To those of you who say ED has little to learn from NMS, you couldn't be more wrong. I know you are here because you love ED, but take the rose tint glasses off yo.
I have been highly critical of some of the decisions FD has made with 2.1.05 and I had every reason to give NMS a chance to "lure" me away from Elite at least as a temporary distraction until 2.2 launched. It couldn't even manage that.
Even on the most simple of levels I can reel off a good number of things ED could learn from NMS :
* Multiple inventories and being able to transfer cleanly from one to another and back again without all the associated aggro, we can't even do that with the SRV yet.
Don't get me started on this. The only thing your suit/ship/multitool are in the game is INVENTORY SLOTS. That's it. The different ships and multitools in the game are just placeholders for inventory slots. They are purely cosmetic and the only goal is to get a "bigger" ship with more slots or a "bigger" multitool with more slots. The promised differentiation between fighter/trader/explorer ships is COMPLETELY absent in the game. I was hoping for a least some meaningful ship choices and customization options, it turns out all the ship does is provide an array of inventory slots to "fill" with weapons/cargo/mods. The only reason inventory "management" exists in NMS is because your "ship" is nothing more than a collection of inventory slots.
* Walking around space stations, NMS does that pretty slickly, ED just gives you a text menu. Sure there's new interiors but you're not going to be able to get out and investigate them.
You have a few small rooms to access on a station, that's it. You don't even have access to a shipyard, you have to literally wait for an NPC ship to fly to the station and land, then walk up to the ship and ask the purchase price. There is nothing you even need to do on stations that you can't do at any of the trading outposts that have market terminal access, with the possible exception of having ships arriving at regular intervals if you want to buy a larger ship.
* Featured, detailed terrains on landing, NMS's might be as shallow as ED's barren planets, but critically there's -more- types. We're STILL on Barren planets, if we're not at least on Volcanic, Frozen and a few others by 3.0 something has gone badly wrong.
Don't even go there, NMS planetary terrain is terrible. The graphics are even worse than the nerfed textures we got when they had to downgrade the original 2.1 planetary textures in Horizons due to performance/pop-in issues. Not only that, but all of the NMS planets have similar (if not exactly the same) gravity and size, there is no discernible differences between my run and jump speeds on the 6 different planets I visited in my starting system. There is also no difference in planetary geography in terms of axial tilt, polar ice caps, etc. I can't even fly to a planet's pole or equator and see any difference in the weather. You basically fly to a planet and it's just a giant, repetitive sandbox with the exact same terrain covering the entire planet's surface, there is no point in going to different parts of the planet to see anything different.
* Being able to play offline. This is the kicker, you can PAUSE in No Mans Sky, go get a tea, or go to the loo, and you can resume right where you left off, even in mid flight, try doing that in ED, or better yet, try maintaining a game in ED with a flaky connection. Go ahead, I'll wait![]()
Offline play is actually the biggest flaw in the game. Other than naming/uploading your discoveries the game is EXACTLY THE SAME whether you play it online or offline. There is NO POINT in even being online other than this issue. There is no multiplayer, no way of interacting with other players, it is not even an online game at all in terms of gameplay. The only reason NMS can provide an "offline mode" at all is because it simply does not use the online connection to interact with the players in any meaningful way.
Now there's some -real- lessons ED can learn from NMS.
Asking what Elite can learn from NMS is like asking what an Honor roll student can learn from the delinquent, pot-smoking kid who doesn't attend classes because everyone told him he was a "genius" growing up when it turned out he really wasn't.
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