![]() When launching to a different planet the game displays co-ordinates of where you’ll land and while you might choose to land near an already built house or a landmark, it doesn’t mean you’ll find life outside of local fauna. There may be some players already there, but it’s unlikely you’ll find them. Look up from your house and you’ll see several planets, each one you can visit to mine more elusive materials or hunt different animals. You’ll build a little house and fill it with machines to craft more interesting items such as warp gates or, most interestingly, gems that teleport you to other planets.īecause so much of Boundless is procedurally generated, all of the worlds are different, while not in quite the extensive fashion of No Man’s Sky. Make an axe, chop down trees to make a hammer which allows you to mine for precious metals, which makes a better axe or hammer or shovel. ![]() If you’ve played Minecraft, you’ll know what Boundless wants you to do. The only recipe I figured out myself was glue, used to make storage chests. ![]() I found myself pinning quests to my HUD half-finished and while it was helpful being guided to certain milestones, it removes any sense of self-discovery. I was mining seams of iron and copper before I knew there were quests for doing so, I’d found ancient buried technology and killed a set number of lifeforms before the game even urged me towards those goals. Using a very different system to Minecraft, it’s helpful, but of course once you get going Boundless falls into the tropes so well established by Mojang. Right from the off, the game holds your hand, telling you what to craft and how to establish a home. There are too few options and one can only imagine that everyone will look similar except maybe with variations in skin colour or horns. This all happens after you sign up for an account and create an alien to be your avatar, which is sadly a pretty dull affair. This is where you’ll buy plots and place them to ensure that other players don’t wreck your stuff and, interestingly, it also makes sure that the procedural generation doesn’t mess up your creations. When you first enter into the world of Boundless you’re instructed to craft a beacon which acts as your homestead. There are lots of seemingly abandoned houses, some with crafting tables set up, some with only a beacon flickering a lonesome flame. This is primarily because Boundless is a community game and, so far, there’s not much of a community in sight. However, for all the gorgeous planet hopping and interesting resource collecting, the game suffers from feeling sterile and empty. If the two games got together for an illicit affair and spawned a love child, this is the game that would appear in the delivery room. Let’s get this out of the way, because it’s a comparison that so many will use and honestly, it’s pretty fitting Boundless is Minecraft meets No Man’s Sky. Boundless Review: It's Minecraft meets No Man's Sky, but in desperate need of a community (Image: PH)
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