions

Images and Videos