We do often include affiliate links to earn us some pennies. See more here.
Civilization: Beyond Earth is a sci fi-themed entry in the much-beloved and long-running Civilization series. It came out late last year to mixed reception and now has seen the release of its first expansion. I decided to check out Rising Tide to see if it managed to recapture some of that classic Civ magic.

YouTube Thumbnail
YouTube videos require cookies, you must accept their cookies to view. View cookie preferences.
Accept Cookies & Show   Direct Link
I have to start the review by talking about Beyond Earth's strengths and shortcomings. I never felt that the base game was outright terrible by any stretch – just dull and repetitive. Whereas in Civilization 5 unique buildings such as wonders and the ideology system added in an expansion could really change the flow of the game, the equivalents in Beyond Earth felt comparatively unimportant. Gameplay and the path to victory seemed to always be the same, no matter if you chose to lead your civilization towards uploading their consciousness to machines or altered the human genome to become more like the local wildlife. This, coupled with a few design oversights like having to micromanage trade routes, disappointingly simplistic alien life and a cumbersome orbital layer mechanic made it a hard game to love. This was incredibly frustrating as a long-time fan of the Civilization series since I thought that when it came to visuals, music and setting, they had struck a good chord.

One of the strengths of Firaxis, the developer, is their willingness to listen to the community. In a series of patches since the game's development have addressed some of the largest complaints, such as making wonders more meaningful and making trade less of a chore. It left Beyond Earth playable but still feeling somewhat like a timid iteration that barely experimented and deviated from the formula of its predecessors. It's something that the developers acknowledged after launch and, in interviews about the expansion, they seemed to show an understanding that they needed to think big and try new things.

Besides the new factions, new biome and music, there's a lot going on that returning players will pick up on immediately. The most obvious addition being aquatic settlements. There are no real special requisites to build on either on land or sea, but there are different mechanics to each. Waterborne cities cannot expand their borders the normal way and must instead either purchase tiles with energy or simply move the city to an adjacent tile. It's a very simple mechanic that makes a world of different when it comes to deciding how to expand on the sea. This, of course, comes with new aquatic units and aliens, resources, buildings and even wonders for the player to deal with. It's one of the strongest and effective changes made to the series in quite some time and I'm glad that the developers got the execution just right.

image

There's a new resource called Diplomatic Capital which players earn through buildings, events and trade deals which can be spent on a whole range of things. You can purchase buildings and units with it but you can also invest it in your civilization and grant yourself perks from a selection. You can level these up for better rewards and even swap them out from each category at an additional cost. It comes together with the new diplomatic system well, where each personality perk can mean different types of deals that the player can enact with other civilization, granting bonuses to both. The more powerful the deal, the more diplomatic points per turn it costs the player proposing it. With limited slots for deals it's a good way to give players incentives to be friendly with their neighbors to reap the best rewards.

Probably the boldest change is the overhaul of the diplomatic system. Barter has been done away with completely. Aforementioned deals are the bulk of diplomacy and different stances with different perks modify relations accordingly. You can ask someone to cooperate with you, giving you open borders and making the bonuses from your deals all the more powerful. Or just the opposite, sanctioning them. Leader's opinions of you are given in the form of little updates at the top of the screen – do something they like such as embracing an affinity or being mean to their enemy and they'll let you know. Build a wonder they coveted or wipe out alien nests when they believe in harmony , however, and their opinion will decrease. There's two gauges that keep track of how much they are willing to deal with you – and if you can't get them to cooperate through being nice they can be cowed by having enough military might. It's a transparent system that works better than the clunky old system of denunciations and friendships and makes it easy to manage relations.

There is, however, one big shortcoming in the new system and that's when it comes to war: deals cannot be negotiated and one is presented to you depending on the how well you're doing. The AI may not accept it either. I understand that in previous games the AI tends to be either too quick to surrender or demand too much but to remove the option for a white peace when you're winning and don't really want to take over half their empire is, frankly, bizarre. It's something that others have complained about, too, and I think it's something that will probably get patched. That said, it was only in one of my games where it was annoying: the AI wouldn't accept peace no matter how beaten down it was because the game kept demanding everything it had left. Other wars in other games, one of them played at standard speed on higher difficulty, had more sensible resolutions where neither side gained much.

