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Interstellar Rift Download For Pc [Password]

Updated: Mar 15, 2020





















































About This Game Interstellar Rift is an open world Starship Simulator with an emphasis on ship construction and multi-player interaction. Players can explore and conquer the galaxy with their own custom designed and constructed starship. Space is vast, but you wont have to face it alone, other players will be able to join your crew, and help out, or build their own rival fleet and fight you across the galaxy. Prepare to make these custom build space ships your home when exploring the galaxy! Use the ship editor to design a ship to your liking, from small exploratory vessels to large cargo haulers, or even enormous battleships. With the editor you build your ship deck by deck, inside and outside. If you'd rather get going immediately you can always browse the workshop for ships that other players made, or you can upload your own blueprints.The galaxy can be a dangerous place, even when playing solo. Strange rifts have opened up, unleashing a hostile race of alien creatures called the Skrill. If left unchecked, they will take over solar systems wreaking havoc on your enterprising. You can fight them alone, or call in the help of your friends, and man a ship together. But not all pilots will fight for a good cause, pirates and opposing fleets can come after you and your cargo at any time. Fight them ship versus ship, or hack your way aboard their vessels and bring the fight to them, in close quarters shootouts. The economy of Interstellar Rift runs on the resources that can be gathered out in the galaxy. Vast asteroid belts circle planets and solar systems, filled with precious ores and minerals. Start up your resource extractors, or send out a wave of mining drones to do the hard labour for you. Visit the stores of LogiCorp and Galactic Trade, or drive a hard bargain with stranded pilots as you delive them fuel. Automate production lines with the ACTR (automated cargo transfer relay), and set up your own store to trade with other players, or any trade drones that might be nearby. After choosing a faction to ally with, the galaxy is open for you to explore. Use rift generators to open up spatial rifts that transport you to new systems, exploring a system will help you map out the galaxy, and pinpoint the location of systems with special resources you might need. Construct new trade posts for the companies and factions that want to expand their influence, and help them set up secure stations and sectors. Take on missions for U-nits, or find good deals across multiple systems to make a profit from. a09c17d780 Title: Interstellar RiftGenre: Action, Indie, Simulation, Early AccessDeveloper:Split PolygonPublisher:Split PolygonRelease Date: 23 Jun, 2015 Interstellar Rift Download For Pc [Password] interstellar rift portable battery. interstellar rift engineering terminal. interstellar rift gameplay. interstellar rift igg. interstellar rift station shield. interstellar rift update. interstellar rift download. interstellar rift wanted level. interstellar rift nuclear reactor. interstellar rift controls. interstellar rift tips. interstellar rift invalid steam ticket. interstellar rift missions. interstellar rift joystick. interstellar rift dedicated server. interstellar rift ion ammo. interstellar rift vault in ship. interstellar rift warp. interstellar rift auto turrets. interstellar rift advanced heat sink. interstellar rift event horizon. interstellar rift game engine. interstellar rift lag. interstellar rift patch notes. interstellar rift weapon cpu. interstellar rift roadmap. interstellar rift ship design. interstellar rift official server. interstellar rift workshop. interstellar rift can't join server. interstellar rift vault. interstellar rift battle. interstellar rift xbox one. interstellar rift trade drone. interstellar rift 3rd person. interstellar rift unobtainium. interstellar rift youtube. interstellar rift download skidrow. interstellar rift build station. interstellar rift rift generator. interstellar rift server hosting. interstellar rift mercury. interstellar rift power transfer box. interstellar rift forums. interstellar rift vs avorion. interstellar rift factions. interstellar rift video games. interstellar rift ion engine. interstellar rift cartridges. interstellar rift refinery upgrade. interstellar rift beginners guide. interstellar rift server.json. interstellar rift mirror mode. interstellar rift. interstellar rift lead. interstellar rift ps4. interstellar rift wiki. interstellar rift di xanthium. interstellar rift hull temp. interstellar rift let's play. interstellar rift vs space engineers. interstellar rift admin commands. interstellar rift combat. interstellar rift cargo container. interstellar rift drone bay. interstellar rift faction data cartridge. interstellar rift port forwarding. interstellar rift download free. interstellar rift improved fuel. interstellar rift guide. interstellar rift beryllium. interstellar rift gameplay 2018. interstellar rift turrets. interstellar rift nitrogen. interstellar rift flak cannon. interstellar rift rotate object. interstellar rift trainer. interstellar rift pve. interstellar rift trade terminal. interstellar rift reactor. interstellar rift gameplay 2017. interstellar rift navigation. interstellar rift focusing crystal. interstellar rift editor controls Have you ever played a Sci-Fi Space Exploration game like EVE Online, and said to yourself, "Man, I wish I could build my OWN ship and fly among the stars with my friends."