Entries in Hello Games (11)

Sunday
Aug282016

‘No Man’s Sky’ issues refunds to unsatisfied players

It seems the complaints from fans have gotten too much that Hello Games’ No Man’s Sky can be refunded on several gaming platforms—no matter how long you’ve been playing the game. If you bought it on Amazon, Steam, or the PlayStation Network, the providers are issuing refunds for them. It’s particularly telling for platforms like Valve where you can only refund after playing the game for under two hours or for Sony how has strict refund policies. You can contact these providers if you feel like refunding the game. But there’s no telling until when they’ll allow these refunds to happen.

Source: iDigitalTimes

Sunday
Jul172016

‘No Man’s Sky’ encourages you to explore with new trailer

Getting gamers hyped up for the upcoming release of No Man’s Sky, the game’s developer Hello Games is release four “Guides to the Galaxy.” This week’s video shows off the exploration that can be done with the game. Indie game No Man’s Sky claims there are 18 quintillion planets with a “limitless variety” of biodiversity, so yes, there is much exploring to be done here. The video shows players moving around the universe and seeing the worlds and the creatures that inhabit them. It doesn’t say much else about gameplay but perhaps we’ll learn more from the upcoming fight, trade, and survival guides.

Source: Rock Paper Shotgun

Friday
May272016

‘No Man’s Sky’ release pushed back to August

We’ve been waiting three years since No Man’s Sky was introduced but it looks like we have to wait a wee bit more. Hello Games, No Man’s Sky’s developer, announced that they will be pushing the North American release of the game to August 9th after it was previously announced to be released next month for both the Sony PlayStation 4 and PC. Hello Games’s Sean Murray said the delay is due to “some key moments needed extra polish to bring them up to our standards.” And with such a gigantic release backed by lots of hype, Murray is right to say that they needed to get this right: “For all our sakes though, we get one shot to make this game and we can’t mess it up.”

To say that No Man’s Sky is an ambitious sci-fi game is an understatement. The game is set in a procedurally-generated universe that has over 18 quintillion planets that you can explore. Each of these planets have their own unique ecosystems and wildlife. And while every player is going to be in the same virtual universe, with that amount of virtual planets, it’ll become unlikely you’d run into someone there, making its players usually the first people to step into a particular planet.

Source: PlayStation Blog | Via: The Verge

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