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This is a category for any video game where the player controls actions taking place, at least partially, on Mars. The action must take place on the surface Mars itself, not simply in orbit above Mars. This includes any alternate universe Mars, such as after terraforming, or on a seemingly fantasical Mars, as long as it is in relation to Earth.
Earth 2160 is a real-time strategy video game, developed by Reality Pump Studios.A third entry in the Earth series, it is a direct sequel to Earth 2150.The release of the game was staggered, originally published in Russia, Germany, and Poland in June 2005, then released in the rest of Europe in September with North America receiving the latest release of the game November.
Food supplies are short, movement of citizens is controlled, and many Mars inhabitants have tried to rise up against Earth, but to little avail. The game follows the story of a 17-year-old boy named Cage Midwell, a worker upon the interplanetary express ship "Bonaparte III" with his close friend (and idol) Ares Enduwa.
Farlanders is a turn-based space colony city-building game set on Mars. It is of the strategy genre, having puzzle elements, the perspective is 2D and gridded, and the maps are procedurally generated. Terraforming is an integral part of the strategy for colonization. It has seven missions in total. [1] [2] [3]
Dead Space (2008 video game) Dead Space (2023 video game) Dead Space: Extraction; Deep Sky Derelicts; Deep Space: Operation Copernicus; Delta Squadron (video game) Demon Attack; Demon Seed (video game) Dino Crisis 3; Doom Eternal; Doom: The Dark Ages; Dyson Sphere Program
Deliver Us Mars received mixed reviews on Metacritic. [5] PC Gamer said its limited budget caused Deliver Us Mars to fall short of its potential, but they recommended it to fans of single-player games with a strong story. [2] Although they disliked the puzzles, Rock Paper Shotgun praised the story and platform game elements. [6]
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Entertainment Weekly gave the game an A− and wrote that "While it's never too early to teach kids to respect the biosphere, the same may not be true of introducing them to complicated simulations such as Simearth: The Living Planet (FCI, for Super NES), which has more variables (temperature, precipitation, etc.) than a polynomial equation ...