Besiege (video game)

Besiege is a strategy sandbox video game developed and published by Spiderling Studios for Windows, OS X and Linux. The game was released on 18 February 2020, which followed a five-year long early access phase.

Besiege
Developer(s)Spiderling Studios
Publisher(s)Spiderling Studios
EngineUnity
Platform(s)Windows, OS X, Linux
Release18 February 2020
Genre(s)Strategy
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

The game allows players to build outlandish medieval siege engines to pit against castles or armies. Players select from a collection of mechanical parts that can be connected together to build a machine. Each level has a goal, such as "destroy the windmill" or "kill 100 soldiers". Although the goals are relatively simple, the wide variety of possible approaches allows for experimentation.[1]

Despite the medieval theme to the game, players are able to build modern vehicles such as tanks, automobiles, bomber planes, propeller planes, helicopters, airships, and battleships. An update in December 2017 added a level editor and multiplayer capabilities, such as pitting the vehicle creations against each other, or other players attempting to knock down a castle created by another.[2] Later they added advanced build mode which grants the player the possibility to build complicated machines.[3] With these additions, players developed systems to run tournaments similar to the television show BattleBots, pitting their Besiege creations in one-on-one matches with others to try to take the other out.[4]

The game was first released via early access on 28 January 2015 before officially releasing on 18 February 2020.[5]

Reception

Marsh Davies of Rock, Paper, Shotgun praised an early version of the game, comparing its "bouncily caricatured" science to a 12th-century version of Kerbal Space Program. Davies also praised the game's stylized graphics and sound.[6] PC Gamer gave the game 85 out of 100.[7]

gollark: Now to work out why SPUDNET isn't working properly.
gollark: As planed.
gollark: Wait, you're looking at my SSH session by monitoring the *system calls*? Interesting.
gollark: You *actually* have that?
gollark: Oh, it's fine.

References

  1. Noordin, Shaun A. (23 February 2015). "Besiege: Engineering madness". The Star (Malaysia). Retrieved 31 October 2015.
  2. Horti, Samuel (10 December 2017). "Medieval destruction sandbox Besiege adds multiplayer and level editor". PC Gamer. Retrieved 10 December 2017.
  3. "Besiege :: Update V0.6.0-6878 - Multiverse Bugfixes & Experimental Branch update". 12 February 2018. Retrieved 19 April 2018.
  4. Davenport, James (21 February 2020). "BattleBots is alive and deadly in Besiege's internet fight clubs". PC Gamer. Retrieved 21 February 2020.
  5. Bailey, Dustin (13 February 2020). "Besiege finally goes 1.0 in February, after five years of Early Access". PCGamesN. Retrieved 13 February 2020.
  6. Davies, Marsh (9 February 2015). "Premature Evaluation: Besiege". Rock, Paper, Shotgun. Retrieved 31 October 2015.
  7. Lane, Rick (25 February 2020). "Besiege review". PC Gamer. Future plc. Retrieved 28 June 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.