cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/48176362

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/48176361

I like community builders and games that I can keep a world for years and grow, watch it evolve. I enjoy Rimworld. ARK evolved series is good.

Bonus if it’s multiplayer capable LAN and not online.

Oxygen not included is nice but mentally taxing sometimes. I prefer laid back chill games with economy and farming. 2d or 3d doesn’t matter. I don’t mind trying indie games. Survival based games are nice. I’m not super pick and choose.

Give me your greatest joy in game form. I’ve heard Stardew Valley is good. I tried it, reminds me of a gameboy game. I could not get into the game. My character kept falling asleep like 14 times in a day.

  • Rothe@piefed.social
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    6 days ago

    Kenshi. Sandbox rpg, citybuilder and more. Pretty unique and unforgiving, but the replayability is endless if you are into that sort of thing (lots and lots of mods as well).

    I’ve played Stellaris for years, although I am really not liking the direction Paradox is going with their AI, and it really puts me off of their games.

  • Black616Angel@discuss.tchncs.de
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    5 days ago

    Factorio is great, how has no one mentioned it yet? Also Dwarf Fortress, Into the breach and “FTL - Faster Than Light”.

    They all have native ports and are moddable.

    Factorial and FTL even have huge overhaul mods, that change most stuff so they don’t really get boring.

  • Nickelalloy@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    I recnetly started playing a game called “StarSector”

    Basically Mount & Blade in space someone said.

    Really good so far, have not played more than 30h due to lack of time to play due changed life/work situation.

    Edit: forgot to say that it is Single player but tons of mods that feel very much in line with the game.

    • marxismtomorrow@lemmy.today
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      4 days ago

      Fun fact, the devs encourage people to share a serial-key to those wanting to try out the game, so you don’t need to purchase it in case you wind up not liking it.

      Here’s a serial-key courtesy of an edgy vtuber that uses a war criminal as an avatar: TEITW-HP9ON-A7HMK-WA6YA

      Again this is not piracy, the Devs actively encourage this. Which is awesome. So if you like the game, buy the game, encourage this behavior.

  • Hiro8811@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    Satisfactory, building game, a bit heavier on resources since it’s 3d but it’s good

    • Sinirlan@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      There is also Factorio, game that inspired Satisfactory, less demanding on hardware as its using top-down view and retro graphics.

  • HM King Charles III DG FD@feddit.uk
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    5 days ago

    Minecraft: Java Edition. You need internet the first time, but afterwards it’s fully playable offline and also has LAN support built in.

  • EuroNutellaMan@sh.itjust.works
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    5 days ago

    Vintage Story. It’s a very good survival, very customizable experience too.

    I think it’s a game that shines best in a multiplayer civilization RP tbh but even as a single player game it’s a very nice survival. It may look similar to Minecraft at first but it is very very different and in all the good ways.

    Plus mod support is so good, by design, even the website itself has 1-click installs.

    Oh and it has chiseling.

  • cmnybo@discuss.tchncs.de
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    6 days ago

    There is Luanti if you want something Minecraft like. It has a built in modding API and tons of mods available. It supports multiplayer over the LAN. It’s also very lightweight, it will run on almost anything.

  • MalReynolds@slrpnk.net
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    6 days ago

    Valheim has a local server you can set up that has it work offline. Shame it’s not on gog, but it’s on Humble which I don’t believe has online checks like Steam, but I had it working with steam offline mode.

  • Solumbran@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    Do you know of Songs of Syx?

    A bit like a large-scale rimworld, with a focus on managing a big population and world diplomacy/war.

    A bit hard to get into, though.

    Also, what about project zomboid? A bit far from your description I guess, but who knows.

    • JakoJakoJako13@piefed.social
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      5 days ago

      I wish I could recommend this game. It clicks all my boxes for this type of simulation. Problem is it runs like dog shit on my PC. Without fail on both native and proton versions it will drop frames after about 20 minutes of game play. Doesn’t matter if it’s a new map or a big city. The game is super smooth then out of nowhere the frame rate tanks to a stuttery mess. I’ve looked around for a solution and it seems like there is a fix for the problem but it doesn’t ever work on my machine. Something tells me that writing the game in Java means the memory management side of the code goes fucking bonkers after 20 minutes. I’ve tried the discord and Steam forums but nothing ever gets resolved.

      Then there’s an even more extreme bug where if the game doesn’t like my Wayland compositor it hard locks my PC on startup. It’s so frustrating. It’s a great game but it’s technically flawed.

    • Micromot@piefed.social
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      4 days ago

      I tried the demo of song of styx but didn’t really manage to do anything because I didn’t understand the menu symbols. Is there a tutorial or something that I missed?

