provided you have the proper facilities to make it.Īnalysis: Since the whole goal of Cube World at its Alpha stage is basically just exploring while trying not to die, it's best suited for casual expeditions, preferably with friends to tackle the really big baddies. From simple potions to intricate pieces of armor, blueprints for all sorts of helpful items can be found everywhere. There's no penalty to respawning, so you'll want to make sure you spend time hunting down materials to craft better equipment with. Threats like giant angry alpacas who interrupt you while you're sucking on pineapple slices. Initially, your best bet is probably to spend a lot of time slaughtering hapless animals to level up, but as you get stronger, you'll be able to handle the more exotic threats. As you land successful attacks on monsters, your magic points go up, and once the bar has filled you can hold and then release the right mouse button to unleash a more powerful attack. In between dying a whole bunch, that is, since friendly NPCs outside of towns are rare, and robbers, monsters, and just plain nasty wildlife want to render your blocks into bits. You can even climb things as long as your stamina holds out, go hang-gliding, get a pet platypus, and more. The world you've just created has everything from towns and castles to dungeons and daily missions (represented by crossed swords on the map) so it's up to you to get out there and discover it all.
After you've created a character, choosing a race and a class, you'll be asked to generate a world by choosing a "seed" (any string of numbers you want) and naming it before being booted out into the land with only the bare essentials. picks up items, while interacts with people and objects, and you can press at any time to get a rundown of the basics.
You move with and look around with the mouse, with both right and left mouse buttons triggering your attacks. And yes, it is a lot of fun.Ĭube World's controls are actually pretty basic. Currently available in Alpha, the game focuses less (or rather, not at all) on building and more (or rather, entirely!) on roaming the world, discovering and delving dungeons, fighting everything from giant cyclopean warriors to enraged sentient radishes, feeding moles chocolate donuts to make them your pets, and dying a whole bunch because most of the world doesn't like your face. Despite what you might think, Picroma's indie exploration-based RPG Cube World is not a Minecraft clone.