? Then Interstellar Rift is a wonderful choice for you. You have almost unlimited possibilities in the way you create your ship. Massive amounts of exterior blocks, different choices of cockpits, Color Schemes, and even different machines and stations to add to your ship to make it usable for different things. Interstellar Rift is more than just massive, flashy ships however. It is also about making money and becoming the ultimate space businessman. From what I have encountered and seen from other gameplay, you can be a miner and scour the galaxy for the most sought after elements, and materials. You could be a manufacturer, and produce supplies to sell to other factions for immense profits. You can fight other ships in chaotic PvP or PvE battles. You can conduct missions for your faction, and make massive amounts of profit by running cargo, scouting systems, or eradicating aliens. You can even become the ultimate pirate, and raid stations for all of their loot and materials.This game is wonderful because you don't need a super hi-tech $2000 Desktop with the newest stuff to run this game. You could run it with the bare minimum for gaming, and have a wonderful experience. The greatest thing about this game though, is that its still Early Access. There are still so many things to be added to the game to make it much more interactive with friends.With all of that, there are still a few flaws that I have found that should be looked at. To begin with, there is no Tutorial for the Ship Design feature. It is fairly complex and will take time to understand and fully grasp. The next issue is random crashing. One personal instance was when I was building my new ship blueprint, The K-3 Devestator (Which Will be uploaded to the Workshop when complete). I was still in the early stage of building the bottom deck, placing catwalks and walls to make it look nice. When suddenly, the game shuts down, and all my progress up to that point was lost. It has happened once since then, and I'm on my 3rd level on the interior. If this is a bug this could use some looking into. Finally, is the lack of diversity in faction missions, and multiplayer interactivity. This game is all about teamwork, as you need a crew to run the much larger ships, and you will want other people piloting to protect you. When you run missions there are only a few templates. Cargo Delivery, Eviction Notice, Scout, and Basic Mining/Manufacturing. Although they incentivize teamwork between crew and fleet members, they don't really varietize the amount of missions to run, which lowers the overall replay value of faction mission running.With all of this I would rate the game in it's current phase as 7.25/10. There is still a lot of potential, and if they keep adding new features to entice interactivity, the playerbase will grow and the game will become a gem.. This game ambitiously combines aspects from many of my favorite space games including: Space Engineers, Faster Than Light, Rodina, and Star Conflict. But don't compare Interstellar Rift to these large titles just yet, because this game still has a long way to go. I am still, however, optimistic of what this game might become.as it has alot of potential to challenge it's predisesors. This will only be possible through constant development, updates, comunity support, and input. Here is a list of pros and cons on the initial launch date: 06/23/2015^^^^^ Please read above first! ^^^^^Pros:-Beautyful Ship interior-High level of detail inside-Command consoles and Gui's make it feel like you are accually in the future-Ship editor is laid out well-Ship design is alot easier than Space Engineers-Gameplay provides alot of future potential-Game contains alot of potential to be the next big space game!Cons:-Ship editor is confusing and makes it hard to place some objects / systems-Exterior ship hull severely needs work as it feels like a voxel game instead of the ideal realism-Confusing systems onbord the ships-Ship control needs refinement-Tutorials needed!This game truely 'shoots for the stars' and could very well be the next big space game ONLY if it is maintained, updated, and improved on a constant basis ("every two weeks" ~keep to your word) with