      Edit: The game didn’t properly do full screen because of my settings so the bar with the build menu etc was not visible, I am now able to play just fine

      • Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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        6 days ago

        I think there is a tutorial but I didn’t touch it, I just started my hemp empire.

      • Solumbran@lemmy.world
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        5 days ago

        I don’t know how long ago you tried, now the game is reaching near completion and there is a tutorial.

        It is pretty hard to get into IMO, you need to get used to many concepts and sometimes weird menus and such, that is the problem of the game. I guess you can give a try to the tutorial now and see if it spikes your interest more, the game has changed a lot over the past years.

  • Auster@thebrainbin.org
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    6 days ago

    Starbound and Terraria come to mind. Also Planet Centauri and maybe Stardew Valley.

    Also Minecraft if a DRM-free version other than the Pi Edition (which is abandoned) ever comes.

    • HM King Charles III DG FD@feddit.uk
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      5 days ago

      Since when did Minecraft have DRM? The only real DRM on it is logging in with a microsoft account that owns the game. You don’t even need to use the official launcher.

              • NewNewAugustEast@lemmy.zip
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                4 days ago

                If I don’t want to use them, I am not making an account. I already have a billion accounts I don’t need yet another, and certainly not a Microsoft one.

                But go back to the original question OP posed: two distinct things, Offline and Long Term.

                I don’t trust Microsoft, Minecraft is dead to me and I cannot count on them long-term.

                Requiring an account is not offline.

                So Minecraft does not meet op’s requirements.

      • Auster@thebrainbin.org
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        5 days ago

        Afaik, the Java version is only accessible with an account, 3rd party launchers potentially being considered cracking means. Bedrock version is tied to its platforms’ DRMs, like Win10’s Microsoft Store validation and a hard-to-access folder which changing permissions is a nightmare, and Google Play Services’ validation on Android.

        As for console versions, major consoles have DRM to their games by default, with a case like PS Vita games even requiring the user to create a dummy validation file by launching the game once to be able to use backups (also iirc all Vita cartridges have a self-explanatory gro0:/DRM/ folder). And as for cartridge overall, be them Nintendo’s, Sony’s, etc., being hard to access their contents due to using non-standard could be considered DRM, and some cases formally considering as in the DMCA.

        So sounds to me like it has DRM in most versions, yeah.

        • HM King Charles III DG FD@feddit.uk
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          5 days ago

          3rd party launchers potentially being considered cracking means.

          No, they directly integrate with the authentication servers and download the files straight from mojang. You even get an official prompt in a browser login window to connect your account to the third party launcher.

            • HM King Charles III DG FD@feddit.uk
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              4 days ago

              If it is DRM, it’s hardly the DRM that people complain about. It’s pretty ethical DRM. If this was a strictly offline computer, you can even install Minecraft on a USB drive and move the installation over.

              • Auster@thebrainbin.org
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                4 days ago

                I’d need to check how long the validation lasts, since it may be well be like emulated PS1 games from the PSN (“PSOne Classics”) and Steam’s offline mode, both that take a few years to reset, but neither permanent.

                But about people complaining, they usually do so only for problems that are obvious to them. And the obvious is usually immediate.

                And if it takes a few months/years to expire, I’d say it is not ethical, but pretty vile, as then people will not notice the problem at first, and when they do, they may no longer access their contents.

                And considering people that forgot to upgrade their original Mojang accounts, or didn’t have access to the needed tools while the change to Microsoft accounts happened, there is a precedent for Minecraft validation methods to not become available any longer.

                Also, from my experience with Windows Vista, where even though I have an actually original key for it, if I try to install Vista nowadays and try to connect it to the internet, it will lock the whole system from my access on the next start-up, I’d imagine because it can’t reach the validation servers. So I’ve seen first hand how Microsoft’s preservation goes over several years. And since Minecraft may also be used online due to multiplayer, checks may still happen, and being nowadays also a Microsoft product, it may suffer from the same vices of origin.

                • HM King Charles III DG FD@feddit.uk
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                  3 days ago

                  I’d need to check how long the validation lasts, since it may be well be like emulated PS1 games from the PSN (“PSOne Classics”) and Steam’s offline mode, both that take a few years to reset, but neither permanent.

                  It would depend on the launcher. Considering that cracked launchers do exist which just bypass this step entirely, I’m sure there are plenty which only really check once just to be on the legal side of the law. Third party launchers are a thing - there is nothing stopping the application from just running the game. I don’t think it would even be possible to permit third party launchers and somehow have the game break itself after a set period of time without internet connection, except for maybe an EULA which they would just have to be trusted to follow. And the EULA doesn’t mention third party launchers.

                  Cracking also isn’t really illegal in a lot of jurisdictions if you already own a licence for the game. But you wouldn’t even need to crack it for Minecraft anyway.