There's a few other smaller but fun changes too. An artifact system is also a new feature and is something like archaeology in Civilization 5. Instead of generating culture in museums, however, these artifacts can be matched up and researched, giving your civilization bonuses and unlocking special buildings and wonders. It makes exploration more fun and encourages players to compete in order to try to get as many bonuses as possible. More quests have been added as well as Marvels, which are features unique to each biome type that grant rewards to your civilization if you follow their associated questlines. In addition, trade is made more interesting with the addition of automatic strategic resource trade with other civilizations, meaning that there's a real benefit to running diverse routes. Lastly, the overhaul of how unit upgrades are displayed and new types with more hybrids of affinities change up another previously weak point of the game.

image

That said, there's still a lingering clunkiness to upgrading units but it's a step in the right direction and one that doesn't take away customization options. Also, I wish they had added more policies or at least something else to the virtue system. They still don't feel as meaningful as the social policies in Civilization 5 and it's not uncommon to win a game with most of them unlocked because there's still no real need for sacrifice. Trade, despite its massive improvements through patch and expansion, still could be become a bit more strategic and thus a more important decision to correctly make. And stations, the replacement for city states, still don't really do much of anything except get killed. I think that the artifact system has the right idea in that regard – players should be rewarded for engaging in the secondary mechanics of the game clearly and directly.

In the end, Rising Tide is a good expansion. It feels like what the Gods and Kings expansion was to Civilization 5, adding interesting mechanics while still leaving room for future improvement. I couldn't go back to the base game without the expansion. It simply changes the game up in too many positive ways despite its continued shortcomings. At the same time, I wouldn't recommend Beyond Earth with Rising Tide nearly as highly as I would Civilization 5 and its two expansions to a newcomer to the series. It's an almost unfair comparison, given how mature and polished Civ 5 is after half a decade since release. But, if you have Beyond Earth already and want to get more out of it, or were thinking of picking it up on the future, then Rising Tide is a must have.

Over many years, I've spent thousands of hours playing Civilization games. In Civilization 5 alone I've reached the 1500 hour mark (just one... more... turn...). Beyond Earth only saw a comparatively measly 60 hours invested since its release. About half of that time was spent in multiplayer, where the game's flaws were less readily apparent. I've already sunk in an additional (un)healthy 16 or so hours with the expansion for the purposes of this review but I can see myself spending time in the coming few weeks playing more. It's not a feverish addiction yet but it's a start :P. If Firaxis continues to deliver with free patches and more expansion material in the future, taking feedback from fans, then it's not hard to imagine that the state of the game at launch will be completely forgotten. After all, when speaking of Civilization 3, 4 or 5, everyone takes for granted the final product and seldom remember just how much their expansions and patches added to their respective game.

I'll end the review with a few boring technical notes. The expansion, same as the base game, was ported by Aspyr and they've been busy taking care of a few graphical glitches and missing textures a few Linux users have experienced since launch. These seem to have affected mostly Nvidia users and have, apparently, since been cleared up. Other than that performance hasn't really changed so if you could run the base game you should be good for the expansion.

You can grab Civilization: Beyond Earth – Rising Tide on Steam. Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
0 Likes
About the author -
author picture
History, sci-fi, technology, cooking, writing and playing games are things I enjoy very much. I'm always keen to try different genres of games and discover all the gems out there.

Oh and the name doesn't mean anything but coincidentally could be pronounced as "Buttery" which suits me just fine.
See more from me
The comments on this article are closed.
11 comments
Page: 1/2»
  Go to:

Maquis196 Oct 10, 2015
View PC info
  • Supporter Plus
Since time is important to me more then anything these days, I have the feeling that I should wait for the next expansion pack. I played Civ5 when it was released and it basically put me off the game forever even though I own all the DLC's (and hell, Civ on Linux! still can't get over that) but too me Civ4 is still the perfect civ, and I have tried Civ5 when it got released on our platform.

So, ill buy this (Thanks Aspyr) and wait for next one. Sounds like then it would rival Alpha Centauri. In the meantime back to EU4 and Crusader Kings 2!
Liam Dawe Oct 10, 2015
I also felt a little underwhelmed by Beyond Earth, and it certainly looks like Rising Tide makes it much more interesting.

Might have to get it.
Keyrock Oct 10, 2015
I'm going to wait a bit more to see if another expansion comes out and then for the inevitable Complete Edition. Once I see the Complete Edition for 50% off or more on sale, I'll scoop it up. Until then, I'll continue to stick with Civ V.
Segata Sanshiro Oct 10, 2015
I'm glad they've improved the base game (which was pretty underwhelming), but it's still a huge slap in the face to have to pay almost £50 in total to get the features which the base game itself should have had. Civ 5 suffered from the same apparently intentional lack of content when it first came out and then became a very good game with all the expansions.... But the standalone game was still better than the standalone BE.

