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For Surviving Mars, 25 customer reviews collected from 2 e-commerce sites, and the average score is 4.1.

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28.4.2018

Surviving Mars is a deep real-time strategy game that sees you build and sustain a colony on Mars. With a strong soundtrack, great visuals and an impressive amount of micromanagement options, Surviving Mars is a fun and rewarding strategy game. The opening few hours are a little slow as you get to grips with the questionable control scheme and mechanics of the game but after some initial trial and error obtaining and sustaining key resources and saving your colony from disaster becomes a little easier. The game has a steep learning curve too and a lack of a tutorial and variety in the latter periods of core gameplay damages what’s otherwise a solid strategy offering.At the beginning of thegame you’re dropped onto a promising slab of land on the Red Planet with the task of building the foundations for sustainable human life. The early parts of Surviving Mars involve harnessing and maintaining electrical power, building a manageable food source and keeping a steady stream of water flowing through the colony. With these core components under your belt the gameplay becomes more challenging as you begin building domes to house colonists and micromanage their needs. It’s here that Surviving Mars increases its challenge by juggling the colonists’ needs whilst growing and maintaining the overall construction on the planet. There’s a fair amount of resource management needed here too and effectively managing this can be the difference between a successful and unsuccessful colony.Most of the busy work on the ground originates from three vehicle types that aid you through most of the building. Explorers are used to navigate the vast map and scan for more resources, gain research points and unlock perks, the transport vehicle is used for transporting resources between different points and the Rover acts as a hub point for worker drones that carry out most of the busy work but only within the radius of that vehicle. Utilising these to your advantage are key but it can take some time to get used to this style of play.Those expecting a fast-paced simulation like Cities: Skylines to build a thriving colony quickly will certainly be left disappointed. Surviving Mars is decidedly slow, especially early on as you get to grips with the control scheme and understanding how to harvest resources on the planet. The lack of a tutorial mode or any substantial information around what you’re supposed to do, what buildings to prioritise and when to make the jump to making Mars habitable takes the shine off an otherwise solid title. The control scheme is a little awkward too, with certain buttons mapped a little awkwardly which results in opening the wrong menu, accidentally pausing the game time or selecting the wrong notification which is far more hassle than it should be.To aid with your quest, Surviving Mars includes the option to restock an array of supplies via cargo rockets from Earth which drops a rocket to your chosen spot on the map. After your first humans have survived for 10 Sols (in-game Mars days), an additional option opens up to allow more humans to colonise Mars and from there grow to multiple domes and more complex societal structures. What’s particularly interesting here is the ability to sift through an exhaustive list of perks and flaws to find the right fit humans for your colony. Want to inhabit the planet with crazy, religious fanatics from Russia? How about a lazy bunch of vegan gamblers from Great Britain? All of this and more can be customised and tweaked including specific domes only allowing certain demographics in further enhancing the ability to be as broad or specific as you like which brings more variety to the core gameplay loop.Researching new buildings does help a little too and whether it be fungal farms and nuclear energy or social bonuses for colonists, there’s a myriad of different options available to unlock but once you’ve grasped the core gameplay through harnessing oxygen, water and energy, there really isn’t much deviation from this with most of the problem solving late on a result of natural disasters or mismanaged resources.Surviving Mars’ difficulty can be modified and tweaked depending on where you decide to build and how hostile the area is but even on the easiest setting, this can be a challenge. Asteroids frequently knock out pipes and cause cracks in domes that need urgent repairs, dust storms can be problematic and running out of certain resources can have a devastating impact on the ecology of your world. It’s at these moments that Surviving Mars is in desperate need of a tutorial mode. One particular moment saw drones statically watching while a malfunctioning pipe housing oxygen caused havoc for a nearby dome and the game gives little acknowledgement of how to fix this other than that the colony is suffering. A quick google search uncovered a lack of resources like metal or concrete is the culprit and restocking these resources or adjusting the location of your Rover to hover over nearby storage areas can alleviate the problem but as this isn’t communicated in-game, moments like this lead to needless frustration and take the shine off an otherwise impressive real time strategy title.There’s no denying that Surviving Mars is a very well put together game. The slick visuals and excellent soundtrack help make this a joy to play through and building up your colony to a thriving, bustling community can be incredibly rewarding. The host of options around choosing colonists, researching extra buildings and perks to improve your society are really well thought out but it’s such a shame that a few glaring issues hold this back from being the great game it so easily could have been. The clumsy control scheme, lack of a tutorial mode and explanation for core mechanics in the game hurts the overall appeal of this otherwise impressive title. With a little more polish and refinement Surviving Mars could easily be one of the most impressive strategy offerings on Playstation 4 but the flaws are difficult to ignore, holding back what’s otherwise a very good game.
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13.5.2019

