Wat? How? Aren’t you working for a giant mega corp that strips planets of all their natural resources in both games? Pollution is a mechanic in both, but in Satisfactory it’s mostly just cosmetic. Radioactive waste is the only thing I can think of that has a gameplay effect and it’s mostly just bad for you. While Factorio’s smog makes monsters angry. Which I guess is also mostly just bad for you… 🤔
In Factorio you are a survivor of a ship crash. I you are trying to send a rescue beacon to space.
In Factorio, the plot seems to be “you have crashed your space ship on an alien planet infested with giant dangerous insect like creatures. Build a rocket.” The gigantic factory you end up building has two purposes: 1, to gather and produce the materials needed to make itself, and 2, to build parts for the rocket. You don’t launch any goods into space to a hungry megacorp.
In Satisfactory, you do work for what appears to be a megacorp, except there’s a little bit of what might be a twist ending, it’s slightly ambiguous. At the beginning they say you’re part of Operation Save The Day, Earth is in peril and you are part of an effort to save it. It rapidly becomes apparent that this isn’t the (whole) truth, and it feels like a cheap, barely thought out reason to get you to obey.
spoiler
Turns out, “Project Assembly” is to build a ship that will launch to some other planet elsewhere with clones aboard to do what you have done. So are we “saving the day” or are we just consuming all of creation like locusts?
Satisfactory seems to critique the corporation (by making them comically callous towards the workers).
Factorio can be read as having imperialist themes in how the goal is to harvest the planet’s resources.
Then why do I struggle to get satisfactory working on Linux other than me being disabled?
It works great on my system, have you tried [all the things you already tried]?
Love that saying lmao
I’m a mint boi and all proton versions on an Nvidia card do nada
Same on endeavor and cent os about a month ago
Weird, works fine on my arch+kde machine with the nvidia-open drivers with whatever Steam has decreed is the default proton for the game. For what it’s worth, I had nothing but problems trying to get mint and gaming to play nice together, to the point where I just kinda gave up using it.
Sorry I can’t be of more help :(
I have it working fine on manjaro with the proprietary nvidia drivers and I think proton experimental.
If 2bquan reads this, my only advice is to try distro hopping. It sucks, but I found some games just seemed to work better in different environments.
lack of class consciousness amongst the proletariat 😔
Have you checked proton db for tips that work for other people? Works perfect for me with Bazzite with proton ge. Ymmv.
What about mindustry?
You mean Ho-Chi-Mindustry? In all lack of seriousness: Definitely proletarian, you are a mechanised force sweeping across a planet, wiping out the privatised military-industrial complex as you go. Lore freely invented by me.
Only true factory game for the working class.
Both celebrate industrialization and the exploitation of the natural world as heroic undertakings without any regard to the value of nature.
Knowing what I know today about the environmental destruction caused by industry (up to and including the global climate crisis), I have decided to skip these games. Even though the core gameplay loop of management & expansion very much appeals to me.
Thinking of checking out Terra Nil. Has anyone here played that?
Both celebrate industrialization and the exploitation of the natural world as heroic undertakings without any regard to the value of nature.
They really don’t. Satisfactory, as has been explained already, is more direct, however Factorio isn’t glorifying itself either if you look even half a Millimeter below the surface.
Have you ever listened to the soundtrack for instance? It is not grand or glorious, especially on Nauvis it mostly sounds slightly ominous. Also the way factories develop, intentionally or not, often resembles the way cancer spreads. And of course enemies attack you because of pollution and the plants around you die because of it. That even harms you because that means more pollution going towards enemies.
It doesn’t have a Glados inspired voice constantly making fun of you and telling you to be a good corporate doggy, but it absolutely doesn’t display itself as heroic in any way.
Additionally, even using exclusively solar power as soon as possible doesn’t really stop pollution from spreading, it just reduces the rate of growth, which is good but it’s also a pretty clear statement that industry in itself is something that needs to be taken as a tradeoff, not an inherent good.
In Factorio 2 (yeah sure, Space Age is “just a DLC”, right), the final armor is basically a coffin. The dev diaries explicitly state their intention on it. They also explicitly say that the protagonist is not the ‘good guy’, for that matter.
I wasn’t sure whether the term heroic would adequately fit both games but if you think about it, you’re still achieving things by pushing your industry in Factorio. The only thing that the tongue-in-cheek commentary adds is some ludo-narrative dissonance. Expansion, technological progress, and conquest are still your main goals as a player.
To be clear, I deliberately did not address my critique to players but the games themselves. If you’re having fun, that’s great. But I still think it’s not for me.
