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Currently developing Interstellar Space: Genesis
A turn-based space 4X strategy game for the PC.

Interstellar Space: Genesis | Turn-based space 4X strategy game for the PC

FTL: Faster Than Light Review

By on September 21st, 2012 10:05 am

FTL - Faster Than Light | Spaceship simulation

Beware: State of the industry rant

The Indie Game industry is a good thing my fellow Spacesector gamers, and I will tell you why. Before huge companies like EA went public, and thus the pressures of business take over artistic risk taking, we would get truly unique titles. All of the major genres today are the fruit of the early days of game development. Where legendary creators like Sid Meier cut their teeth.

This is what I believe led to many talented developers leaving these large companies (lack of job security as a game developer is well known) to make games large corporate public companies deem too risky. Even the famed founders of Bioware just left, which I saw as inevitable because EA owns Bioware now.

The indie game industry and now crowd funding sites like Kickstarter are re-igniting the creative side of PC gaming. So I am very optimistic that these indie developers will make truly great titles, and their evolution will contribute greatly to the PC game industry.

The Rogue Like Ship Simulator

FTL is basically a roguelike ship simulator where you manage a starship with crew, energy, weapons, and resources. Your crew gain experience and gain bonuses in the various systems. Your ship can be upgraded with scrap you find from encounters and combat.

The story in FTL is a simple one, you belong to a Federation that is being over ran by a large Rebel fleet. They have infiltrated other locations along your route, and you happen to be carrying vital data that can help the defense of the Federation. This basic story line is the framework within which encounters are structured, and it makes for a very fun game.

FTL eases you into an excellent tutorial for those who like the hand holding, however those players who like to dive in can simply forgo it. The tutorial will introduce you to the basics of crew control, ship systems and their energy usage. You will also learn how to upgrade your ship and install new equipment like weapons. You will then learn how to engage in combat, and how to target and use weapons.

A Tutorial that is useful?

The tutorial is useful for less experiences players and veterans alike because it shows you how combat in FTL is played out. Everything about FTL is well thought out, and combat is no exception. Ships usually have shields, and certain weapons are better against shields than others. The usual sci-fi conventions apply here, where lasers or beam weapons are poor against shields and missiles outright ignore them. The tutorial will teach these basics by having you target the shields with your missile launcher, which can ignore the shield and knock it down to red.

Ships in FTL are comprised of compartment rooms sealed with doors. Most rooms contain the vital ship systems like shields, weapons, oxygen, and bridge. Some rooms are simply hallways. You simply target which component you prefer, and if you damage that component enough it will turn red.

The tutorial will also show you how to deal with boarders and damage. Some enemies will have crew transporters, and will send of hostile boarders that target a ships system and start to damage it. You have to organize a security force, and counter attack before they damage any vital systems. They will go for ships systems first!

Ship Systems

A ship is comprised of a number of compartments where some contain the vital systems of running a modern FTL ship. The main systems are Shields, Engines, Oxygen, Med Bay, Weapons, and Drones (Not all ships start with Drones). The subsystems are the Bridge, Ship Surveillance, and Bulkhead control.

Your ship can be upgraded according to your strategy. Upgrading the engines will increase your FTL recharge rate, and dodge chance. Increasing your ship sensors will allow you to view the enemy ships crew activities and locations. Each upgrade also requires investment in the ship power system. This adds immense depth to the game as you should be preparing for the boss battle, and every upgrade needs to be carefully thought out.

The color state of the system gives you a quick update on its damage state, which are basically grey, orange, red, and blue. Grey is normal status, orange is half way damaged, and red is destroyed, while blue is temporarily disabled by ion damage. A system that is orange will function less than normal, and red it will not function at all. You have to then assign a crew member to head to the damaged section to repair the system. This gets tricky when you are dealing with ship combat, intruders, and managing what to repair first.

Repairing ship systems is something you will inevitable encounter, and fires will be the bane of your experience. Certain weapons cause fire damage, and when not contained will spread to all of your ship. Fire is hazardous in more than one way, besides destroying systems it also swallow oxygen. Putting out fires hurts your crew as well.

One time I forgot to close my security doors, and I had a raging fire that spread to the rest of the ship. Once I realized my mistake I was in a bad situation. Forgetting to close doors is a common mistake because sometimes you need to open doors to allow oxygen to spread to a room with a breach. This will allow your crew members to repair the room without suffocating to death. It also allows you to earn an achievement where you take out a ship by suffocating its crew. Devious indeed!

“Captain I detect hostile crew on board.”

