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Huge changes to base game: coming with the 'End of the Road' update!
With this update you now have more options in controlling your soldiers. While you could already make them run to you, by spending gratitude and using WarCry, you can now toggle your soldiers between two separate states: advance and surveil. Advance is their default setting from the original game, and allows them to move down the road at their own pace, while surveil, puts them on patrol at the edge of your village. Like everything to do with villagers in Desktopia, there is a chance that heroes (bored of surveiling) will override your orders locking you out for a short period although they are less likely to do this if they are happy.
A new character menu not only allows you to view your current statistics on the fly, but also allows you to change your character avatar between six different skins, three male and three female.
The Castle was always a difficult building to justify, taking up two slots and providing warriors that were mostly outdated with the onset of rifles but not any more. Building the castle now allows you to spend Gratitude to increase your level: increasing your attack and health, and making you more effective when supporting your troops.
The alchemist, hospital, and geneticist all now improve your healing rate, along with your soldiers so that you can stay in battle longer with your new increased health, and alongside this, theres now a numeric health indicator on the main screen, so you can get a more accurate overview of your current health. In the base game, you also level up, each time you finish a village. And in EotR, you level up each time you defeat a mini-boss and stronghold.
As requested: a toggleable autosave feature that can be turned on from the main menu.
Are safe, but incompatible with the new version. In order to make all the changes we have, weve had to rewrite huge portions of the base code, and make fundamental changes that make old saves incompatible. This is one of the reasons we are releasing this as a DLC. That way you can try the new version but can easily roll back by uninstalling it. Save files from different versions are stored separately in your installation so wont be overwritten. Were sorry that old saves are not compatible, it sucks, but hopefully releasing the update as a DLC is a reasonable compromise. Thanks, as always for the support. I passed on all the well wishes to Angels, and she was most thankful. Speak soon, Mike
[ 2023-01-16 14:06:02 CET ] [ Original post ]
On top of the new End of the Road game mode, weve overhauled large portions of the basegame to bring you a more fun and streamlined experience. Before we release a full list of changs, Id like to show you some of the more interesting things that will have a visual impact on how you play the game.
Soldier Command
With this update you now have more options in controlling your soldiers. While you could already make them run to you, by spending gratitude and using WarCry, you can now toggle your soldiers between two separate states: advance and surveil. Advance is their default setting from the original game, and allows them to move down the road at their own pace, while surveil, puts them on patrol at the edge of your village. Like everything to do with villagers in Desktopia, there is a chance that heroes (bored of surveiling) will override your orders locking you out for a short period although they are less likely to do this if they are happy.
Character Menu
A new character menu not only allows you to view your current statistics on the fly, but also allows you to change your character avatar between six different skins, three male and three female.
Levelling Up
The Castle was always a difficult building to justify, taking up two slots and providing warriors that were mostly outdated with the onset of rifles but not any more. Building the castle now allows you to spend Gratitude to increase your level: increasing your attack and health, and making you more effective when supporting your troops.
The alchemist, hospital, and geneticist all now improve your healing rate, along with your soldiers so that you can stay in battle longer with your new increased health, and alongside this, theres now a numeric health indicator on the main screen, so you can get a more accurate overview of your current health. In the base game, you also level up, each time you finish a village. And in EotR, you level up each time you defeat a mini-boss and stronghold.
Autosave
As requested: a toggleable autosave feature that can be turned on from the main menu.
Your current saves:
Are safe, but incompatible with the new version. In order to make all the changes we have, weve had to rewrite huge portions of the base code, and make fundamental changes that make old saves incompatible. This is one of the reasons we are releasing this as a DLC. That way you can try the new version but can easily roll back by uninstalling it. Save files from different versions are stored separately in your installation so wont be overwritten. Were sorry that old saves are not compatible, it sucks, but hopefully releasing the update as a DLC is a reasonable compromise. Thanks, as always for the support. I passed on all the well wishes to Angels, and she was most thankful. Speak soon, Mike
[ 2023-01-16 14:06:02 CET ] [ Original post ]
Desktopia: A Desktop Village Simulator
The Evergloom Team
Developer
The Evergloom Team
Publisher
August 5th
Release
Game News Posts:
41
🎹🖱️Keyboard + Mouse
Mostly Positive
(191 reviews)
Public Linux Depots:
- [517.01 M]
- [529.24 M]
- [531.42 M]
At it's core, Desktopia is a city-builder game which simulates an evolving, medieval-esque village along the bottom of your desktop, allowing you to work, watch, or browse something else while you play.
