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FTL: Faster Than Light is a top down, real time strategy game created by indie developers Subset Games. In the game, the player controls the crew of a single spacecraft, holding critical information to be delivered to an allied fleet several sectors away, while being pursued by a large rebel fleet. The player must guide the spacecraft over a number of sectors, each with planetary systems and events procedurally generated in a roguelike fashion, while facing against rebel and other hostile forces, recruiting new crew, and outfitting and upgrading their ship. Combat takes place in pausable real time, and if the ship is destroyed or the crew lost, the game ends in permadeath, requiring the player to restart.

The concept for FTL was based on tabletop board games and other non-strategic space combat video games that required the player to manage an array of ship's functions. The initial development by the two-man Subset Games was self-funded, and guided towards developing entries for various indie game competitions. With positive responses from players and judges at these events, Subset opted to engage in a crowd-sourced Kickstarter campaign to finish the title, and succeeded in obtaining twenty times more than they had sought; the extra funds were used towards more professional art, music and in-game writing. The game, considered one of the major successes of the Kickstarter fundraisers for video games, was released in September 2012, to many positive reviews.

Gameplay[ | ]

The player controls a faster-than-light (FTL) travel capable spacecraft belonging to the Federation, which is on the verge of collapse after losing a war with human-supremacist rebel forces. The player's crew intercepts a data packet from the rebel fleet containing information that could throw the rebels into disarray and ensure a Federation victory. The goal is to reach Federation headquarters, waiting several space sectors away, while avoiding destruction or capture by the pursuing rebels.

At game start, the player chooses a spacecraft with several specific systems rooms (piloting, engines, weapons, life support, etc.), and a crew. The game randomly generates multiple space sectors à la roguelike games, with twenty-some interesting way-points per sector. The player must "jump" the ship between way-points, normally unaware what awaits at each point, making headway to an "exit" point leading to the next sector until the Federation is reached. Players can revisit way-points, but each warp jump consumes fuel and causes the rebel fleet to occupy more of the space in each sector. Encounters are more dangerous deeper within the rebel sphere of influence.

Way-points may include stores that offer ship systems, fuel, ammunition, crew recruits, and hull repairs for a certain amount of scrap (in-game currency). Other way-points may appear as distress calls from stranded ships or traps set by rebels and other hostile groups. Certain destinations are hazardous to the ship or ship functions: asteroid belts continually pelt ships, nebulae disable sensors, and flares from red giant stars cause fires. Hostile ships often attack the player, and must either be destroyed or fought until they offer surrender. During attacks the game becomes a real-time space combat simulator in which the player can pause the game for situation evaluation and command input.

In combat, the player can manage the ship's systems by distributing power, order crew to specific stations or rooms to repair damage, and fire weapons at the enemy ship. Successful weapon strikes by either side can damage systems, disabling their functions until repaired by crew; cause hull breaches that vent air into space until patched by crew; ignite fires that spread and damage both systems and the hull until they are extinguished by crew or starved of oxygen; and inflict direct hull damage, which reduces the ship's hull points (the player can restore hull points via stores, friendly bases, random events, and hull repair drones). A ship is destroyed once its hull points are reduced to zero, or defeated once its crew is eliminated. A player victory earns resources for bartering, upgrading, or combat; an enemy victory results in game failure, deleting the save file and forcing the player to start over creating a high level of difficulty. Alternatively, the player may evade combat by jumping to another way-point after the ship's engines have charged.

