Star Citizen - Identity Crisis - Still Doesn't Know What It Is...

Posted on the 29 July 2018 by Freeplanet @CUST0D1AN
six years down the line, and (while No Man's Sky is suddenly looking full-bodied and finished and proper) Star Citizen from CIG with ten times the number of devs in L.A., Texas, Frankfurt and Wilmslow is languishing in FIH or first-iteration hell.
FIH means all its current gaming features implemented to first-functionality level. Nothing seems to have been thought out further than this initial two-week sprint-task solution. No integration of systems. No grand overscheme to dictate variety and flavor of gaming experience. No unity of galactic vision or play style.
Six years down the toilet, not only is Star Citizen lacking a REAL DESIGN PROTOTYPE for interplanetary travel and trading (they're just hoping it all works when they plug it in) there's a more serious issue of IDENTITY CRISIS. Six years down the design and production path, Star Citizen is struggling with fundamental design choices that should have, could have, been made years ago. And it has to start making them, or it can never make a game of this idea. Star Citizen needs a spring clean.
MainStream or SimGeek:
currently, the control system seems to heavily pander to the geeky hotas or flight-sim crowd. Who has such a crazy set up? Nobody. What a real mainstream game like Star Citizen needs is a simple 2D mouse-spherical-surface THRUST-based (not launched from Space Carrier i.e. SPEED-based) control system for all driven items in the game, be that your character or ship or golf buggy.
Manual or Thinky:
when you look-at a button and interact with it touching it, "What the hell are you doing?" Why is there a button? Buttons are for TOUCHING. Either take out the buttons or button-ise everything so that you can PHYSICALLY INTERACT with the game on a far-higher level than this simple tw-option solution offers the dev-team. I don't like thinky, when it could be touchy. Or vice versa...
Hierarchy or Gravity:
right now, when you 'land' your character on a ship or 'land' your ship in a moon's atmosphere, the game plays a clever hierarchy trick on you. It ADDS YOU TO THE STRUCTURE of the thing you're 'land'ing on. You're a part of that hierarchy, like a dead-man's hand is part of a quivering Frankenstein monster. Real space or atmospheric flight mechanics can only come about once 'calculated gravity' hits the game, but then this is something else to add to an already stuffed project that's testing even the best system beyond its limits.
Story or Sandbox:
it's gotta just state what it is. Right now we're waiting to see how Squadron 42 (the story military version) comes out to see how that will dictate how the Star Citizen player interacts with assets in the 'verse. But they won't say it, "Star Citizen is a story-driven-sim with the player logging into the world as a guest," if they say that, at least they will have stated their gaming intention. Star Citizen won't be a sandbox, it'll be a pop-into-story multi-player universe. And that'll be it. But this silence on the 'story' issue... come on, "Will there be Military Conscription of the Civilian Players during their time in the 'verse?" etc.
I personally wanted my AI spaceship to be my Star Citizen-sandbox gaming buddy - the Reddit shot that idea to shit. LOL. But I know this 'verse-guide entity who knows more about your game than you "would be great" in the same way that the horse in westerns is the gunslinger's best friend. And evidence shows that no thought at all has been given to this.
My old producer in games used to say, "You can't just throw people at it," and this might be what we're seeing here. It'll never feel finished. It'll never release. Without a massive overhaul of systems, design, input, HUD, interface, physics, galactic travel. It just won't because it won't ever stick together as a final vision. It'll always be a by-word for shat-on-the-fence gaming. Sorry, Chris needs to step up to the plate and totally unify this game vision so that all the mainstream backers can enjoy a mainstream product. That's all, folks.