help from the dev. team and the playing comunity. This game is definitely worth checking out and supporting if you have ever wanted a truly wonderful space game experience.I can't wait!Thanks, ~Captain 06/23/2015. This one will be breif.It has the potential to be fantastic. It's actually pretty much there, and a damned fine achievement for an indy developer to accomplish.In short, its like Space Engineers meets Star War Galaxies meets Eve Online.Mining is ridiculously easy. You set the machine to grab the 'roid you want, and let it do its work while you get other things done. You don't have to build the ship block by block, you just make a blueprint in the editor, or simply pick one up in the Steam Workshop. When you have the resources, "build it" and its there.If it IS your thing, spend hours making multicrew ships of grandious scales, with all types of artistic flourishes, or a hyper efficient box of death.Oh, and the ships CAN be multicrew. In fact, the larger and more funcional it is, the more likely it's going to HAVE to be multicrew to get the most combat efficiency out of it.Or have your big boy boat and use everything in it at your leisure.Oh! And your mates and you can walk around the ship while it is moving! No flying out the back while at warp. Pilot can drive the bus while you get work done back in the workshops. It's flippin fantastic!There are Factions to join. NPCs to do missions for. Reptuations to gain or lose.So, I like it. Obligatory Cons at the moment:Player dedicated servers - This is sort of a double edge sword. Player deds can be a bit problematic, and it could take time to find one you like.Small-ISH Playerbase - It'd be nice to have a huge playerbase, with people bumping into eachother all the time, but the server can lag a bit when someone first logs on, and I'm not too sure how player run dedicated servers would handle the large loads. In my experience, not the best. But this game will trully SHINE if that can get sorted out....bah... and I said it was going to be breif. Can't ever do it.It's on Sale for under $11. I'd call it pretty much a no brainer. At $15, still a for sure thing if you're interest is piqued. If it's $20 at the moment of reading this... I'd still give you a thumbs up on a buy, but know that you'll want at least a mate to up the enjoyment. Or find some on server.. I like space buildy-type games like this. I wanted to like this game too, but I'm having a SUPER hard time doing it. I am not a stranger to games like this, in fact, this genre is sort of my jam. I play(ed) Eve, Space Engineers, Starmade, Avorion, Elite Dangerous, Empyrion and others. This game is tagged as early access, but it's been out for FOUR YEARS!With my experience with kludgy and cobbled up menus, this game should be nothing new, and it doesn't need to be perfect either. This game is extremely new-player unfriendly. It's got a very abbreviated tutorial that introduces you to a very small amount of the game and most importantly, introduces you to the ABSOLUTELY TERRIBLE mouse flight controls. Hyper sensitive flying, regardless of my mouse DPI settings and the control options in the game change exactly ZERO with regards to ship handling, and the flying is very much like Elite Dangerous. For a game about SPACESHIPS the devs have completely dropped the ball on this and they apparently don't give a\u2665\u2665\u2665\u2665\u2665\u2665 The only way to slow down the super touchy flight controls is to take most of your thrusters off or offline, and then the ship handles like a rock. FOUR YEARS! I feel like 40% of Grosse Point Blank . . .There are a TON of machines, consoles and screens and extremely few of them have any kind of labeling or explanation as to what they actually do or are for. Some of the machines can be figured out, but more than half, no clue unless you comb the net for information on how to play the game that the devs haven't bothered to explain or describe. Half the machines on my ship - NO clue what they do or how to use them so if I don't want my money to be wasted on this game, I have to go online and get other players to show me what the devs could have and should have done. IE the BASICS.There are all kinds of modules and cards and discs and chips - and no explanation. How do I get them? No idea. How do I make them? Well, I click on them IF I can find them, and then it shows me some coloured ingot icons - you guessed it with ZERO explanation or naming on them. How do I use them? No idea. What do you use them FOR? No idea. If the devs actually wrote some instructions like :"This machine is called "this". It does "this". This is what you need in order to build it." Instead, we get an encyclopedia that you have to search for items, but if I don't know what the hell it is called or what it does, how do I search for it? There is a tab menu system that you use to access all kinds of information, but you have to hold