The game begins with a single accessible ship, the Kestrel-class cruiser. Eight further ships are unlocked by completing objectives. Each ship has a second layout—a different color scheme, equipment, and crew—that can be unlocked by completing base-layout objectives. Each ship design and layout begin focused on different game play aspects; the ship roster has designs for stealth, boarding, drone systems, and other variations. The game also has separate achievements with no gameplay impact. The game can be modified by the user to alter the various ship configurations.[1]

Development[ | ]

FTL is the product of the two-man team of Subset Games, Matthew Davis and Justin Ma. Both were employees of 2K Games's Shanghai studio, and became friends during their tenure there, playing various board games in their free time.[2] Ma, who considered himself a jack-of-all-trades, had become dissatisfied with working in a larger studio, and after traveling to the 2011 Game Developers Conference in San Francisco and seeing the Independent Games Festival, he realized he wanted to become an independent developer.[2] Davis had left 2K Games early in 2011, and after biking through China, returned and joined Ma, who had also recently quit, and began working on the core FTL game.[3] They agreed they would spend a year towards development and if their efforts did not pan out, they would go on to other things.[2]

The idea for the game was inspired by tabletop board games, such as Battlestar Galactica: The Board Game,[4] and non-strategic video games, such as Star Wars: X-Wing, where the player would have to route power to available systems to best manage the situation.[3] Unlike most space combat simulation games, "the initial concept was as simple as wanting to put the player in the commander's chair instead of the pilot's", according to Davis,[5] and to make "the player feel like they were Captain Picard yelling at engineers to get the shields back online", as stated by Ma.[2] The intent of the game was to make it feel like a "suicide mission", and had adjusted the various elements of the game to anticipate a 10% success rate.[4] They looked to Super Meat Boy as an example of a game designed "to be hard, but not frustrating", according to Ma, noting that there were almost no barriers to the player restarting after a failed attempt; in considering that a loss in FTL means the player must restart the game, they felt that there had to be no barriers at all for the player to start a new game.[4] However, they also considered that each loss was a learning experience for the player, gaining knowledge of what battles to engage in and when to avoid or abandon unwinnable fights.[4] The permanence of a gameplay mistake was a critical element they wanted to include, and gameplay features such as permadeath emphasized this approach.[4]

Their preliminary versions used primitive art assets to allow them to focus on the game. This helped them to realize that they were trying to help the player become invested in the characters they controlled, allowing their imagination to fill in what their graphics at the time could not.[2] Only as they neared the August 2011 Game Developers Conference in China after about six months of work, where they planned to submit FTL as part of the Independent Games Festival there, did they start focusing on the game's art.[3][5] The game was named as a finalist at the IGF China competition, leading to initial media exposure for the game.[6] PC Gamer magazine offered an early preview of the game that created more media interest in time for the Independent Games Festival at the March 2012 Games Developer Conference.[7] The OnLive cloud-based gaming service included FTL and other Independent Games Festival finalists for several weeks around the conference.[8][9] At the Festival, FTL was nominated for, though did not win, the Grand Prize and the Excellent in Design award; these accolades further helped to spark interest in the game.[6] Davis considered that the game's involvement in these competitions were important to keep the game's development on a forward schedule, as judges and members of the press would be expecting playable prototypes of the completed title.[10] Davis believed that the publicity of being a part of these competitions, even if not as a nominated title, helped to garner interest in FTL by the larger public.[10]

Subset Games had initially planned to work on the title for about a three-month period after saving enough of their own money to cover expenses for about a year.[4] The additional attention to the game forced them to extend development - what would be a two-year process - and thus they turned to Kickstarter in order to fund the final polish of the game as well as costs associated to its release, seeking a total funding goal of $10,000.[11] Their Kickstarter approach was considered well-timed, riding on the coattails of the highly successful Double Fine Adventure Kickstarter in March 2012,[12] as well as gaining the attention of top developers like Ken Levine and Markus Persson;[5] with interest spurred in crowd-funded games, Subset games was able to raise over $200,000 through the effort.[11] FTL represents one of the first games to come out from this surge in crowd-funded games, and demonstrates that such funding mechanisms can support video game development.[12]

