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  • YOUR Review of MOO3

    Now in our Directory:
    POST YOUR MOO3 REVIEW

    if you want to post some screenshots,
    Use the Upload service
    For the sake of everyone's bandwidth, dont use the img tag to display images in your review, instead link to them(yes you can use html for links, bolding, etc)

    Finally, please dont reply to reviews in the directory. Post here instead. Use the directory only to post your view of the game and rate it
    Last edited by MarkG; March 4, 2003, 04:24.
    Co-Founder, Apolyton Civilization Site
    Co-Owner/Webmaster, Top40-Charts.com | CTO, Apogee Information Systems
    giannopoulos.info: my non-mobile non-photo news & articles blog

  • #2
    i will be brief

    i have lurked here for over a year... waiting for this game.

    i think i cover it quite nicely with:

    Phantom Menace

    a good film... worth watching.


    but....

    you had all that time... all that money.... and all the talent you could ask for.

    and you delivered mediocre graphics and an obtuse interface.

    a host of minor yet annoying imperfections:

    no ship upgrade

    no fleet reconfigure

    no planet/system naming

    missing information that should be accessible with a click

    no varied time on fleet combat

    difficult or buggy counter offer in dipolmacy.
    .....

    there is more but thats enough for now.

    That being said. it is a fun game. it is interesting and i see tremendous potential... look forward to version 1.5

    becasue unlike the TPM this can be patched.

    currently a 3/5

    edited to add

    3/5 for die hard strategy gamers ... a do not ever purchase for the casual sort dont even play it if given as a gift
    Last edited by britvojnik; February 28, 2003, 19:45.

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    • #3
      britvojnik, what you posted should be here
      Co-Founder, Apolyton Civilization Site
      Co-Owner/Webmaster, Top40-Charts.com | CTO, Apogee Information Systems
      giannopoulos.info: my non-mobile non-photo news & articles blog

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      • #4
        edited to edit

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        • #5
          This is not a game...it is a friggin pain in the butt...way to complicated to be fun. I don't want to spend 100 hours to learn how to play a game....I want to play the game. These kooks could learn alot from civ 3...much easier to learn.

          Comment


          • #6
            my moo3 review...in brief

            Alrighty then lets get to it!

            I have been lurking on the boards for over a year and just like a lot of people out there I let the fear and outright hysteria affect me....

            that was until the game arrived!

            what a rollercoaster...I spent 24full hours on sat trying to play...and I must have restarted 4 or maybe 6 times AAAARRRGGGG! my worst fears were comming true..again just like so many others out there....

            so many things were going wrong ....I was confused by the flood of info... and I kept trying to micromanage everything (wrong thing to do IMHO)...I was not impressed with the space combat engine...little ships..little battles....to much tech fooding in could not refit ships everything seemed to be as the dark lords of the reviews has said......UNTIL

            .... I went for a much needed nap and much moo3 dreams/nightmares......then BLAMO!

            I woke up and literaly ran to the computer and it all started to make sence! YES YES

            I started and the Klakons (I highly recomend anyfirst time player follow lorweavers strat guide)
            and Iam now on turn 146 and WOW it keeps getting better and better! Although I got kicked out of the senate (which is fine as I did not want a klick through victory...which is only to say when the insects start in the sentate it is easy to over populate all others except the lizard folk and win the senate victory..but diplomacy is for talkers not swarms of mad BUGS)


            I now soundly disagree with the trash talkers...not with their opinions 'cause you can't ...but with the inacurate reporting of things like:
            1. the AI is no good.....pure crap.
            I have found it to be great so good infact that I have to think hard if I am going to change any of its policies.

            2. viceroys are not good....again more crap.
            I have found the key is understanding that the true brilliant part of this game design IMHO is the interactive ai which uses the programing goals set by the player in the EMPIRE section were one sets the policys for the different planet types, the better the player is the better the Ai will be.

