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The Power Of 'No Man's Sky' Is Making You Feel Insignificant

Published by Huffington Post on Tue, 16 Aug 2016


By Daniel Starkey for WIRED.This galaxy hasa pulse. Freighters streak into view from its farthest reaches, nebulae throb in fluorescent hues, roving herds of creatures with near-infinite permutations dart and creep on the plains and through the forests of a billion billion worlds. As countless suns rise and set, as scouts struggle to catalogue every species, and as traders exploit life and land for untold wealththe void triumphs.No Mans Sky, released this week on PlayStation 4 and PC, invokes a sense of scale like no videogame before it. In so doing, it offers perhaps the first semi-accurate presentation of the crushing majesty and endlessness of our own real universe.If youre familiar with Minecraft, youll feel a certain familiarity with No Mans Sky right from the off as you wander, aimless, directionless, in a gargantuan world (or in this case, procedurally-generated quintillions of them), all the while seeking out metals and minerals, isotopes and silicates to fuel your vessel and craft new gadgets.No Mans Sky is the progeny of Minecraft just as Sonic the Hedgehog was born of Super Mario Bros. Though similar on the surface, cracking the veneer reveals them to be antipodes. Sonic was sold as a game that played faster than Mario, with its protagonist zipping and soaring where Mario merely ambled. And yet it was Mario, not Sonic, that had the more punishing timer, constantly pushing you forward, demanding speed.Similarly, No Mans Sky has been marketed as a game where you can do anythinggo anywhere, travel the stars, conquer worlds! But that doesnt quite mesh with what it actually is.Minecraft truly is about effecting change, about raw power. The mark you leave on the world is deeply transformational, and it is all-encompassing. No Mans Sky does not share that solipsism. In its universe, I am meaningless. My journey is trivial in the scope of it all.When I first land on a new planet, perhaps one with floating islands held aloft by some strange gravitational anomaly and littered with squirrel-horse hybrids, I feel powerful. My view grips the horizon, bringing all that lies within under my domain. I, after all, have cannons, a ship, lasers. Its all mine.But moments later, when Ive stripped what I can from this no-name world on the edge of the cosmos, my ship lifts off with the softest of breaths, and Im off, blasting into the endless vacuum. I leave nothing that lasts. No structures, no marks on the land besides what I took. And even then, what is one person against a galaxy' Indeed, at this scale what is ten million people' A billion'My thoughts often turn to Carl Sagans essay Pale Blue Dot. Even on our home, the only world humans have ever known, we are minuscule. We may be warming the planet, we have caused thousands of species to go extinct, but if we were suddenly wiped out, the Earth would carry on, indifferent to the flicker of us.I leave nothing that lasts. No structures, no marks on the land besides what I took.That smallness, that utter insignificance, is profound, and one that we are woefully ill-equipped to understand. Our planet is so large in relation to us, our solar system that much more so, our galaxy more. Sagan and his former protg Neil deGrasse Tyson have spent decades trying to impress upon us the fact of our own smallness.Can a videogame do it'No Mans Sky doesnt start with such lofty goals. The first few hours are banal. With little tutorial or direction, No Mans Sky dashed me on the rocks of a barren world. Here, I gathered my tools, and prepared for my journey into the black. As ready as I felt, it was a couple more hours before I left that first star system. In the interim, I wrestled with an obnoxious inventory screen, shuffling various items and tools and resources about to make the best use of limited space.I fear that this is the part that will lose a lot of people. Its tedious, even boring. Its also what makes up the majority of the games playtime. In the coming days and weeks, youll hear how often people talk about the wonder of finding new life, or seeing a vibrant pink planet with a striking green sunset, but the majority of the No Mans Sky experience is far more prosaic.Sean Murray, the games director, has said numerous times that its a niche game, intended for a smaller audience than its astonishing marketing budget would have you believe. None of this is a problem, necessarily. No Mans Skys best moments are small miracles. It really is hard to overstate just how incredible stepping foot on dozens of alien worlds is. Or how self-indulgent it is to name a world after its most precious resource, or just name it Butts McGee.But then that gnawing realization comes back: No one will ever see my worlds. No one, besides myself, will know what I saw and who I was in this facsimile. It reminds me, consistently, of my own arrogance, my presumed meaning.No Mans Sky says that we are all conceited for thinking that our lives have purpose. No Mans Sky is predicated on the idea that there is poetry in the knowledge that we are as lonely and as small in its computer-generated space as we are here in reality.I step away from the game feeling insignificant, but I take serenity in that. No matter my personal failings, no matter what kind of dark thoughts I hide in me, I dont need to be the hero of the universe. Instead, I can enjoy life for its brief moments of joy. I refuse to take for granted the intimacy I share with loved ones, or the allure of our own world.For all this, for all of its pretentiousness, for all of its own flaws, No Mans Sky rightly deserves a place in a modern art museum. Like a home with doors that may never open, begging us to ponder what lies beyond, No Mans Sky is an unanswerable question, but one Im glad I asked.More from Wired:Playboy Trades Nipples for Good Design, and It Works (NSFW)Stephen Colbert Adds Gaming Stars to His Guest RosterNintendo Plays on Nostalgia With Tiny Retro 8-Bit NESEvery Olympian Is Kind Of A CyborgFantastic Photos of Terrible Junk Food Around the WorldThe 7 Most Ridiculous Olympics Videogames Ever -- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
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