12 years later... we're playing Spore

With Spore, Will Wright intends to make you an Intergalactic ruler who begins life as a bottom-feeding primordial soup dweller. When I first saw the game back in early 2006, I wondered if Wright and his team over at Maxis would be able to pull this off? I didn't mean "pull it off" in the technical sense, but in the gaming sense of making it fun. I've waited a long time to see if Wright succeeded, and when my review copy arrived in the mail recently, I found out the answer.





There are whole worlds to explore, but will you want to?

Spore is a game about evolution, but evolution that's intelligently designed by the choices you make. Players design their creatures' traits, and those traits ultimately influence the civilization. The game is segmented into five phases of the evolutionary scale: Cell, Creature, Tribal, Civilization, and Space, with each stage presenting a different kind of game-play; a progress bar along the bottom of your screen marks how far along you are within each evolutionary stage. This is a game that wants you to feel comfortable playing and exploring; the penalty for "dying" is not severe.

At the outset of this review, I think it is only fair to mention that during the installation process, EA "highly suggested" that I allow the installation of the EA Downloader so Spore could stay "up-to-date." The message was a bit vague, but it implied that this was the only way patches and other content would be made available to me. Since I already had the EA Downloader installed it was a non-issue, but this might be an area of contention for some. This behavior is reminiscent of previous MMO games, and immediately it became apparent that Spore is more than a single-player experience. Once logged in, you will be granted access to the game's menu system and to EA's network, which allows on-the-fly access to other user-created content. I attempted to use the offline mode, but was unable to determine exactly how much my game would be affected. Overall, the message was simple: play online, by EA's rules, or several features could be unavailable. And be very clear: this game is wrapped up in obnoxious DRM, and many gamers just plain don't like it.





The graphics aren't amazing, but they certainly are attractive

Kicking the game off, I chose a colorful planet nestled in the galaxy of Spore and started at the beginning—the Cell Stage. Already presented with choices, I had the option to select whether I wanted to be a Herbivore, Carnivore or Omnivore. Being the type that would rather play a Renegade (meat eater) than a Paragon (vegetarian) in games like Mass Effect, I naturally went with carnivore.

It was time to discover what more than ten years of development time, and untold millions of dollars, had given to gaming.