

You could say that FarSky’s a far cry from the aquatic adventure game we were wrongly hoping for, and you’d be right. We enjoyed the actual experience of playing it - being lost underwater and all - but after we finished we were left wanting a more fulfilling experience. That’s it, we don’t really have anything more to say about FarSky. Sebastian, you liar - life under the sea is just an endless cycle of predation. When you’re hurt, you need food, so you hunt fish. If you can’t see the vicious cycle forming here, let us explain: when you hunt fish, you’ll inevitably be hurt by sharks. Third, every single fish you kill has the unfortunate side effect of attracting sharks. Craft a knife so you can re-enact scenes from Psycho spliced with Finding Nemo.
Farsky base building upgrade#
However, until you can upgrade your home base with a proper potato farm, you’ll be hunting fish for sustenance. Second, you need food to heal and control your hunger. SUNK: The only man-made highlights you'd find in the undersea map are shipwrecks littered with treasure. Gold is the most important resource as you’ll need it to craft better diving helmets so you can dive deeper and better air tanks so you can explore further. We have so little to say about FarSky that we’ve decied to spend the rest of this section giving you advice on what to do, because the game doesn’t make a few important things obvious enough.įirst, hoard all the gold you can find. We had already seen everything FarSky has to offer.

We could have continued in Survival Mode (where we’d only have one life, no respawns) or or in Sandbox Mode (where we’d have no objective but to survive) but there was no reason for us to. We finished the main Adventure mode in as little as three hours. These correspond neatly to the three tiers of equipment upgrades you can craft, but they’re not the kind of environment that rewards the naturally adventurous. There are exactly three levels to the sea - underwater, deep underwater and super deep underwater - and that’s it. GLOW BALLS: You'll find more luminescent life the deeper - and darker - you go into the ocean.
Farsky base building full#
In some of the nicer moments of FarSky, we’d find ourselves lost in the game world, walking through towering forests of kelp as schools of colourful fish swim by.Īs we looked up, we’d see majestic whales and mantas going about their merry way, ignorant of the tiny human returning to his carefully-built underwater home while carrying a pack full of freshly mined ore. This isn’t the kind of game that we’d forget any time soon. Sure, FarSky ain’t Far Cry and its graphics engine is relatively simple, but the visual aesthetics and soundtrack do a fantastic job in making you feel like you’re the only man/woman walking on the seabed. We basically have one good thing and one bad thing to say about FarSky. He’ll need weapons to defend against the dangerous sea life that he’ll often encounter, food to lower his hunger and an underwater house where he can restore his air supply. Now it’s up to him to gather all the pieces and make his escape.Īs with most survival games, you know the drill: Nathan has to mine resources and improve his equipment so he can traverse deeper into the ocean. His submarine - his only ticket to the surface - had been broken into multiple parts and scattered across the ocean floor. We started the game in the standard Adventure mode, where we played as a diver named Nathan who ran into an unfortunate accident. SHARK ATTACK: Why are you still reading this caption? Run! It’s just you, the seabed and a host of mostly-normal (and very hungry) marine life. No fantastic underwater cities, no magical adventures and certainly no singing lobsters. FarSky offers you one thing and one thing only: the experience of living underwater. Unfortunately, our expectations were a little too high for something that goes deep underwater. Perhaps it’s all those stories of Atlantis we read as a kid, or perhaps we envisioned sealed underwater cities ala Bioshock.
Farsky base building Pc#
This PC title is an underwater survival game where you’ll spend equal amounts of time crafting, exploring, chasing fish to eat and running away from fish that want to eat you.Īt first, the thought of an underwater survival sim was very exciting to us. There’s a certain optimism in this statement that completely ignores how life underwater often involves evading a non-stop parade of aquatic predators.įortunately, we have FarSky to rectify this idyllic misconception.


In respect to living under the sea, Sebastian the lobster once sang, “Darling it’s better. It’s less about whimsical singing lobsters and more about running away from sharks. FarSky is a survival/crafting game under the sea.
