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'Stellar Tactics' [Official Site, Steam] is a rather expansive looking space exploration RPG and the good news is that the developer already has plans for a Linux version.

From the Steam forum:
QuoteLinux will be supported. I moved a sticky thread to another forum. It will be go into BETA after the final release of the game along with a Mac version. If I can find time, and it will be difficult, I may try to release a test build sooner.


About the game
Bringing back the nostalgia, excitement and wonder of classic RPG's, Stellar Tactics will thrill you with a compelling narrative, deep strategic squad-based ground combat and rewarding open world space exploration. To survive, you will need to build your team's skills and equip your party and ships with the best weapons, armor and equipment you can find. With 10,000 sectors, tens of thousands of solar systems and millions of planets to discover, you can spend countless hours exploring, fighting, trading and building a party of seasoned veterans that can dominate the challenges of deep space.

Thanks for the info webcreature!

Looks pretty good, I like how expansive it seems in features. The settings seems like exactly the type of game I am into as well. Excited for this one. Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
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I am the owner of GamingOnLinux. After discovering Linux back in the days of Mandrake in 2003, I constantly came back to check on the progress of Linux until Ubuntu appeared on the scene and it helped me to really love it. You can reach me easily by emailing GamingOnLinux directly. Find me on Mastodon.
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11 comments
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Beamboom Oct 6, 2016
Looks really really cool, but - sigh - why do every indie RPG have to be turn-based?

I'm sure some will now slap some real-time indie RPG titles on the table but seriously, they are in the clear minority. Turn based totally dominates on the smaller RPG scene.

Why? Is it cause it's easier to design/program?
Cybolic Oct 6, 2016
Oh look! It's Michael Biehn! Glad to see his likeness on a non MGS or FarCry game ;)
Mountain Man Oct 6, 2016
Quoting: BeamboomIs it cause it's easier to design/program?
I think it's largely due to the fact that RPG combat has its roots in Dungeon and Dragons. People who play RPGs tend to be more thoughtful and contemplative in their approach which doesn't really work in a real-time setting, and I have yet to encounter a real-time combat system that is as deep, complex, and engaging as turn-based systems. Even "real-time with pause" is inherently shallower than its turn-based counterpart and tends to devolve into simply spamming your most powerful skills.


Last edited by Mountain Man on 6 October 2016 at 3:33 pm UTC
whm1974 Oct 6, 2016
Quoting: BeamboomLooks really really cool, but - sigh - why do every indie RPG have to be turn-based?

I'm sure some will now slap some real-time indie RPG titles on the table but seriously, they are in the clear minority. Turn based totally dominates on the smaller RPG scene.

Why? Is it cause it's easier to design/program?
Because some of us enjoy turn based combat. And like Mountain Man said, The games are better.
Beamboom Oct 6, 2016
Quoting: whm1974Because some of us enjoy turn based combat. And like Mountain Man said, The games are better.

The last statement is obviously subjective, it's all depending on what you're after.

I'm in it for the story and the characters, to enjoy a RPG universe and be my characters. Exploration, decisions, shaping character(s), explosive action, fantastic abilities, skill trees, storyline, intrigues - that's RPG to me.

Having the entire game freeze on me and transform into a chess game whenever action (could) appear just rips me totally out of the setting. All of a sudden it's a strategy game with pieces on a board. Your characters are just pawns.

And to your first statement: I don't object that some of you enjoy it. Not one bit. I do not ask for a termination of the genre. I'm all for diversity.

What I'm saying is just that it's such an enormous imbalance between TB and RT in indie rpgs. And since we on the Linux platform pretty much are left for the indies to cater to, I find it really annoying.

But most of all, why? It's not like action RPGs don't sell!


Last edited by Beamboom on 7 October 2016 at 7:41 am UTC
Beamboom Oct 6, 2016
duplet


Last edited by Beamboom on 6 October 2016 at 3:30 pm UTC
Mountain Man Oct 6, 2016
Quoting: whm1974
Quoting: BeamboomLooks really really cool, but - sigh - why do every indie RPG have to be turn-based?

I'm sure some will now slap some real-time indie RPG titles on the table but seriously, they are in the clear minority. Turn based totally dominates on the smaller RPG scene.

Why? Is it cause it's easier to design/program?
Because some of us enjoy turn based combat. And like Mountain Man said, The games are better.
To be fair, I never said that it makes the games better, only that the more thoughtful approach encouraged by turn-based combat tends to appeal to the kinds of people who play RPGs. It might make the games better for them, but that's not an absolute qualification.
Keyrock Oct 6, 2016
They lost me at "Procedural Universe". 2016 is the year procedural generation officially entered the negative category.
neowiz73 Oct 6, 2016
i seen sci-fi sandbox rpg, i'm hooked already :)
Beamboom Oct 7, 2016
Quoting: KeyrockThey lost me at "Procedural Universe". 2016 is the year procedural generation officially entered the negative category.

Very much agreed. It's becoming a synonym for "can't be arsed with designing large enough play fields".

Only exception is for multiplayer exploration-based games, in order to provide new maps to explore. Example: Procedural maps in Seven Days To Die. Once you know where everything is in the hand-crafted one the exploration bit dies.


Last edited by Beamboom on 7 October 2016 at 7:41 am UTC
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