One underhanded tactic of enemies you encounter is to beam aboard their crew to disable yours and kill your crew. You must deal with this threat immediately because they will go room to room disabling all your systems.

Ship systems like the Engines, Weapons, Shields, and Bridge function more efficiently with crew members manning them. Having to deal with hostile boarders makes you lose the manned bonus. However not dealing with invasions is not an option, because they will disable your ship one room at a time. You can get lucky if you damage their ship enough, they will recall their own crew to help repair the system.

There are other ways to help you deal with an invasion. The simplest way is to upgrade your doors, which force the invaders to break through the door longer, and also contains fires longer. The other way is to simply fire bomb your own ship. This is a viable strategy if you have fully upgraded doors, and hit them when they are in a room without a system.

Fighting invaders becomes a careful balance of knowing when to retreat to the Med Bay to heal, and when to fight. You can get an augment where your Med Bay can repair your crew in any room, which also gives you a huge advantage in a fight.

Crew: A precious resource

Your crew are perhaps your most precious resource, because there are many perils in space and replacing them is hard. You may get lucky and find a couple through encounters, but by and large my biggest challenge has been crew. They are expensive at merchants, costing between 45 to 65 scrap. This scrap needs to go towards upgrading or adding weapons and your ship.

When I first start a game, I usually leave my first crew member as the pilot, then divy them out to the shields and weapons. This will give you a manning bonus to all three, and if I get another crew member, they get assigned to the engines for that bonus as well. You can rename them and your ship at the start of any game.

The reason you want to focus one crew member on the same station is that they gain experience up to a max of level 3. Each level gives you a bonus in that system, like in the weapons room you will get a faster charge time. Shields is similar, and the pilot gives you higher dodge chance.

The universe consist of different races where each have their own bonuses and negatives. The Engi race of course are great engineers and provide faster repair rates, but have horrible combat traits. The Zoltan provide a powered system even though it has no power, which is useful in keeping systems up. The Mantis race are great fighters, and the Rock are immune to fire. The Humans of course not good or bad at anything in particular.

What is Rogue Like?

Those of you familiar with other titles like Dungeons of Dredmor or Dwarf Fortress, will know what “rogue like” means. You cannot save while playing except when you quit. Once your ship is destroyed all is lost, and you only have a scoreboard to remind you of your glorious exploits. No reloading to a point before you made that disastrous mistake.

Conclusion

FTL is a simple yet engaging indie effort that makes losing exciting and suspenseful. There is only one map, and once you get to the end and defeat the game boss, your mission is complete. However, FTL has high replayability where every play through is random, and you have the opportunity to unlock many other ships of the other races. To unlock these ships you have to achieve certain quests or visit specific locations.

This is the heart of the replay factor of FTL, where encounters are random and you can run across helpful upgrades in your exploits. With scrap that you earn from either a surrendering ship, or destroyed one, you can buy additional crew, weapons, and modules. (TIP: accepting a beaten foes plea yields different rewards, like more missiles or fuels. However if you need scrap more than anything else finishing them off is the way to go.)

The key to survival in any FTL play through is how you upgrade your ship with the scrap you have in preparation for the boss battle. I am convinced the first upgrade you should strive for is that of adding a second shield level. This allows your ship to tank more hits before you start taking hull damage. Hull is of course limited, and is very expensive to repair.

From www.giantbomb.comFTL Dev Interview

Justin Ma, one half of the FTL duo dev team was generous enough to answer some questions during a busy post launch period. Justin Ma left Shanghai 2K Games to form Subset Games with Matt Davis.

SS: I find it interesting that you guys are based in Shanghai, China, how did you two meet? 

Justin Ma: We both worked in a larger game studio in Shanghai.

SS: What motivated you two to get into game design, and how did you go about learning how to do it?

Justin Ma: We’ve both loved games and I had more of an art/design background while Matt is more of a coding background. We decided to make our own project since the ones we were working on in the studio were not meshing well with us.

SS: What has been the biggest challenge of developing FTL, and how did you overcome it?

Justin Ma: I would say the biggest challenge has been learning the business side of development, since that’s something neither of us have experience in.

SS: What are your future plans for FTL as far as expansions, sequels, or ports go?

Justin Ma: We would like to be able to update the game and port it to tablets but we will need to evaluate our situation and plans before we announce anything specific.

SS: Thank you Justin Ma for taking time to reply to a quick interview, we at Spacesector wish you guys the best of luck!

FTL: Faster Than Light

FTL: Faster Than Light (Win, Mac, Linux)

Buy at GOGSteam or at the FTL developers website.