It might be good business to do things this way, but it's just going to drive people away from the franchise.
oldrocker99 Oct 10, 2015
View PC info
  • Supporter Plus
I've stayed away from CIV:BE, owing to the large number of negative reviews. Besides, I can get that old Alpha Centauri feel from (a) playing AC with wine, and (b) playing Pandora:First Contact, which is costs a hell of a lot less than CIV:BE, or did when released (I notice that CIV:BE is $29.95, down from $39.95 on release).

If it takes a non-free DLC to make the game playable, I say fie on that. Fie, I tell you. That's the province of free patches (see Wasteland: The Director's Cut, which will add a ton of new content, and which will be free on release to all owners of W2), not DLC, which is supposed to add more content and tweaks, not just to make the game playable.

Fie, I tell you.


Last edited by oldrocker99 on 10 October 2015 at 4:50 pm UTC
gojul Oct 10, 2015
I have an annoying bug with BE (not present in Civ5) : if you bring terrain quality upper than minimal terrain textures just disappear ! At first I thought it was normal but after searching a bit I'm not alone.

Driver : NVidia 352.41 on GF 970

I hope it will be fixed
rudeboyskunk Oct 11, 2015
Thanks for the review.

I got Civ5 when it came out for Linux with all the DLC on that release sale in which everything together was roughly $12. I'm going to wait until I can get BE for around the same price.
BTRE Oct 11, 2015
View PC info
  • Contributing Editor
Quoting: Segata SanshiroI'm glad they've improved the base game (which was pretty underwhelming), but it's still a huge slap in the face to have to pay almost £50 in total to get the features which the base game itself should have had. Civ 5 suffered from the same apparently intentional lack of content when it first came out and then became a very good game with all the expansions.... But the standalone game was still better than the standalone BE.
Quoting: oldrocker99If it takes a non-free DLC to make the game playable, I say fie on that. Fie, I tell you. That's the province of free patches (see Wasteland: The Director's Cut, which will add a ton of new content, and which will be free on release to all owners of W2), not DLC, which is supposed to add more content and tweaks, not just to make the game playable.

The game was playable, just comparatively (to Civ 5 + expansions) bland. I think that calling it an intentional lack of content or claiming that they owe anything else beyond the patches they release for free is disingenuous. Games cost money to make and once you define your project scope you can't go adding in features late in development without risking to screw yourself financially. Like I noted in my review, I still got 60ish hours of gameplay from the product they previously released, so I can't with a straight face say it was bad or unplayable. Was I disappointed that they squandered potential? Sure but I feel like that about most entertainment. If I hadn't had any fun, I'd have stopped playing much earlier. If it had been an 8 hour long AAA FPS for that price, then yeah, I guess I'd have felt I wasn't getting my moneys' worth.

As for the "Free DLC" - they're really not doing that just out the goodness of their hearts, you know. Much like the upcoming Divinity: Original Sin revamp, Wasteland 2 is getting that update because of financial reasons. Mainly that their launches coincide with console release dates. If it wasn't for that, I very much doubt that these studios would just hand out radically improved versions of their games. One way or another studios have to recoup the money they spend on development. Money, sadly, still makes the world go around.

Quoting: KeyrockI'm going to wait a bit more to see if another expansion comes out and then for the inevitable Complete Edition. Once I see the Complete Edition for 50% off or more on sale, I'll scoop it up. Until then, I'll continue to stick with Civ V.
You'll probably end up waiting two or more years given how Civ 5 went but, yeah, patient gamers get all the best deals.