the alt button every time you have any menu open to free the mouse (or it just pans the whole screen and gives you vertigo).It's got a ship editor that is not unlike the other games I've mentioned, but you have to be extremely careful you don't inadvertently delete things with accidental right-clicks, because then it's next to impossible to figure out what you deleted and how to get it back. Impossible I say because 1) when you mouse-over some machine\/part it tells you NOTHING about the object - no name, nothing. So then when you manage to find the components in the different build menus that are based on inside, outside or sticking from inside to outside, 2) it gives you the name when you mouse over it (and you don't know by name if that's what you're looking for after you deleted it), but most of the time the menu image doesn't even LOOK like the component after you put it in the ship! Then there's saving the edit, which doesn't mean it will actually take your modifications and put them into the game, THAT is a completely different button that doesn't look like it implements any changes you made, but it does anyway.My biggest problem is drones randomly attacking me, warp scramming me so I can't get away, and then blowing me up, for no reason and with no warning while I am doing simple delivery missions in the starter system. So, after 35+ hours, after being blown up 3 times, I have no idea why they're doing it, no idea how to forewarn myself and I have less money than when I started. IF this WAS still an alpha, and presumably it's claimed to be in beta now, as an alpha, I could understand why it's so un-fleshed out. I watched the latest live stream (#56 or something) and even the devs had NO CLUE what key strokes did what, what options\/functions worked, what keys did what and where things were located. There are functions and keys that aren't even documented in the Control section of the Options! Supposedly there's some kind of "gripper" so you can open stuck doors. Really?? Supposedly there's a key stroke that allows you to follow other ships. ?? After 50-some-odd TWO HOUR streams, the devs are still doing what I'm doing and driving around mining. Supposedly there's more than that, so HOW TO YOU GET TO MORE CONTENT! DEVS!?!?. . . and then the multiplayer\/networking. Get about 5 players or more (and sometimes not even 5) and the entire game chugs to the point where you can't even function and then you invariably lose connection or the game crashes.Anyway, this game COULD be very cool and supposedly you can build stations and get shipping and trading routes, and there's pvp - which I have zero interest in, but there are so many things that are busted and the biggest thing, NO INFORMATION ON HOW TO USE THE GAME, I would say wait. After FOUR YEARS, I would say give it another four years or wait until it is on sale for like 50% off. After the amount I've tried to play the game, I can't get my money back now, so that sucks . . .. I like space buildy-type games like this. I wanted to like this game too, but I'm having a SUPER hard time doing it. I am not a stranger to games like this, in fact, this genre is sort of my jam. I play(ed) Eve, Space Engineers, Starmade, Avorion, Elite Dangerous, Empyrion and others. This game is tagged as early access, but it's been out for FOUR YEARS!With my experience with kludgy and cobbled up menus, this game should be nothing new, and it doesn't need to be perfect either. This game is extremely new-player unfriendly. It's got a very abbreviated tutorial that introduces you to a very small amount of the game and most importantly, introduces you to the ABSOLUTELY TERRIBLE mouse flight controls. Hyper sensitive flying, regardless of my mouse DPI settings and the control options in the game change exactly ZERO with regards to ship handling, and the flying is very much like Elite Dangerous. For a game about SPACESHIPS the devs have completely dropped the ball on this and they apparently don't give a\u2665\u2665\u2665\u2665\u2665\u2665 The only way to slow down the super touchy flight controls is to take most of your thrusters off or offline, and then the ship handles like a rock. FOUR YEARS! I feel like 40% of Grosse Point Blank . . .There are a TON of machines, consoles and screens and extremely few of them have any kind of labeling or explanation as to what they actually do or are for. Some of the machines can be figured out, but more than half, no clue unless you comb the net for information on how to play the game that the devs haven't bothered to explain or describe. Half the machines on my ship - NO clue what they do or how to use them so if I don't want my money to be wasted on this game, I have to go online and get other players to show me what the devs could have and should have done. IE the BASICS.There are all kinds of modules and cards and discs and chips - and no explanation. How do I get them? No idea. How