Space Sector score: 9.5/10
excellent
The Good:
– Great replayability
– In depth yet simple ship crew simulator
– Unique playing experience
– Up-gradable Ship Components
– Crew gains experience
– Many additional modules to find or buy
– $9.99 Price Tag
– Excellent music
The Bad:
– Only one scenario
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Interstellar Space: Genesis | Turn-based space 4X strategy game for the PC

25 Comments


  1. Johan says:

    Thank you for a fair and, ultimately, excellent review of this fine game.

    It is probably the most interesting title that I’ve had the pleasure of playing in a long time. Looking at Steam statistics, it’s clear that people like it a lot and it just goes to show that you can be successful as an indie developer if you have the right ideas.

    Best regards,
    Johan

  2. Adam C says:

    Big Fan of FTL :)

  3. Romah says:

    I cant wait for a game like this to be full, free world space rpg.
    Honestly, I crave longer and more customizable gameplay roguelikes can never fulfill.
    That said, this game is a must have for any sci fi fans!
    I hope FTL 2 will ditch the rogulike model and makes a full world game.
    That will be legendary and ground breaking!

    Another similar game to keep an eye out on is “starship corporation”

    Thanks for the good review!

    • PirateCat says:

      RLs can do longer gameplay. Even with thought out stories. Maybe not open world GTA style deal, where you die and yet live forever, but still. If you want a RL with strong storytelling, check out ADoM (Ancient Domains of Mystery), if you want a huge open world to wander through and explore with multiple characters check out Dwarf Fortress. That one has an adventurer mode like that, and a fortress mode that’s like Sim City but 20% cooler and with more blood and vomit encrusted alcoholic midgets.

      • Romah says:

        Thank you for the links! Sadly, its actually opposite of what I hope FTL developers take the game direction if any…

        I was thinking more open universe to explore.. Privateer, x universe etc alike…
        Where deeper ship and crew customization can be achieved. Docking with stations to do some trading. Missions that require boarding party to take over stations. Heck, why not having ability to construct and run one? Planetary colonies, research, construction, ship design all of the things can be expanded into open world model quite successfully… They are sitting in gold! :)

        As for rogue like games, check out doom roguelike!!! Crafting system makes that game worth it!

  4. Evil Azrael says:

    Good Review, it explain almost the whole game *G* And much praise for a game you needed to be convinced to include it on this site. I would subtract 0.5 or 1 point one imbalance thing. I think the “Weapons Preloader” is essentiell or you loose the game. Being able to fire immediately after a fight is vital, especially with the final boss. And you don’t get it in every game. I am curious that is is guaranteed that every thing is obtainable at least once in a game.

    • Adam Solo says:

      Kyle did a good job convincing me that FTL had enough strategic and tactical elements ;) I’m glad he did. Looks like a wonderful game, with many decisions to be made and a good amount of depth.

    • PirateCat says:

      Its not required, I’ve beaten the game several times without the weapon preloader. The fact than nothing is guaranteed in every game forces you to think on your feet and use different strategies. In my book that’s not a negative, its a positive.

    • SQW says:

      The Cloak is actually more versatile and almost essential to beat the third boss in my opinion. Then again, Rogue-likes were never suppose to guarantee a win; even the best well laid path sometimes leads to doom simply because every bloody shop you visit doesn’t sell weapons! =P

  5. Hypnotron says:

    There will be clones…

  6. Rob says:

    Great review, but there is a another kickstarter game that has funding to look to. Starcommand. not much yet but its seems to be a more rpg like. http://www.starcommandgame.com/

  7. Ermdog says:

    I still can’t beat the last boss on easy :( I need to think of a new stratagey

  8. Keith Turner says:

    If I didn’t have so much else to play right now, I’d be all over this. It’s certainly on my list of games I want to get around to playing.

  9. Stian says:

    Just bought it…Just have to try it out..looks very funny…a little “fast” game to play when not the time to spend hours. =)

  10. Cykur says:

    I love this game and can’t recommend it enough. The great thing about this game is you can use many different strategies, often necessitated by what you find and what ship you are using. I’ve won the game many times now using different tactics and ships. The Weapons Preloader is great for the big slow firing weapons and completely unnecessary for using a bunch of cheap weapons which I manually fire simultaneously to overwhelm a specific shield. One game I relied heavily on Ion weapons, one on drone weapons, one on my cloaking device, etc. You usually need a couple things going for your ship in case you meet an enemy that is particularly resistant to one strategy. And while there is a lot of bad luck / good luck situations, a big part of winning is just realizing if a particular encounter is not a good fight for your ship and avoiding it. While some enemies are easy to kill, sometimes you see a ship that looks like trouble based on the weapons you see it is carrying (usually lots of shield penetrating missiles if you have no defense drones). Whenever I’m in a fight where I think my damages / ordinance expenditures are going to be higher than any possible gain, I try to avoid it. It shouldn’t happen much, since you need to kill a lot of ships to build up your own, but it is very important to avoid or escape from fights that aren’t worth the cost. That alone is what minimizes the luck factor which I see some people complain about.

