![]() ![]() If you’re unable to provide them with Marlow’s hierarchy of needs (safe housing, clean water, food) then you’ll make them none too happy. You start constructing a new settlement to ensure your people have shelter, work and are fed. The weedy bushes and warped metal will have to do – in the beginning. But as a wise man once said, you deal with the hand that’s been given to you. You start out having to build a settlement that is the sum of sand dirt, scrap metal, some measly berry bushes and contaminated water wells. Seeing how many plates you can keep from crashing – how well you deal with Homeseek’s resource management system – is the core of this unforgiving game. You have to juggle resource management (like spinning plates in the air), the building of your new home, as well as *gasp* difficult choices. Your task is to guide a group of survivors to build a new community in a hostile environment that is in no way your friend. The new future of earth is brutal, did I have the guts to survive it? Homeseek Review – Gameplay ![]() I didn’t have a lot of experience with resource management games, (having only hazy memories of Sim City floating around my cranium) but Homeseek was a good introduction to the genre. ![]() Think of Dune and you’ll get a similar atmosphere. What has emerged in this post-apocalyptic hellscape is the struggle over the nectar of life – Water. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |