![]() >This was more or less in the original (Acorn) Elite and was absolutely in Frontier.įor Frontier, maybe relatively extensively. is one of the major points that differentiates between the two games, which makes oOlite a game of its own. > These things will happen regardless as to whether you are there or not. Maybe it's changed a lot since last I tried it, but it at least used to be basically a prettier Elite, as I've mentioned. My point is mainly that oOlite in the large is much more like Elite than it is like the later ones, a few features here and there notwithstanding. You're right that some of the features that have been added probably come from FE2 and FFE. Considering that 100% of the article is about how great oolite is, this does not exactly come across as fair. 30% of the article and it could be about the original Elite. Other un-credited things that were in other Elite games first (but were more awkward/lengthy to quote) include the story-driven news feeds, jump tracking, a table of prices, and in-game ads.īasically, if you edited out 20% of the article it could be about FFE. > It is without doubt, the best Space Trading game freely available, and is, in the opinion of the writer, everything that Elite wished to be, and with the advent of OXPs, everything that the new Elite: Dangerous wants to be but can’t.Ĭonsidering that "Elite: Dangerous" is only half done, a bold claim. But it quickly falls back into a revisionist history. Then came oOlite, which took hold of the idea of Elite, transforming it into something huge > Elite gave a new realm of “choices” in a game. I would have no complaints if the entire article was written in the same style as the sections about missions, expansions, backgrounds, and towing. The next couple of paragraphs are well written, explaining actual original features or giving credit to Elite when appropriate. Once again, not original and entirely from Elite. > Within the vast regions of Space and the thousands of planets, there are many different systems of Government. Oh, linked the source is just gameplay footage, no voice-over retconning FE2 out of existence. I was pretty sure "Frontier Elite II" was "the official sequel". Well these extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. > the forthcoming release of Elite: Dangerous (the official sequel to the Original Elite game By David Braben: see a recent E3 2014 trailer on youtube) "Compared to any other" except for the original Elite, which had all of those. after purchasing a fuel Scoop, an item intended to scoop fuel gravitational matter from the Suns, but also found to scoop all items with matter, such as CargoPods (ejected from traders you’ve attacked, or that you’ve come across after someone else’s misfortune), also pieces of Asteroids found in Space, broken up with a mining laser > One example as to the massive improvements within oOlite compared to any other Space Trading Game could be the career of a miner. > oOlite brings new roles and perspectives to fill that seat from the outset, such as transporting clients (should you have a passenger bay fitted) from one system to another, or delivering packages to earn credits This was more or less in the original (Acorn) Elite and was absolutely in Frontier. These things will happen regardless as to whether you are there or not. > If you sit outside a station, you can watch many ships entering and leaving to their destinations, watch as a fugitive decides to attack a vulnerable trader, and is attacked by the system police, or scoops up its ill gotten gains. Also I might commit the same sin as the author, and credit FFE for the introduction of a feature when I should be crediting FE2. ![]() Keep in mind, I'm only critiquing the way the article was written, not oolite. Let me make my point clearer - this article gives a lot of credit to Oolite for things that other Elite games did first.
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