            3. Space combat graphics are poorly done....again crapola
            they are not poorly done this system like others that have been reviewed is missunderstood...they are great at giving the effect that was intended..which IMOP is like in return of the jedi when the emporer is trying to turn Luke and he tells him to watch the reble fleet being cruched... IT IS NOT NOR WAS NOT MENT TO BE MOO2+ and I found it great once I built up an armada or two WOW...fighters, missles, 'plosions...very cool I feel like the emporer in STAR WARS....I bet just like it was intended!

            4.Depolmacy is eratic and irrational......once again BUllpoopoo!
            IMHO I have found it not worse than Moo2...and I suspect the varied methods used to calculate the reactions are to deep to be understood yet....but once we do understand and the paths are maped out I bet we will find they make perfect sence if you look at it from the angle that you have two alien civ who come from two diferent head spaces are trying to talk and do biz!!

            one example of subtle and complex relations acn be seen by what happened to me and my buddy the meklars...ok we have been friends pretty much since turn one...we worked up and have an alliance not a FULL alliance mind you..anyway I am build ..and building and I send a little 15ship task force to meki the meklar just to say hi...and boom he delairs war on me !!!
            now at first I was pissed "WHAT.the F%^K" I said? then I realized
            how things would look from the little mek's perspective...what would I think if my "buddy" showed up on my door step with 15 missle ships! I might think he was planing something..yes he could have just asked me to go..but he is an alien he is supposed to be confusing and wierd...I think if we look deep enough we will find reasons however tenous to suport the actions the diplomatic ai takes.

            5. documentaion is very poor....ok this I agree with and I think is the reason for a lot of the disatisfaction....things just are not explained well and that is frusterating...like what is the dif between allaince which in moo2 would allow you to travile through someones empire and the alliance in moo3? what is a full alliance etc...
            soon as this gets fixed confusion and thus frustration will fade.

            All in all a classic and when people start playing multi this game will shine even brighter....


            wonderfull job you guys at QS just what I was hoping for: A highly complex game for those who want to challenge themselves and see if they truly are MASTER!!

            thanks for listening sorry for the bad spelling!!
            Last edited by azuldracul; March 3, 2003, 14:37.
            " It is from the character of our adversary's position that we can draw conclusions as to his designs and will therfore act accordingly"
            - karl Von Clausewitz

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            • #7
              My Slightly Bitter Review

              If MOO3 were a coin toss - I'd say the coin landed on it's side. There's alot about it to like, if it were it's own game. But it's the third in a series of games, and for my money the first two were not without problems, but more fun. There's alot of great new stuff in here, but in the intial release not much of it works to my satisfaction. I'm sure it could all be made to work with a patch and/or user mods, but who wants to spend $50 hard earned bucks for the promise of a good game after waiting all this time? There isn't even a good manual to read while your waiting, the manual that shipped with the game is weak, even by Rantz's admission.

              What's fun about any space strategy game? Well, getting to build combat-ready spaceships is sure a blast for any science-fiction fan, and was one of my favorite parts of the first two MOO games. But unlike the first two games, building spaceships yourself in MOO3 is an absolute chore. There's no easy way to compare different designs in the (IMHO) abysmal and bland ship design screen, so who in thier right mind is gonna want to sit and see if Auto-Firing, Armor Piercing Procto-Blasters are more effective than Improved Recto-Phasers with two degrees of miniturization? Finding on your own that sweet combo was so satisfying in MOO2. But here, your pretty much railroaded into just hitting the "auto-build" button. In fact alot of this game railroads you into doing what the AI wants to the point that you may wonder if you're playing the game, or if the game is playing you. Regardless, having been looking forward to third-generation spaceship building, with new techs, and new graphics I found this game's answer to that to be deeply unsatisfying. I've had more fun in Excel than I do building ships in MOO3.

