Quote Changes:

- NEW: The readme.txt has been updated to reflect latest changes. Check it out.

- NEW: Procedural terrain! Alpha 91 demonstrates the earliest incarnation of the kind of landscapes you can expect to see in NOWHERE. After a short one time seeding, the game starts off with three Nowherian shells, which are uniquely grown for every game; All shells are depictions of the same Nowherian at different stages of his life. The smallest shell has an age comparable to the human age of 10. The second shell is about 20 years old, while the third shell is about 60 years of age, and has an average diameter of 600 to 800 meters. While these bodies are still just gracefully rotating shells, in the finished game, Nowherians will live within and around each other, functioning both as agents with artificial intelligence and housings to other agents.

- NEW: Instead of a propulsion system that would get you precisely where you would like to go, you are now equipped with a much more energy efficient tether, which works as a mixture of a rope and an anchor, or some kind of electromagnetic umbilical cord.

- NEW: Previous alphas have been using the Bullet physics system, which was difficult to control from Python, badly documented and therefore hard to tune right. The library has been replaced with the OpenDynamics Engine, which, while not as excessively featured, is more accessible, well documented, exposes better treatment of hard collisions and, most importantly, is fun to use.

- NEW: A completely overhauled rendering system. The engine now uses deferred high dynamic range rendering and lighting, normal mapping, cascaded exponential variant shadow maps, screen-space ambient occlusion, motion blur, depth of field rendering and wide bloom to improve color fidelity, surface plasticity and depth perception. These improvements help players greatly with navigating an abstract environment, and establish the basic system requirements of the game. They also help us to maintain a basic visual quality level even when models and textures are still placeholders.

- NEW: Video quality can be controlled with the command-line switch --video-quality and provides seven different presets to balance presentation for performance. Check out the readme.txt for more information.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.

So, NOWHERE is still living up to my weirdest game ever award and I decided to take a look at it in this weeks "Liam plays a game badly" video.Right now there isn't much to do other than slingshot your way around which isn't actually that easy, at all. In future it looks like there will be other things flying around with you and the big things you hook onto will have some sort of AI as well.The music is very cool and very eerie and I love the fact that the music picks up when you use your little slingshot.The game is supposed to have realistic zero-g which is why it's so damned hard to get where you want to go, check me out playing it badly below in a short video, short as there isn't much else in it yet.With the universe a little more populated I can see this being quite an experience, looking forward to seeing other bits and bobs moving around.Kinda scared to ask this, what do you think folks?