Close Menu
PS4 HomePS4 Home
  • Home
  • Best PS4 Games
  • Editorials
  • How To’s
  • FAQs
  • Accessories
  • PS5 Home
  • More
    • PS4 Game Guides
    • PS4 Games List
    • PS4 Wallpapers
    • PS4 Console Pictures
    • Other Gaming
      • PS5
What's Hot

PS4 Rebuild Database: Optimize Your Console’s Performance

October 27, 2024

Is The Finals on PS4? Availability of Popular Basketball Game on PlayStation 4

October 27, 2024

How to Delete PS4 Account: A Simple Guide to Account Management

October 13, 2024
Facebook X (Twitter)
PS4 HomePS4 Home
Facebook X (Twitter)
  • Home
  • Best PS4 Games

    The Best PS4 Games for April 2024

    April 17, 2024

    The Best PS4 Games for March 2024

    April 17, 2024

    The Best PS4 Games for February 2024

    February 25, 2024

    The 50 Best PS4 Games Of All Time

    January 11, 2024

    The Best PS4 Games Coming In January 2024

    January 9, 2024
  • Editorials
  • How To’s
  • FAQs
  • Accessories
  • PS5 Home
  • More
    • PS4 Game Guides
    • PS4 Games List
    • PS4 Wallpapers
    • PS4 Console Pictures
    • Other Gaming
      • PS5
PS4 HomePS4 Home
Home»PS4 Editorials»No Man’s Sky – A Real AAA Indie Game?
PS4 Editorials

No Man’s Sky – A Real AAA Indie Game?

By Dusty W.March 25, 2015No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Reddit LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Reddit Email

The way video games across all platforms are going, there’s a pretty clear divide between big studios with big names, big budgets, and big press coverage, and the smaller indie game marketplace. Let’s not kid ourselves into thinking one is outright superior to the other, especially when games like Minecraft and Counter-Strike have already proven bigger successes than a lot of AAA titles, while series like Uncharted and God of War routinely run circles around indie games. However, it’s usually pretty easy to tell which is which; AAA titles use time-tested formulas and jaw-dropping graphics, while indie games are experimental, trying something a little new with a more minimalist art style. It’s a line that everybody, even non-gamers, can figure out.

No Man’s Sky 01
With the game No Man’s Sky, however, that line might have just been blurred beyond recognition.

For those of you who don’t know, let’s start with the basics. While details have been intentionally vague, No Man’s Sky is an open-world space exploration game coming from a mostly unknown startup company by the name of Hello Games, whose previous claims to fame were the Joe Danger series and little else. While this may smell a lot like any one of a thousand other indie titles, this is where the similarities end, and its differences could change the way we all think about indie gaming.

Unimaginable Gameplay

While No Man’s Sky may have indie gaming in its bones, it’s got the heart, soul, and computing power of a full AAA title, and it’s more than willing to open that up as a PS4 exclusive. The real secret to No Man’s Sky is something called procedurally generated content, an older concept in games that generates levels and other such pieces following an algorithm rather than an individual artist rendering every single environment. Essentially, it sets out a few rules, reaches into the game’s art assets, and allows the game to create its own random levels, saving a lot of disk space and programming time. While early procedurally generated content was designed to save disk space or add a little bit of random generation, it’s picked up some steam in the last decade due to games like Left 4 Dead and Dwarf Fortress. With No Man’s Sky, however, they’ve really gone all-out with procedural generation; we’re getting a universe with quintillions of planets (no, that isn’t a typo, we really do mean trillions of billions of individual planets), each one of them filled with procedurally generated plants, animals, landscapes, weather patterns, and a host of other features designed to give every player a truly unique gaming experience. With the PS4’s hardware behind it, No Man’s Sky may be the first entirely unspoilable game ever created.

See also  Top 10 PS4 Compatible Keyboards

No Man’s Sky 02

For the PS4, this is an absolute god-send. In terms of raw computing power, No Man’s Sky really shows us what this new generation PlayStation is capable of in a way that’s literally beyond comparison; while everyone may share one gigantic map, visiting every single world would take literally billions of years. Because it’s all algorithmic, Hello Games can use more of their disk space to create beautiful art assets, something that the PlayStation has always excelled at, and do it all with a team of ten people.

