How much days to survive : No save files as "don't starve" or limited.

Started by Aeden, March 23, 2014, 07:07:38 PM

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Aeden

Hi guys,

I'm just starting to play at Rim World and i enjoy do much.
I would like to suggest to limited the save files of the game or just have no possibility to go back if you do a mistake. I mean it's quite normal to do mistake and to assume it.
I think it's because pre-alpha it's saving every 3 minutes but the temptation to load again is losing interest if the goal is to survive at the AI.
May it's my own opinion :). Rim world with a system as "Don't Starve" or on a separate game mode without possibility to load by yourself (only click continue at the main menu) could be a interesting challenge.

I haven't even got right now the role of the fear and i think the system to recruit prisoners can be more specific. (not just click try to recruit and nice talk).

If someone can tell me about you're welcome :)

Aeden

Armorat

I definitely like the ability to go no-save (Ironman mode in XCOM was my latest go). However, I think there are a lot of people that want to spend time building sprawling fortresses, and the ability to go back to an old save I think is essential for something like that, if you've planned totally wrong or something unexpected happens that messes up your blueprint. So, like XCOM and Diablo, would be best if there was an option whether or not to run the game that way.

iame6162013

Quote from: Armorat on March 25, 2014, 01:44:01 PM
I definitely like the ability to go no-save (Ironman mode in XCOM was my latest go). However, I think there are a lot of people that want to spend time building sprawling fortresses, and the ability to go back to an old save I think is essential for something like that, if you've planned totally wrong or something unexpected happens that messes up your blueprint. So, like XCOM and Diablo, would be best if there was an option whether or not to run the game that way.

Yea there has to be a chose really
Linus Torvalds: "But it clearly is the only right way. The fact that everybody else does it some other way only means that they are wrong"
Robert J. Hanlon: "Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity."