Just a quick note to let everyone know that I am still working on the full version of evolution. I may have a small release soon with some changes to the interface, information screens, as well as a brief tutorial to help understand the simulation. Many of the changes are thanks to Kelsey King Kelsey the author of Trials and Errors did a fantastic job of reviewing Evolution. Although many of the suggestions have already been made, she did an unbelievable job of articulating the issues and more importantly, she outlined actionable steps to correct them. If anyone is looking for feedback I would highly recommend reaching out to her. Check out the fine work she has done here: Evolution Review Thanks again!
[ 2016-03-17 14:04:04 CET ] [ Original post ]
Just a quick note to let everyone know that I am still working on the full version of evolution. I may have a small release soon with some changes to the interface, information screens, as well as a brief tutorial to help understand the simulation. Many of the changes are thanks to Kelsey King Kelsey the author of Trials and Errors did a fantastic job of reviewing Evolution. Although many of the suggestions have already been made, she did an unbelievable job of articulating the issues and more importantly, she outlined actionable steps to correct them. If anyone is looking for feedback I would highly recommend reaching out to her. Check out the fine work she has done here: Evolution Review Thanks again!
[ 2016-03-17 14:04:04 CET ] [ Original post ]
🕹️ Partial Controller Support
- Evolution Content for Linux [480.18 M]
There are a number of games built around this evolution simulator. Primordial Soup is a free for all evolution platform where the creatures evolve mostly independently. You can help them along but its their world and they do what they like. To start you choose a world (or create a new one) and all the creatures become part of a global shared pool. It quickly becomes apparent that older more evolved creatures will dominate but there is always a chance you could evolve one that survives. Alternatively you can just start a new world and become the dominant creature there.
In Tidepool, the world is stacked in your favor to help you select and breed the creatures you deem fit to live. At first you control a small handful of creatures and help them find food, focus on those that move independently, or just let them figure it out. You compete against creatures that evolved in other tide pools from other players so it is never the same game twice. If you do manage to take over the environment all your creatures level up and you start over competing against the next level of enemy creatures.
The laboratory is where you can experiment on your creatures, cross breed creatures with other creatures, manage, save and share your creatures, and apply targeted mutations. Unfortunately the laboratory was not secure enough and the inevitable outbreak occurred. In this micro battle to stop the spread of an unstoppable pathogen (that you foolishly created) you battle the creatures directly in a miniaturized ship. Save Patient Zero to save the world, unless the creatures manage to find their way into another human but what are the odds of that happening?
- OS: Ubuntu. Linux
- Processor: 1.5 GHz+Memory: 1 GB RAM
- Memory: 1 GB RAM
- Graphics: GeForce 8800+
- Storage: 100 MB available space
- OS: Ubuntu. Linux
- Processor: 2.0 GHz+Memory: 2 GB RAM
- Memory: 2 GB RAM
- Graphics: GeForce 8800+
- Storage: 500 MB available space
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