Actual Game-centric Approaches

Once again, at first glance, No Man’s Sky looks like it’s trying to do something that other franchises have tried before, reducing itself to a single gimmick that gets boring after a week; if anybody remembers MAG or Watch Dogs, you know what I’m talking about. However, No Man’s Sky seems to be something special. When it debuted at E3 in 2013, it really and truly stole the show despite numerous setbacks in production and organization that an AAA game just wouldn’t have. For starters, because everything is randomly generated and always in flux, it was incredibly difficult to find something that would fit in a good trailer; this wasn’t a polished, pretty demo piece that the Hello Games crew was showing at the biggest video game conference of the season alongside multi-million dollar titles, but thoroughly unscripted gameplay. This was honestly as much a feature as an obstacle with this company, whose CEO said in an interview with GameSpot, even after the E3 demo blew everyone’s minds that the focus wouldn’t be on emulating the AAA titles with gameplay trailers or massive development teams, but just making a game the way they believe it needs to be made.

See also  Sony's PS4: backward compatible or not?

No Man’s Sky
These implications are incredibly different than those of big-name studios; with a big title like Assassin’s Creed, you put a huge amount of time and effort into one big flagship product, so just to make back your costs; you’re forced to follow a set of rules that everyone expects. This isn’t to say that it’s bad, just a reality of gaming as a business where, at the end of the day, everyone still has to get paid. No Man’s Sky, however, is both poised for success and unapologetically different. If it can prove that different works, No Man’s Sky can encourage others big studios to follow suit, putting their big budgets behind cool, indie concepts in the future.

Keep an eye on No Man’s Sky when it comes out later this year; its success will definitely change both how we view video games and prove that even the big dogs of the industry still can learn a thing or two from the up-and-comers.

Dusty W.

Dusty has interviewed some of the brightest minds in the video game industry at E3, written for Lifehacker, and much more. Dusty is also a passionate PS4 gamer who has a BA in journalism.

featured
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Email
Previous Article10 Reasons To Be Excited About God of War 3 Remastered
Next Article Slender The Arrival – Launch Screenshots

Related Posts

How to Delete PS4 Account: A Simple Guide to Account Management

October 13, 2024

When Will Sony Stop Making Games for the PS4?

September 1, 2024

Is Your PS4 Still Worth Holding On To in 2024?

September 1, 2024

The Best PS4 Games for April 2024

April 17, 2024

The Best PS4 Games for March 2024

April 17, 2024

The Best PS4 Games for February 2024

February 25, 2024
Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Featured
Editor's picks

PS4 Rebuild Database: Optimize Your Console’s Performance

October 27, 2024Updated:October 27, 2024

Is your PS4 running slower than usual? You might need to rebuild its database. This…

Editor's picks

How to Delete PS4 Account: A Simple Guide to Account Management

October 13, 2024Updated:October 13, 2024

Deleting a PS4 account might sound tricky, but with the right guidance, it’s straightforward. To delete…

Best PS4 Games

The Best PS4 Games for April 2024

April 17, 2024Updated:August 31, 2024

We’re well into 2024 now, and the PS4 has yet to give up the ghost,…

Best PS4 Games

The Best PS4 Games for March 2024

April 17, 2024Updated:August 31, 2024

It’s officially spring (well, according to the meteorological definition, anyway), and you know what that…

Our Picks

PS4 Rebuild Database: Optimize Your Console’s Performance

October 27, 2024

Is The Finals on PS4? Availability of Popular Basketball Game on PlayStation 4

October 27, 2024

How to Delete PS4 Account: A Simple Guide to Account Management

October 13, 2024
Popular Guides

PS4 Rebuild Database: Optimize Your Console’s Performance

October 27, 2024

Is The Finals on PS4? Availability of Popular Basketball Game on PlayStation 4

October 27, 2024

How to Delete PS4 Account: A Simple Guide to Account Management

October 13, 2024
Popular This Month

PS4 Backwards Compatibility – How To Play PS2 And PS3 Games On PS4

June 2, 2019

Adults: How to Watch Virtual Reality Porn on PlayStation VR

October 31, 2017

Is The Finals on PS4? Availability of Popular Basketball Game on PlayStation 4

October 27, 2024
PS4Home.com © 2012- 2023
Partners:    Gamerbolt.com | PS5Home.com


  • About us
  • Advertise

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.