First, I should admit I've been a fan of this sort of building sim from the original release of SimCity through to Cities Skyline! Surviving Mars can be quite complex with a largish number of different resources required to build and maintain your structures and I played through a couple of the Tutorials twice before starting out on the easiest settings. Difficulty is determined by your mission sponsor from generous, with lots of support from Earth, to the most frugal who only provides an absolute minimum. Choosing your Mission Commander will give you a perk that encourages different tactics and finally your choice of landing site varies the number of resources and hazards.The initial phase has you set up a function base,with a protective dome covering living quarters, food production, services etc and is well supplied with water and oxygen. All this is done with your tiny drone workforce that busy themselves taking the required resources to construction sites as well as maintaining the base and collecting resources. Once your first wave of Founders settle in, more options become available and there are several different strategies you can use to keep your population happy and expanding.The controls took a little getting used to as this kind of game is so suited to mouse & keyboard control. But hints are always available and the control layout makes sense. Especially once you realise that L2 is all about building and information and R2 allows you to access the options of a selected building or vehicle. That option window always appears on the right side of the screen, helping you remember the controls. Shortcut options are displayed when available and cover most common tasks, which makes things fairly seamless.I understand the frustration of other reviewers as this game does take a while to get the hang of and the Tutorials could have gone deeper into game mechanics. There is plenty of information available online but personally, I really would have liked an old fashioned paper manual to refer to away from the game.
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19.3.2018

This game is calling out for 5 stars. The premise is good and if like me you enjoyed the trailers and the build up on social media, to play this game is a happy relief.What let's it down is the fact it doesn't have a tutorial. I spent the first day just working out the basics. And after a few days in still playing my first game.This, for me, is brilliant. Games like tropico that you can usually finish in a few hours, although rewarding, often feel like there missing the more complicated factors of civilisation for the pc. This is what makes this game different. I can't imagine many of you will finish this in a few hours.Yes the gameplay can be repeating. I have no food. I have no metal,oh dam my power is off again. But learn the basics and make sure you don't have too many jobs for too few citizens (this caught me out to begin with) then your on the road to glee.I'm a fan off these games. Civilisation and tropico are examples. This feels like a balance between the 2. It doesn't hold the depth of tropico, until future dlc hopefully , and doesn't quite carry the detail of civilisation. But for me I love this game.Put a tutorial in and this would earn 5 stars. Well worth the money and the countless hours you will loose playing this
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10.4.2018

These sort of games don't generally work very well on consoles, but Surviving Mars is the best of the bunch. Whilst the controls may be a bit clunky, that's all to do with the PS4 controller and not the game itself. The game is immersive and the graphics are great. Given how cheap the game is I thought it probably wouldn't be that great, but I was wrong!

2.4.2018

Fantastic game, keeps getting better as play and progress. Awesome replay value and definitely a game you can just chill and play, time flew by playing this...like 7 hours solid with quick toilet breaks, haven't done that's since GTA San Andreas lol

29.4.2020

Really cool game at a great price. Although others have complained about the 'german packaging' I didn't have an issue with this as the XBOX one automatically knew to use English, be default, once I'd installed it.

15.6.2019

Didn’t expect it to be as complicated as it is. The details are well thought out. The art is lovely. Feels like I’ll sink a bunch of hours in.

10.12.2019

Addictive little game with lots of great nuances, you can definitely waste hours on this little gem

6.6.2018

Love the game and it has great replay value. Graphics good, gameplay good and stories are great.

6.5.2018

Bought as part of a bundle I was giving as a gift, they were very happy with it.

14.2.2019

I really enjoyed playing this and will play it again

5.12.2018

Christmas present, so not actually played yet

23.8.2019

Fast delivery and as stated.

25.4.2019

It's an amazing game

7.12.2018

Fab and fast simples

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