Hello there! Would you like to bathe in deadly radiation for
no special reason fame, glory and !!SCIENCE!!?
Do you enjoy games such as Duskers - or does the combination of words "sci-fi, exploration, mysterious aliens and science" makes you all tingly?
Then come with me and start calling Scavenger SV-4 an
indie gem today.
This game came out of nowhere for me. But in this roguelike, you're a spacer that for some reason (the backstory is different each playthrough) is orbiting an extremely radioactive planet, on a spaceship equipped with a highly modular exploration rover.
Although you don't fly the ship, you can operate some of its features, go on EVA (no reason for it, most of the time), do your hourly treatment of radiation in the autodoc, and so on. You can also space yourself. You've been warned.
The core of the game lies on sending your rover into expeditions on the planet, finding derelicts and ruins, acquiring artifacts, recalling your drone, researching the alien artifacts and, most of the time, fitting them back into your drone for greater firepower, utility or survivability.
Due to being roguelike and sometimes a little slow, I don't think this will be everyone's cup of tea. But for a game made by one man in five years, I find it great and damn fun.
The little details and features just makes me happy - from animations such as the rover taking cargo from inside of it with its own little arms, to the really great ability to assign the rover's modules to any screen in the UI (see my screenshot - you can click&drag modules on the left and drop on any of the displays, and each module will have its own information display).
Not to say about the 'resource management' of spare parts. Your rover's Microphone blew up? You can't hear anything in the surface - either use a Radio Receiver and try to make something up from the static/radio frequencies, rely solely on visual from the crappy video camera, or try to find an alien microphone to research.
Your good reactor blew up? Now find a way to deal with all the heat of the crappy one.
The game also has a full PDF manual, 90s style, which includes an interesting "Useless Tips" section.
It reminds me of Duskers - albeit here you have just one drone and you only explore the single planet..that will probably give you enough trouble anyway.
By the end of the expedition, you will be given a score and epilogue. My first run, I ended up becoming a pawn shop owner when coming back. Second run I died on my way back home with absurd radiation, and became some historic explorer.
Let me know what you think.
Here's the first video I watched on it.Here's a link to the Steam store.Here's a screenshot.