(FWIW these doubts started forming in my mind as I was playing the otherwise excellent Anno 1800, where ever-happy brown-skinned people gladly support you in replacing their lush forests with belching smokestacks.)
they are your goals but you’re quite obviously doing it at the expense of the natural world. the planet slowly corrupts as the factory grows; the trees start growing twisted and ugly and eventually die, the grass turns from green to yellow to red, to bare dirt, and the oceans slowly go from a crystalline blue, to a muddy green, and finally to a dark brown. thats not ludonarrative dissonance, that’s showing you the consequences of your actions.
Not all media has to have the protagonist or player character be a good person.
Of course it depends on how it’s portrayed, if for example American Psycho actually was written the way a lot of idiots seem to think it was, glorifying Patrick Bateman’s actions and showing him as “cool”, that’d be a different story from how it actually exists. In that case the book would be significantly more problematic. Considering your Anno 1800 example, I am unfamiliar with the game, so I can not tell you how things are portrayed there, but overall you definitely need to see the nuance between showing someone doing a bad thing and actually promoting said bad thing.
Also it’s totally fine if that’s not for you and you prefer media with a heroic protagonist, everyone has their own tastes, but
Both celebrate industrialization and the exploitation of the natural world
is blatantly false
Both celebrate industrialization and the exploitation of the natural world as heroic undertakings without any regard to the value of nature.
Not really much to spoil, but just incase anyone cares: spoilers.
Haven’t played Factorio, but Satisfactory is definitely NOT presented as your character being heroic or glorious. Your character is constantly berated for being too slow to meet expectations, too stupid to understand what’s going on around them, and basically just constantly being treated as a tool. There is a ‘save humanity’ angle but it’s floated as pretty obvious bullshit to try to milk a bit of motivation out of your character that’s basically a slave whose interests the company doesn’t give a single fuck about, by hitting you with over the top messages like “Remember all of Earth is counting on you, to include millions of kittens and/or puppies.” Even when attacked by hostile wildlife, the indicator that you’re taking hits doesn’t even say YOU are taking hits, but makes a little popup notifying you of something akin to ‘unauthorized damage to company property detected’ lol.
I took it as being critical of that hyper-corporatism by depicting it as cranked up to a comical level.
They even slipped in some real world politics by unlocking the “Cyberwagon” in response to doing something stupid in game. It’s a Cybertruck, which is stupid-expensive in game, has only a single inventory slot, handles like shit, has broken windows, and my favorite jab: is literally only capable of turning right. So, if you wanted a good indicator for where the devs’ heads are at, there ya go.
I’d definitely recommend it.
More spoilers, read at your own risk - how to get the truck. Taken from the Wiki:
`When a FICSIT Coupon is sunk into the AWESOME Sink, the Cyber Wagon is unlocked.
ADA will then tell the pioneer that the Cyber Wagon is its “first solo project”.`
The satire in satisfactory is both pretty on the nose while also quite subtle of you look a little deeper. Only the most cursory glance at the game would make you think it glorifies the destruction by industrial expansion.
The factory must grow turns into starship troopers base defense real fucking quick. The artillery train will turn all into soup, the factory must grow.
I don’t know… saying that satisfactory celebrates industrialization is a stretch. The ‘glory’ of the robotic she-voice is so tongue in cheek that I don’t see how anyone could miss it, like when they mention that reflecting on potential causes of death is discouraged per your contract.
Buy it, it’s a fun little game. But gameplay wise it has absolutely nothing to do with management and expansion. The game’s description itself is actually pretty poor. It’s mostly a puzzle game, where the correct order of steps matters a lot.
No, the game is really just pure, uncut heroin for engineering nerds. It’s designed to appeal to their deep desires for automation, clever designs, and optimization.
Those people don’t really care about economics, they care about creating little engines that process one type of resource into another.
You can do things in games which you should absolutly not do in RL…
Go for it. play these amazing games!
Its only these who cant differenciate between real and virtual who will judge you for playing it.
You do you. If a theme of industrial growth just doesn’t fit with what you can enjoy, it’s no one’s business to say you’re wrong for that.
That being said, if the game otherwise appeals to you it might be worth checking out the demo to validate your feelings, at least regarding factorio. There just really isn’t anything else out there like it, so it’s worth it to be sure.
I’ve heard shapez2 does a decent job coming close to it, and I think it’s just an infinite abstract plane of shapes and color.
Sounds like Eco may be for you. It’s definitely not the same management and production chain thing but some of that, and I ended up liking it more than I expected
Terra Nil is great. Very different vibe mechanically, but I found it a refreshing change of pace from the implicitly imperialist and explicitly industrialist tone of many games
i agree tbh, basically the whole sandbox resource production game genre is rife with colonial ideology
but thank you for mentioning Terra Nil, that looks neat! i need to look into that
Why do people who have clearly never played the games try to describe them?
Where does Shapez 2 land on this continuum?
Shapez 2 is the platonic ideal of a factory building game
that must be why i don’t like it. the suffering is apparently the point.
You call this bait?
I’ve felt this sentiment and today I see it voiced. Thank you.
Wtf?