![]() ![]() And the big circle is just a bubble shield: it gets taken down easily, but regenerates, meaning small clashes do no lasting damage. ![]() The circles are all translocators, a weird direction-agnostic propulsion device that lets you strafe and reverse as fast as you move forwards, but is useless for turning sharply. ![]() The U-shaped piece is a Chrono engine, which accelerates the operating speed of anything attached to it. The quivering pink lozenges are Blurst Shields: they bounce back enemy fire. I made this after buying Captain Successor, esentially the registered version, and as you can see it adds some stuff. It’s glorious when a lucky shot nails their core module and a whole vast battleship made of tier-5 parts just gently disintegrates into a nebula of fatal freebies. The same logic applies when attacking: you’re trying to destroy their core piece without damaging too much of the rest of them, because anything they have left when they die simply falls off for the taking. My logic with that design was to protect my parts: obviously it’s counter-productive to cover your guns entirely, but by giving them ‘barrels’ like that most incoming fire would hit the tough, functionless hull pieces instead of my fragile weapons and engines. Thus, you scoot wonkily away from the fight with a hastily cobbled space hulk like this:Īnd find a quiet corner of the galaxy to take yourself apart and build something a little more like this: Since space is dangerous and there’s no separate screen for ship design, you don’t always have time to optimally rebuild your ship after a fight to incorporate all the cool new parts you’ve salvaged. If you’d crashed your time machine into my Lego space police set when I was a kid and told me that in the year 2010, I’d be able to snap together my own little craft then fly them around and blow bits off other spaceships to make my spaceship bigger, I’d have been all, “What use is that information realistically of to me at this stage?” But it’s cool. I’ve been playing it secretly free now forever my Lord all day – my new year’s resolution was to design more space ships, so the year is shaping up well already. It needn’t be so hard, just click this link to play secretly free now forever my lord. The other ways Captain Forever tries to persuade you not to play it is by making the game’s site confusing and devoid of information about the game, and releasing a similarly named sequel almost immediately, which isn’t free. I was put off it before because when people were pimping it, you had to pay to get in on the beta. This is Captain Forever, a free web game where you shoot ships, and bolt bits of the debris onto your own. ![]()
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