              Well, this game is supposed to have the advanced AI that frees you from that kind of micromanagement, right? The real fun of a space strategy game is taking it to the streets mano-a-mano in glorious 3D combat. Well, don't sell the farm for that new Radeon card yet - the graphics engine must have been designed when the project first started four years ago, and apparently QS didn't have the time, inclination or budget, or all of the above to bring the combat engine into the 21st century. The graphics are not necessarily bad in my opinion, there a step up from any of the previous games by far, and I can live without them if there's strategic depth that I can control. But the combat mechanics are pretty awful, everything happens so fast, and there's no way I found to slow it down or pause it so you can effectively order your fleets, to bring the short range ships in close, sweep the long range ships out the flanks, keep the point defence, carrier ships and missile ships in a defensive cluster away from the fray. Now THAT'S fun!!! There's really no excuse for that, especially in single-player. It wants to be in there, it wants to be cool and fun, but again the ham-handed implementation of the game pretty much railroads you into just clicking "watch" and having the AI play the game for you. *Sigh* I hope my computer is having more fun that I am watching it fight massive fleet battles with my ships.

              Researching exciting new technology is another fun facet of a space game. Mind-boggling advances in hyper-tachyon physics!!! Hooray! But in MOO3 getting a new tech is really kind of a drag, because you can't refit your existing fleet to use ANY new technology, so for every drive, weapon, weapon mount, special, armor or shield tech you discover or improve, you must return to the painful design screen to use it, and not just for one new ship, but every ship type in your inventory that can use the advance. Discover a faster drive? Obsolete every design, and redesign every ship you know how to build from the ground up to use the new improved tech. 16 different ships types with 9 different missions, and all these can either be system (local) ships or Starships which can patrol the galaxy at large. And between different ship systems, and improvements for existing ship systems, there must be hundreds and hundreds of techs, forceing you to either continue using "outdated" tech, or completely redesign every single ship every 10 or so turns. This is the kind of micromanagement hell I thought this game was supposed to save us from. Then on top of that, the new designs are (relative to your current production technology) so expensive that it takes many presses of the "next turn" button to start to have enough of the new ships so that you can build task forces, the basic fleet unit in MOO3, by which time you've discovered something else anyway. And that's only if you manually tell your planets to build them, otherwise they'll just crank out more and more troopships for you. The new weapon tech advances are baby steps apart instead of great leaps forward for your navy, so you can get away with not upgrading right away, but this just means there are way too many techs in the game, making the discovery of any one, a very ho-hum event. Remember when you discovered neutron blasters in MOO2? Oh Yeah. Not here though. Planetary, Government and Spy technolgies are equally plentiful, but these work a little more smoothly because either techs just apply themselves immediately, or the planetary AIs handle building them, and the AI doesn't need to refit existing buildings, it can just keep adding them to your planets as you go, constantly improving your colonies thoughout the course of the game. This would be a good thing, and is certainly nice in the early game, but later on I found my empire was mining/harvesting TWICE as much minerals/food than my empire could actually use, with no profit made from the excess, so by the time you discover yet another bioharvesting/mining improvement, I was overwhelmed with a deep sense of "Whatever". Well, if your empire is mining/harvesting too much, you're building to many mines and farms, right? Well, yes, but your not the one building them, the AI is, and going back and undoing everything it does is twice as much work and half as fun using the bulky interface as if you just chose what to build in the first place.

              OK,what about space fleets, those are pretty cool in space games right? Just think of those battle groups of Imperial Destroyers scouring space for the rebel forces in Star Wars! Yeah! Well the task force system is very cool in MOO3, and adds a nice naval flavor to military fleet action, with different ships and fleets filling different roles just like fleets today. The different roles each ship, and then each task force are assigned to do add a very deep strategic layer to the mix, and I think this is one major improvement over the previous games. But then again point defence ships don't seem to be working consistently against missiles, which seem to be overly powerful in comparison to other weapon types without this balance. Troop transport Task Forces automatically disband after landing thier armies, kinda like if we invaded Iraq and then had our boys walk back home, or even weirder if we disbanded the units they were in and they magically appeared back home after a few years. Who's the game guru who came up with this ground combat deployment model? Nothing that can't be fixed, but after all the delays in releasing this game, with the promise that it was to fix bugs, I'm not too forgiving about this kind of stuff anymore. So yet another great idea has most of the fun beaten out of it by a faulty implementation.