do I make them? Well, I click on them IF I can find them, and then it shows me some coloured ingot icons - you guessed it with ZERO explanation or naming on them. How do I use them? No idea. What do you use them FOR? No idea. If the devs actually wrote some instructions like :"This machine is called "this". It does "this". This is what you need in order to build it." Instead, we get an encyclopedia that you have to search for items, but if I don't know what the hell it is called or what it does, how do I search for it? There is a tab menu system that you use to access all kinds of information, but you have to hold the alt button every time you have any menu open to free the mouse (or it just pans the whole screen and gives you vertigo).It's got a ship editor that is not unlike the other games I've mentioned, but you have to be extremely careful you don't inadvertently delete things with accidental right-clicks, because then it's next to impossible to figure out what you deleted and how to get it back. Impossible I say because 1) when you mouse-over some machine\/part it tells you NOTHING about the object - no name, nothing. So then when you manage to find the components in the different build menus that are based on inside, outside or sticking from inside to outside, 2) it gives you the name when you mouse over it (and you don't know by name if that's what you're looking for after you deleted it), but most of the time the menu image doesn't even LOOK like the component after you put it in the ship! Then there's saving the edit, which doesn't mean it will actually take your modifications and put them into the game, THAT is a completely different button that doesn't look like it implements any changes you made, but it does anyway.My biggest problem is drones randomly attacking me, warp scramming me so I can't get away, and then blowing me up, for no reason and with no warning while I am doing simple delivery missions in the starter system. So, after 35+ hours, after being blown up 3 times, I have no idea why they're doing it, no idea how to forewarn myself and I have less money than when I started. IF this WAS still an alpha, and presumably it's claimed to be in beta now, as an alpha, I could understand why it's so un-fleshed out. I watched the latest live stream (#56 or something) and even the devs had NO CLUE what key strokes did what, what options\/functions worked, what keys did what and where things were located. There are functions and keys that aren't even documented in the Control section of the Options! Supposedly there's some kind of "gripper" so you can open stuck doors. Really?? Supposedly there's a key stroke that allows you to follow other ships. ?? After 50-some-odd TWO HOUR streams, the devs are still doing what I'm doing and driving around mining. Supposedly there's more than that, so HOW TO YOU GET TO MORE CONTENT! DEVS!?!?. . . and then the multiplayer\/networking. Get about 5 players or more (and sometimes not even 5) and the entire game chugs to the point where you can't even function and then you invariably lose connection or the game crashes.Anyway, this game COULD be very cool and supposedly you can build stations and get shipping and trading routes, and there's pvp - which I have zero interest in, but there are so many things that are busted and the biggest thing, NO INFORMATION ON HOW TO USE THE GAME, I would say wait. After FOUR YEARS, I would say give it another four years or wait until it is on sale for like 50% off. After the amount I've tried to play the game, I can't get my money back now, so that sucks . . .. Early Access Review: 22.3 hrs on record (more hours if I count playing the demo/alpha from the Split Polygon's site).This is one of THE most enjoyable games I have. Here's what you can do RIGHT NOW:1. You can design and NAME your OWN ship. You lay out your ships in cubed blocks. You can have multiple levels and multiple rooms on each level.You have to add a power source. I like to use a combination of hydrogen generators and solar panels. You have to add power storage. I like to use a combination of hydrogen tanks and back-up batteries.You add doors, lights, a helm/bridge. gun turrets (limited and not working yet, but on the roadmap). You add stairs and elevators, windows and walkways.You have to add a teleporter. You have to add life-support (an oxygen processor, and then ventilation in all rooms).You add furniture, storage cabinets, computer terminals and quite a lot more.2. Then you build your ship. To build your ship, you need multiple resources. To be those resources, you have to use an "extractor" to capture asteroids and mine them for iron, copper, water (which can be refined into hydrogen and oxygen), and silicon (though I understand that more elements may be on the way).You then refine the raw resources, add the resources to your "vault" and build a ship. To get silicon, you currently have to