    • Bryan Bell says:

      Speaking of the luck factor, I’ve seen repeats of the same decisions presented to me (i.e. do you transport an old man onto your ship or not) and the positive/negative outcome of one choice or the other seems random. Is it? If so, the choices seem meaningless. One may as well blindly choose any option. If not, upon what basis are we expected to decide?

      • Cykur says:

        As far as I can tell there are multiple possible outcomes to all of the choices, though I think some situations have more negative outcomes than good ones. Some of the situations chain into other events, ie. the quests, and unlocking ships, etc. You can also get “Blue” safe choices (USUALLY) to some events based on having a specific race of crew or a specific special system, like a cloaking device, transporter, salvage arm, beam laser, or beefed up engines / weapons….. Like I said, luck can play a factor in any one choice, and a string of bad luck can indeed spell your doom, but you can also have strings of good luck, and make the wrong choices in a fight and die anyway. There is certainly luck involved, but the game is winnable. I’ve won it 5 times on normal in the first few days I had it……

      • Hypnotron says:

        two points

        1) it’s not meaningless if you consider that the player is given a CHANCE to take a RISK. The player can ignore all the risk if they want it sounds like (i havent actually played FTL yet, just been too busy). But the user becomes very much aware that they are being presented with a risky proposition. Therefore, you should consider the condition of your ship and crew before daring to take the risk.

        2) Rogue-like games have used the “gamble” game mechanic for decades. It’s a core feature or Rogue-likes that there are a lot of unknowns out there, the world is dangerous and these chance opportunities can be deadly. This shapes the players thinking as they play and helps define the mood of the entire game.

        • Kyle Rees says:

          Great points Hypnotron,
          Also, FTL is not meant to be played through just once. The randomness is what gives it the replayability. If the random encounters all had the same outcome, you would simply choose the ones that were only positive.

          With the current system, as Hynotron astutely pointed out, you have to take the current condition of your ship into consideration when deciding on whether to assist the space station with a “Giant Spider” infestation.. if your short on crew maybe it is not worth the risk of losing another crew member.

          It is a cheap gameplay mechanic, but one that is effective for FTL games whose price point is lower than $10.

  11. Harry says:

    This is a great game for a tablet PC or?

  12. Chris says:

    This game is absolutely fantastic, so is your review Kyle. I bought it a few days ago and I am really hooked on it, it has such an addictive factor to it. Besides it is really something unique. For such a small price I definitly recommend it for anyone who is remotely interested.

    Although there is still some room for improvements, for instance more varied encounters and possibilities, more detailed ships, more stations that can be manned or other cool gimmicks, crewmembers being sucked out if the doors are open etc.

    It has so much potential, I hope the devs will have great success with this one.

    • Kyle Rees says:

      Thank you for your kind words.

      It was funny because when I finally beat the end, I did not realize a new feature that was lacking on the Kestral and Engi ships. So when a breach happend, I used the “Open All Doors” control to equalize pressure so my crew can repair the breach. All of a sudden my Oxygen was nose diving towards zero!

      I was befuddled because my O2 systems was nominal, and I have never loss oxygen that fast to one breach. I finally figured out, after a few terrifying game seconds, that the Federation Cruiser indeed had airlocks linked to open space. I was wondering why the devs did not include the feature in the game, but lo and behold it was just not included on the starting ship.

      So as you mentioned, it is a wonderful game that truly exemplifies indie game development that heralds back to the days when pc gaming was a indie industry as a whole.

      Your criticisms are spot on, so why did I give it one of the highest scores to date on SS.com? The price point. For two trips to Starbucks for Caramel Macchiatos, you can have a copy of FTL.

      One other criticism I forgot to mention in the review, was performance on older laptops. One would think that this is the type of game that can be played no problem on really old laptops, especially ones that can play Spore or Sims 3, that FTL would run the same.

      Small gripes in the scheme of all the other features of FTL. I really hope they do some expansions like the devs of Dungeons of Dredmor, before they move onto another project.


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