Like any city-builder, you get to make the big decisions, while also being able to take control of your own sword wielding character. You can join in the battles, harvest resources, put out fires, or interact with your villagers. In Desktopia, you can be as active, or as idle, as you want!
Before you buy:
This game was not created in a studio, but by three friends looking to make something different, fun, and useful: We think we've done that and we love Desktopia.We want anyone who plays it to love it too. With that in mind: you should be aware this is not a AAA game like the amazing ANNO series (which you should definitely check out), with thousands of hours of content, nor does it have the beautiful rendered graphics of Cities Skylines (a game we love). If you're looking for a cute pixel-art game, something fun you can play while watching a series, browsing the internet, or writing that essay, then Desktopia might be for you!
- A completely original approach in PC gaming: designed with functionality in mind, Desktopia allows you to use your PC for multiple purposes on a single monitor.
- Clever UI: with resizeable pop-out windows which can be arranged anywhere on your screen.
- A playable character which levels with your village, so you can jump into the action whenever you want.
- Detailed logs and statistics arrayed in beautiful charts and graphs.
- Spy Mode: focus the camera on any villager, any time, and watch as they live their life.
- Resizeable game world, with the option to have it 'always on top' of other windows.
- Quick-hide button that puts the whole game into the windows tray... in case your boss come along while your playing!
- From nothing: grow a series of villages along a dangerous and treacherous road: from a single house to a bustling metropolis.
- Construct a range of facilities (inns, libraries, post offices, temples, blacksmiths etc) and watch villagers move in independently.
- Keep your villagers happy to collect gratitude, and use it to host festivals which bedeck your village in bunting!
- Recruit and upgrade soldiers to defend your village from undead, bandits, fairies, and demons. Join them in battle if that's your thing!
- Hire heroes to lead the charge against your foes and destroy their strongholds.
- Decide on building low-tech villages with few needs, or risk it big by aiming for high-tech villages with needy villagers.
- Quirky villagers each with their own set of needs and personalities.
- Increasingly dangerous attacks and enemies as your village grows.
- Villager moods driven by weather, village events, and personal ones.
- Criminal villagers, driven by low moods, that steal or commit arson.
- Dangerous fires which kill villagers and destroy buildings: lit by enemies, criminals, or accidentally.
- Huntable animals and monsters.
- Bosses that stand in the way of you moving down the road, and heroes to counter them.
- Serfs that upgrade to become nobles, or even industrialists.
You start by chopping down some bushes, earning some gold, and building a welcome sign.
Some villagers move in. It's your first village; they're serfs and they want food and protection.
After they've harvested some bushes and earned you some gold (with you helping if you want) perhaps you build them a chicken coop and some more villagers move in.
They love it, and start dropping Gratitude, which you pick up.
After some more harvesting, you build a barracks and a few soldiers appear.
They start heading off along the road to kill stuff. Maybe you join them.
More villagers move in but now they want religion, and some luxuries.
Perhaps you build a blacksmith or a... hold on, some skeletons and spiders are coming down the road from the crypt.
Phew, your soldiers kill them, but only after they kill some villagers.
Now your villagers are sad so you build them a tavern.
More villagers move in.
You have a lot of villagers now and some are getting rich and becoming noble, aww, don't they look cute in their new hats.
Wait, now they all want infrastructure.
Maybe you build a post office.
All your villagers are moaning about rain, but you've earned enough gratitude to throw a festival.
You throw a religious one, as everyone is still moaning that you haven't build a temple yet.
Everyone is so happy, but your village has expanded past an animal grove and wild boars are attacking your villagers.
You hire a hunter.
But now the skeletons are coming back, with a vampire this time and they are determined to burn down your village... if only you had enough gold to buy a hero!!
MINIMAL SETUP
- OS: Various (Ubuntu for sure!)
- Processor: i3 4k series. Ryzen 3 2200g
- Graphics: Any
- Storage: 1 GB available space
- OS: Various (Ubuntu for sure!)
- Processor: i5 2500k +
- Graphics: GTX 760 +
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