With the larger funding, Subset has considered the benefit of adding more features at the cost of extending the game's release schedule. They opted to make some small improvements on the game, with only a one-month release delay from their planned schedule, and stated they would use the remaining Kickstarter funds for future project development.[4] The additional funds allowed them to pay for licensing fees of middleware libraries and applications to improve the game's performance.[4] Additionally, they were able to outsource other game assets; in particular additional writing and world design was provided by Tom Jubert (Penumbra, Driver: San Francisco),[4] while music was composed by Ben Prunty.[13] Prunty was introduced to Subset through another game developer, Anton Mikhailov, that was a common friend to both Prunty and Davis. Prunty was already ready to provide Subset with some music tracks prior to the Kickstarter, but with its success, they were able to pay for a full soundtrack. Prunty retained the rights to the soundtrack, and since has been able to offer it on Bandcamp.[13] Prunty wanted to create an interactive soundtrack that would change when the player entered and exit battle; for this, he composed the calmer "Explore" (non-battle) version of each song, then build atop that to create the more-engaging "Battle" version. Within the game, both versions of the song play at the same time, with the game cross-fading between the versions based on action in the game.[13] A secret race in the game, the Crystal, is the result of one person contributing at a high enough level for the tier reward that allowed the person to help design the race for inclusion in the game.[4]

Subset Games has stated that they would not likely create a direct sequel to FTL, though future games they are planning may include similar concepts that were introduced in FTL.[4] It is unlikely that they will use a Kickstarter method to raise funds, as they have raised enough money through sales of FTL to continue to fund their future projects.[4]

Reception[ | ]

 Reception

FTL received positive reviews, with praise for the game's captivating nature and means of tapping into the imagination of players who have envisioned themselves as captains of starships. The game's approach and setting has been compared to science fiction works; Ben Kuchera of Penny Arcade Report calls FTL "Firefly by way of the Rogue-like genre",[20] while others have compared it to Star Trek, Star Wars, and Battlestar Galactica.[16]

PC Gamer awarded FTL its Short-form Game of the Year 2012 award.[21] The game won both "Excellence in Design" and the "Audience Award",[22] and was a finalist for the "Seumas McNally Grand Prize" awards for the 15th Annual Independent Games Festival.[23] It was also named the "Best Debut" title at the 2013 Game Developers Choice Awards.[24]

While reception of the game has generally been positive, some reviewers have criticized the game's difficulty level. Sparky Clarkson of GameCritics wrote, "FTL is an absurdly, cruelly difficult game."[25] The staff of Edge magazine, while generally complimentary towards the game, said, "FTL can occasionally feel punishing".[26]

The game's soundtrack was nominated for IGN's Best Overall Music and Best PC Sound of 2012.[27][28] Additionally, it was recognized as being among Kotaku's Best Video Game Music of 2012,[29] one of the Top Ten Video Game Soundtracks of 2012 on The Game Scouts,[30] one of Complex magazine's 25 Best Video Game Soundtracks on Bandcamp,[31] and one of NeoGAF's Official Game Soundtracks of the Year 2012.[32]


References[ | ]

