Steam Next Fest BroForce dev s world regrower Terra Nil is blooming marvellous
Steam Next Fest: BroForce dev's world-regrower Terra Nil is blooming marvellous Eurogamer.net If you click on a link and make a purchase we may receive a small commission. Read our editorial policy. Steam Next Fest: BroForce dev's world-regrower Terra Nil is blooming marvellous Compost apocalyptic. Feature by Robert Purchese Senior Staff Writer Published on 16 Jun 2021 8 comments I am smitten! Terra Nil has rocked my world. And I tell you what: I would never have expected it from the maker of BroForce. I love that game dearly, but it's a reckless action game where heroes tear pixelated lands apart. This, on the other hand, Terra Nil, is a serene game about restoring them. Terra Nil preview Developer: Free Lives Publisher: Devolver Platform: Played on PC Availability: Coming to Steam. Release date TBA It's a sort of city-building game. "Sort of" because you don't actually want people to come and live in what you create. You want nature to. You want birds and bees and animals to repopulate what begins as a scorched piece of Earth. A barren wasteland, earth cracked, trees dead. Nothing lives here. But with your futuristic array of environmental machines, you can change that. These machines slowly enable you to transform the land. For instance: your first lesson is to build a wind turbine for power, then a soil cleansing machine to make some land fertile. Then, you greenify the land with another machine, growing grass, bushes and trees. And when you do this, you earn a leaf-resource to buy more things with. Watch on YouTube I play the Terra Nil demo. I jump forwards in time at a couple of points, to try and show more of the later game. The whole demo took me around an hour and fifteen minutes to finish. Game jam roots It looks like Terra Nil was created in a game jam roughly this time last year. There's an Itch.io page with a prototype you can play, if you want. But! There's a strategy to doing this. You can't build anything wherever you like. Turbines can only be built on small rock formations, and only have a small power radius. Small rock formations are limited. You can create your own, but you need water, and there's no natural water on the map, so you need to create that too. This all costs leaves, so if you're not careful, you'll run out, and have to begin again. That's just layer-one of complexity. New layers unlock when you satisfy your main goal. Goal-one was covering a certain amount of the land in greenery. Goal-two, for me, was covering the land in biomes - forest, wetlands and meadow - and I unlocked an array of new machinery to help me do that. But it's never straightforward. You can't just plant a forest: you need to burn an area down first to create the ash-rich soil it needs to grow. So, as the game opens up and new objectives filter in, the complexity ramps up. But the masterstroke comes at the end. You see, it gnawed at me that finally we had a game about restoring the beautiful natural world of our planet - an idea which couldn't be more timely - but still it was about building. Still it was about our interfering in the natural world and leaving our grubby mechanical print upon it. But then came the masterstroke. Progress! I set that fire on purpose, by the way. It will soon spread across that entire area. There is lovely detail to the world. Here, you can see deer and birds, and a bear pokes her nose from the woods. The fundamental difference between Terra Nil and other building games is that the ultimate goal is to remove everything you've built from it. To leave no trace. The final layer of the game requires recycling all of your buildings, then using the materials from them to build a craft and fly away to another area in need. You build, you return the land to nature, and then you give it back to nature. You completely bugger off. And I can't tell you how pleased this makes me! It's as if I'm playing a building game in reverse. And the thrill of leaving a land completely unspoilt is tremendous. There are mini-thrills along the way as well, mainly in seeing animals gradually return to your once desolate land. Herds of deer start to appear, flocks of birds fly above, fish swim in your streams. Bears even poke their heads out from your forests. It's a world in which even the rain returning is cause for celebration. Terra Nil is cause for celebration. I cannot wait to play more. Become a Eurogamer subscriber and get your first month for £1 Get your first month for £1 (normally £3.99) when you buy a Standard Eurogamer subscription. Enjoy ad-free browsing, merch discounts, our monthly letter from the editor, and show your support with a supporter-exclusive comment flair! Support us View supporter archive More Features Digital Foundry Nvidia GeForce RTX 4090: a new level in graphics performance The Digital Foundry video review - and how the new GPU champion delivers for 4K 120fps gaming. Feature Evercore Heroes wants to wind people up the right way "There's less rage at them, because they didn't end your fun." Feature What games get wrong about horses And what they could do about it. 28 Feature Shout out to all the Overwatch supports - where would we be without you? Merci. 55 Latest Articles Digital Foundry Nvidia GeForce RTX 4090: a new level in graphics performance The Digital Foundry video review - and how the new GPU champion delivers for 4K 120fps gaming. Google announces cloud gaming Chromebooks less than a fortnight after Stadia shutdown GeForce Now preinstalled. 3 Feature Evercore Heroes wants to wind people up the right way "There's less rage at them, because they didn't end your fun." Genshin Impact Path of Gleaming Jade dates, login event rewards Including other anniversary rewards and how to claim them. Supporters Only Premium only Off Topic: Take a minute to appreciate Cookin' with Coolio's incredible scallops recipe. What a great book. Premium only Off Topic: Reading City of Glass in comic form "Where exactly am I going?" Premium only Off Topic: Il Buco is a transporting film about a really big hole Underlands. Off-Topic Netflix handled Sandman brilliantly It was Dreamy. 9 Buy things with globes on them And other lovely Eurogamer merch in our official store! Explore our store