              OK so maybe MOO3 wasn't really supposed to be a tactical space combat game at all, but an game of political intruigue and struggle amongst strange alien races. Well, as I see it, that missed the mark by a light-year. Races will declare war or threaten you for no apparent reason, and then the war will mysteriously end. No, they won't approach you with a lucrative offer of tech or cash or galactic real estate in exchange for your mercy, you'll just look in the sitrep at the beginning of some turn and it'll say "War has ended with the Turdarians". Yawn. But don't worry, it'll start again in a few turns as quickly as it started, and for as little reason. Allies do seem to stick closer to you in MOO3, which I like, but don't bother asking them to trade with you. Unless they come to you, I've never had even my closest ally accept any trade offer. Making a counter-offer to a proposal doesn't work at all, and I've heard bad things about the Orion Senate being bugged in the forums, but starting a game without being a member you can't ever get into it anyway, and I haven't had the good fortune of starting a game in the senate yet, so I wouldn't know. And anyway when I think of this kind game, I'm seeing laser beams blazing across the cosmos, I'm not really as interested in C-Span in space, although that can be a nice facet, if properly implemented. Which it's not. Again.

              So to sum up - The macromanagement angle of the game is a great idea, and the big galaxies with the starlanes to channel forces into provides a nice strategic element, so the game plays much better in the mid to late parts than either of the other two by far. The Task Forces are very cool. Ground combat is better in someways, worse in others. Alot of the game looks much better, but some of it doesn't work as well as in the previous games. The byzantine and inconsistant user interface is a drag, and they took away alot of the really cool features the other games had, like leaders, heros, fleet experience and ship design. Oh sure leaders are in this one too, but they are more like special events that last a few turns than valuable additions to your empire because they die of old age or get killed by spies in a few turns regardless of how much you love and protect them. Just a couple of tweaks here, a few fixes there, and a smattering of what was great in the past would make this game one of my favorites, and I'd be first in line for the expansion pack. The only reason I bother to air what I feel are this games flaws for you to read is that I can tell this was a labor of love for QS, and I hate to see something so good come so close to greatness but miss the mark because of silly little stuff. You know how when you say a word over and over 100 times in a row it starts to lose it's meaning in your mind? I think thats what happened at QS after four years of working on this baby. Now with fresh feedback from us and little more TLC and elbow grease from them, we're gonna have a real winner on our hands. But until a patch comes out I would hold off on dropping my cash down for this one, unless you feel sure you know what you're in for. Peace to the races, and props to QS for getting us this far, just don't leave us hanging please!!!

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              • #8
                I have to say it is all true. I would have at least like to be able to select and existing design and upgrade the design, even if I can not upgrade the old ships. As it is now, you will need to remember all the component of a given design as when you go to the shipyard, it is not likely to be the design you want to work on. Plus the name is reset each time you turn around.
                Yes I still play Moo1 and Moo2 and still get to points in the game where I am trying to get a specific new tech and really sweating getting to it (more so for Moo1). Not so here as you say, so many come, it is hard to notice or care and surely I have no real clue as to their real value. Looking at the discriptions, I can not easily decide if I should use the newest thing a ma bob, I just learned.
                Undetstand, I have not written it off yet, but there are some serious issues.

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                • #9
                  POST YOUR MOO3 REVIEW (yes, click this link right here )
                  Co-Founder, Apolyton Civilization Site
                  Co-Owner/Webmaster, Top40-Charts.com | CTO, Apogee Information Systems
                  giannopoulos.info: my non-mobile non-photo news & articles blog

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