build a small ship with its own extractor and go to ANOTHER distant asteroid field, mine it, and return to the station.3. You then equip your ship. You mine water for oxygen and teleport it to the cargo pads on your ship (where you can grab it, slide it into the oxygen processor on your ship, and load it into the system). You mine water for hydrogen and teleport it right into the hydrogen fuel tanks on your ship.4. You can then teleport to your ship. You can walk around. All the doors work. The extractors, refineries, cargo teleporters, cargo pads ... those ALL work. More things I'M SURE will come later. Just walking around, in first person view, in a ship I created, is a real joy.5. You can FLY your ship. The bigger the ship, the more engines you need. My ships don't turn very well. Not sure why. But it's a joy to set course and fly.Just messing around with the editor is hours of fun, but having adventures in space, playing as captain of my own ship, BEING my own Han Solo or Malcolm Reynolds in a ship I designed and named ... awesome.I can't WAIT to see what this game will become. What it lacks in "flash", it MORE than makes up for in gameplay.. This game is currently in pretty early development and a lot of features aren't implemented yet.That being said, what is there is really solid. Ship and station interiors look fantastic. The ship editor is logial and easy to use.The computer interfaces are fantastic. I have very high hopes for this game.. NO, THIS IS NOT ANOTHER SPACE ENGINEERS CLONE!(even using ship exteriors that look like voxels)At first, I was skeptical. Then, I gave it a try... and I don't regret I did it. The game is still in alpha, but it is awesome and full of potential. For the ones who remember, this game resembles "Battlecruiser Millenium", where you had to manage a ship, fly it, engage in combats, etc. The difference: at that game, everything was too complicated and too full of numbers; here at Interstellar Rift, things are way easier and - best of all - first person. You build your ship (in an editor, not in real time) and run it. The game lets you build your ship from scratch or edit a pre-existing model, and the building scheme is NOT voxel-based, just look like it. It seems a bit boring at first glance, but when you notice you are building a custom ship which you will be piloting, you become involved in a quest for the excellent ship for your needs. After that, you gather ingame resources by operating machines (a miner - called extractor - and a refinery to smelt the ores) in your starting space station to build your ship. The amount varies according to the mass (the size) of your ship, with each component included in ship's design adding to the total. In case you are not prepared for this, you can simply purchase an initial ship with your initial U-nits (ingame currency) and begin piloting immediately. Depending on the size of your ship, the game becomes better played with a crew. Player Community seems to be a bit shy at the moment, since we can't easily find a crew, but as I said, you can fly your ship alone. In fact, it seems the game is still growing and that everyone wants his own ship, so that's why we still need some time to let things settle down.The game is enjoyable in its current state. The staff is present in forums and due to game updates we can see they are working hard to make a great game, fixing bugs and including content. Despite of the ships "blocky appearence", the graphics are very good (in fact, only ships are blocky, ship interiors are very detailed). The price is great for an early development title. Recommended.. Truly an amazing game with a very real feel of sandbox play. Despite what faction you choose to start out with, maintaining or changing your affiliations via reputation or otherwise is all in how you decide to play a role. I'm not a huge fan of the ship design limitations, especially that adding a small room to the inside of your ship creates a HUGE set of obnoxious and (frankly) off-scale exterior blocks that can seriously ruin your ideal image/design of your creation.The universe is simply huge and I'd gather it's every bit as big as Elite Dangerous', No Man's Sky's, or Star Citizen's universe. When the ship tells you that it will take 3000+ days to get to a location without accelerating, it means it and it's very obvious from the first time you set to leave a planet's nearby exo-sphere at anything less that Warp 3. I love this game, it's got all the right elements there for PvP and PvE and the amount of grind is also, notably, balanced as well. Combat could use some more polishing, joystick HOTAS integration is still needed, and the ship editor needs some tweaking, but overall the game is pretty awesome and if the playerbase would simply give it a chance, I think we really see a hard hitting competitor in the mix here.9/10 Recoms

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