Quoting: GuestIt's a real shame performance never got optimized for this game. [...]
Of course, devs only focusing on OpenGL from the get go, and Vulkan, will help fix this.
I get *acceptable* performance running on mesa with my 7870 and I imagine it's much better on Nvidia from what I've seen in the forums. It's a turn-based strategy so I don't need 30+ fps to have a good time on large maps. Still, it's nowhere near what I'd get on Windows, sure. Beyond Earth was one of the few games to use AMD's Mantle on that platform and it runs like butter on hardware like mine. It'd be interesting to see if future Firaxis games get Vulkan support, I think they'd be open to it.
Segata Sanshiro Oct 11, 2015
Quoting: BTREThe game was playable, just comparatively (to Civ 5 + expansions) bland. I think that calling it an intentional lack of content or claiming that they owe anything else beyond the patches they release for free is disingenuous. Games cost money to make and once you define your project scope you can't go adding in features late in development without risking to screw yourself financially. Like I noted in my review, I still got 60ish hours of gameplay from the product they previously released, so I can't with a straight face say it was bad or unplayable. Was I disappointed that they squandered potential? Sure but I feel like that about most entertainment. If I hadn't had any fun, I'd have stopped playing much earlier. If it had been an 8 hour long AAA FPS for that price, then yeah, I guess I'd have felt I wasn't getting my moneys' worth.

As for the "Free DLC" - they're really not doing that just out the goodness of their hearts, you know. Much like the upcoming Divinity: Original Sin revamp, Wasteland 2 is getting that update because of financial reasons. Mainly that their launches coincide with console release dates. If it wasn't for that, I very much doubt that these studios would just hand out radically improved versions of their games. One way or another studios have to recoup the money they spend on development. Money, sadly, still makes the world go around.

Hence why I said it makes good business sense to do what they do, but they're not making friends (the bad reviews with the base game speak for themselves). I'm not opposed to the idea of DLC at all, I just really dislike the idea of intentionally excluding content for a game to then flog it an an additional price later on - I don't think that's a disingenuous statement at all, that's very clearly what happened here. Most people were OK with it with Civ 5 (when the base game had features missing which were in Civ 4) but with BE it's just way too blatant and made even worse by the fact that the expansion costs almost as much as the base game.

Take Paradox as the example of how to do DLC right. The base games are amazing (and continue to get improved upon for YEARS after release), while the expansions are reasonably priced and aimed at people who have already enjoyed the base game a lot and want some new content. There's a reason why so many people love Paradox as a company and will drop £10-15 on some DLC without thinking twice about it. They've developed an enthusiastic and loyal fanbase from doing things "right" and not just hid behind the success of a brand under the false pretence that they can just release anything at any price and people will pay.

To make things clear though, I don't think Firaxis OWE anyone anything and they clearly have no obligation to add free content - I think that attitude of entitlement which many gamers have is misplaced. But I felt conned after paying full price for the base game and now I'm in the same camp as @keyrock - I'll wait until a "complete edition" comes out and then grab that on sale and will do the same for any future Firaxis game as long as they continue doing what is unfortunately becoming very common in the games industry.
BTRE Oct 11, 2015
View PC info
  • Contributing Editor
@Segata Sanshiro
Sorry, but to claim that they intentionally cut content to put it in an addon later is disingenuous. Pray tell, what did BE cut from Civ 5 that then made its way into the expansion? Or what did Civ 5 cut from Civ 4 that then made it into both of its expansions? In the former - nothing and in the latter: the only feature that was in civ 4 that eventually made it to civ 5 through expansions was religion. Corporations didn't make it in, neither did vassals nor splitting up empires with colonial nations. Not to mention that the religion mechanic was radically different in purpose and focus anyhow. So yeah, I still think that it's an argument that doesn't hold water. You can say that vanilla Civ 5 or BE weren't very good, and I'd argree, but there is zero evidence to state that they intentionally gimped their games.

It's funny that you should bring up Paradox - I'm a big fanboy of theirs. But still, even I can recall all the bitching from the player base with the CK2 expansions adding playable factions like Muslims and people complaining that they should have been playable to being with. I think that their DLC model is superior to most but you have to realize that many of the arguments people are using here about the game not being 'complete' applies to them as well.

Firaxis could stand to do a better job with their games on release but I certainly don't think that they've tried to deceive and con anyone. Reading through interviews, it's clear that their designers have free reign to do what they like, which doesn't always work. XCOM reboot was great but the departure of the Civ 5 lead designer shortly after release showed that not all of their experiments pan out. Ultimately though, you're free to vote with your wallet. I know that I don't feel too burned by the thousands of hours that I've gotten out of their games.
While you're here, please consider supporting GamingOnLinux on:

Reward Tiers: Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal.

This ensures all of our main content remains totally free for everyone! Patreon supporters can also remove all adverts and sponsors! Supporting us helps bring good, fresh content. Without your continued support, we simply could not continue!

You can find even more ways to support us on this dedicated page any time. If you already are, thank you!
The comments on this article are closed.