  1. Thursten, Chris (2012-10-18). FTL mods video round-up: fly ships from Star Trek, Star Wars, and Firefly. PC Gamer. Retrieved on 2013-01-01
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Lien, Tracey (2013-03-12). The Opposite of Fail: The Story of FTL. Polygon. Retrieved on 2013-03-12
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 CjnLion (2012-05-10). Kickstart to Lightspeed – An FTL Interview. Destructoid. Retrieved on 2012-09-20
  4. 4.00 4.01 4.02 4.03 4.04 4.05 4.06 4.07 4.08 4.09 4.10 4.11 Floyd, Christopher (2012-12-09). Sunday Sidebar: Meet Justin Ma of Subset Games. Video Game Writers. Retrieved on 2013-01-07
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Graft, Kris (2013-02-13). Road to the IGF: Subset Games' FTL. Gamasutra. Retrieved on 2013-02-13
  6. 6.0 6.1 Rose, Mike (2012-09-20). Kickstarter, contests bring FTL to life. Gamasutra. Retrieved on 2012-09-20
  7. Smith, Graham (2012-12-06). FTL: a game about managing a spaceship in an infinite galaxy. PC Gamer. Retrieved on 2012-09-20
  8. Francis, Tom (2012-02-28). Superb spaceship game FTL is now playable through OnLive, buyable through Kickstarter. PC Gamer. Retrieved on 2012-09-20
  9. OnLive (2012-02-27). "OnLive Announces Indie Showcase in Partnership With the Independent Games Festival". Press release. http://www.onlive.com/corporate/press_releases/1250. Retrieved 2012-09-20. 
  10. 10.0 10.1 Sheffield, Brandon (2012-11-19). How competition deadlines whipped FTL into shape. Gamasutra. Retrieved on 2012-11-21
  11. 11.0 11.1 "Subset Games is raising funds for FTL: Faster Than Light on Kickstarter!". 27 February 2012. http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/64409699/ftl-faster-than-light. Retrieved 10 September 2012. 
  12. 12.0 12.1 Hillier, Brenna (2012-09-17). FTL: Faster Than Light heralds the Kickstarter age. VG247. Retrieved on 2012-09-20
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 Kuchera, Ben (2012-10-02). Video game music composed on a banjo: The man behind FTL’s soundtrack. Penny Arcade Reports. Retrieved on 2012-10-02
  14. FTL: Faster Than Light. Game Rankings. Retrieved on 2012-09-21
  15. FTL: Faster Than Light (2012: pc). Metacritic. Retrieved on 2012-09-21
  16. 16.0 16.1 Whitehead, Dan (2012-09-21). FTL: Faster Than Light review. Eurogamer. Retrieved on 2012-09-21
  17. Todd, Brett (2012-09-17). FTL: Faster Than Light Review. Gamespot. Retrieved on 2012-09-21
  18. Cobbett, Richard (2012-09-15). FTL: Faster Than Light Review. Gamespy. Retrieved on 2012-09-21
  19. Johnson, Leif (2012-09-19). Where No Roguelike Has Gone Before. IGN. Retrieved on 2012-09-21
  20. Kurchera, Ben (2012-09-14). FTL is Firefly by way of the Rogue-like genre, and it’s punishingly brilliant. Penny Arcade Report. Retrieved on 2012-09-21
  21. Senior, Tom (December 28, 2012). The Short-form Game of the Year 2012: FTL. PC Gamer. Retrieved on December 29, 2012
  22. Cart Life, FTL: Faster Than Light, Little Inferno take home IGF awards. Gamasutra (2013-03-27). Retrieved on 2013-03-27
  23. 2013 Independent Games Festival announces Main Competition finalists. Gamasutra (2013-01-07). Retrieved on 2013-01-07
  24. Makuch, Eddie (2013-03-28). Journey takes top prize at GDC Awards. Gamespot. Retrieved on 2013-03-28
  25. Clarkson, Sparky (October 10, 2012). FTL: Faster Than Light Review. GameCritics. Retrieved on January 19, 2013
  26. FTL: Faster Than Light review. Edge (September 21, 2012). Retrieved on January 19, 2013
  27. Best Overall Music. IGN. Retrieved on 13 May 2013
  28. Best PC Sound. IGN. Retrieved on 13 May 2013
  29. Hamilton, Kirk. The Best Video Game Music of 2012. Kotaku. Retrieved on 13 May 2013
  30. Hamlin, Jon. Top Ten Video Game Soundtracks of 2012. The Game Scouts. Retrieved on 13 May 2013
  31. Amirkhani, Justin. The 25 Best Video Game Soundtracks on Bandcamp. Complex. Retrieved on 13 May 2013
  32. NeoGAF’s Official Game Soundtracks of the Year 2012: Results and Archive. NeoGAF. Retrieved on 13 May 2013

External links[ | ]

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