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The premier professional society serving the nuclear industry. Online offerings include meeting information, nuclear news, publications, member services, a career center, public information, and many other resources.
Your goal in Atomic Society is to build a large settlement that can keep hundreds of survivors alive in a harsh wasteland. Expand carefully and overcome challenges from a dangerous and desolate world. Decide what laws and values your town will have. Create a society that others will admire or dread.Atomic Society is now available on Early Access and continuing to receive big updates.Our dev blogs cover the making of the game from our earliest prototype to the present day, talking about what it's like making your first ever game, and what new features are coming next. Current & In-Development Features. CRIME.
Citizens who commit crimes and a wide range of social issues as you play. JUDGEMENT. Act as judge over a range of social issues including abortion, murder, vegetarianism, drug use, cannibalism, and several other controversial topics.
PUNISHMENT. Choose between execute, long or short prison sentences, tolerate and even encourage for all the issues that happen in your town. Be whatever kind of leader you want. BELIEF. Pick what you believe in and share that with others through violence, exile or education so that your laws are listened to. OUTSIDERS. Build defences to keep raiders out of your town for good.
Or make deals with them so they won't attack you. CONTROL. Create and name your own leader character. Use this person to help build your town, or explore the world for salvage and special upgrades. Walk around your town. SURVIVAL. Starting out with nothing, slowly build a large settlement that can keep hundreds of people fed, watered, healthy, housed and entertained, if you can.
Convert ruined houses and offices into useful buildings or loot them for supplies! Welcome to the first dev blog of 2019, which will look at what’s in next store for Atomic Society, and how things are going on behind-the-scenes as we make the slow journey through Early Access.What's Up Next?Right now we are hard at work on another little content patch for the game. Picking Goals For 2019One problem was working out what those big changes should be.We're not short of ideas. We have at least 300 of them sitting in our database, waiting until we have time to work on them. And that's not including the suggestions players give us. We could just keep adding them and it would improve the game, but it wouldn't go far enough.
It would pad out the game, but it wouldn't fix it. We need to go deeper.I have spent the last 2 weeks just studying game design again. It's not a topic you can stop learning about. It's why this blog is late. I've actually had re-write this whole thing as I keep learning new things.Sometimes my brain decides it's ready to level up and I have these learning phases. We've never made a game before, and what you're seeing or playing is the product of gut instinct. Occasionally, I have to retreat and do some homework.
This usually involves taking great games and pulling them apart to see how they work, writing down what I've learnt, and then starting all over because the learning doesn't stop.Fortunately, I think see what the problem is now and it is treatable.It's the Economy, StupidI know Atomic Society isn't deep enough, and adding more stuff isn't going to fix it.The problem lies within the 3 pillars of the game aka the gameplay loop. I've really neglected one aspect of it, which is the resource-gathering side (the others being keeping people alive, and keeping your town running efficiently). For example, we have about 10 buildings that involve keeping people alive and happy. 1 resource building (scavenger's hut). Oops.Realising things like this slaps you in the face, and you wonder how you never noticed it before, but that's what learning on the job is like. Sometimes you feel pretty dumb, but it's rewarding at the same time, gaining expertise.So, for the time being (or until I make more discoveries) our plan is to get the next little patch I mentioned already out (hopefully this month), and then go away and make a considerably larger patch that will expand and improve the resource production/gathering branch of the game. It would also be a fine time to introduce the barter/trade system I've been thinking of.Hopefully a patch solely devoted to the resource aspect of the game will make it a lot more fun.
There's only one way to find out.I've still got so much to learn and time is always against us. We'll do what we can to make this game a lot better by the end of 2019.
It's a relief to me anybody likes what we've made so far. I just tend to see the flaws and get depressed. Onwards and upwards!
3 months Since LaunchIt's been (almost) 3 months since I pressed the big green button and found out if there's anybody in the world who wants to buy our unfinished game. It then took us another month to get paid.
That was a nice day. We did well for a bunch of first-timers and for the first time, we can actually pay ourselves on a regular basis. I still don't think anybody on the team has absorbed the fact we're getting paid to make games until the money runs out. We've been doing this as a glorified hobby for so long that it won't sink in. I keep expecting to find out it's all been a practical joke.Earning some money forced us to do some basic chores, which slowed us down a bit in December. For example, Nick desperately needed new hardware, and Nani had to handle a lot of boring paperwork that goes with running a company while not being arrested.Still, we managed to put out a patch before Christmas, and I can't even remember what was in it now it feels so long ago (the patch notes are ).Then we took a break for Christmas, which was nice, because we could actually afford to survive Christmas this year.
And now we're back at work again, like nothing's changed.I don't feel a professional game developer, even though I guess I am now. I literally have my dream job, but everything is the same. I still kept my day job as a janitor because surviving off Steam sales is scary. The money train could stop at any time.
We do have enough money to finish the game now though. Work-wise things are just going to be the same as they were, but with less fear and stress.
I'm very grateful, it just all feels like a dream still, and ultimately the only thing that matters to me is making a game I'm proud of. First Steam SaleSpeaking of money, we decided to try our first Steam sale over Christmas. We weren't sure about doing it. It felt a bit soon, but we had to find out if they're as good as people say. I can confirm they are. Our sales went up a lot and I discovered a ton of people buy games on Christmas Day, which is funny because that's exactly what I do as a treat to myself.
We will probably do little discounts during the big sale events from now on if people are waiting. I don't want to go and do big discounts now until the game is finished. We still have a long way to go.Other Plans for 2019I've already mentioned the core focus of improving the resource side of the game. There needs to be a resource production flow before you can build and expand your town.After that it's hard to say because the game will be different in 3-4 months and I'll have to review our plans then.Some things are guaranteed. There will always be be bug-fixes coming. We could spend months just fixing bugs.We also definitely need to translate the game, or at least enable people to translate it for us (depending on what we can afford). We have started preparing for this at least.
We have to move every single piece of text into the game online so it can be edited easily and then downloaded back into the game, which is boring work but almost done now.My concern is that we're still in Early Access and the text in the game is changing all the time. So a translation will be out of date all the time.
We'll figure something out. I'm sorry it can't be sooner but we will get there one day.Apart from that, as I mentioned we have 300+ ideas to review. That sounds like a lot, but 90% of them are probably awful. In terms of big changes I've started thinking about a campaign mode to go along with the sandbox mode we have currently.
I'd like there to be a little mini-story on each map with some moral dilemmas. That won't be for a while though, if at all. Looking Back At Crazy 2018Beginning a new year is also a time to look back at the last one.First up, I just want to thank everybody who decided to buy our game. I'll probably never get to meet anybody who's actually bought our game but I don't take it for granted. Every sale is a surprise.I have no regrets about last year, thank God. We had to get on Steam because we were going mad just thinking about it.
If releasing a game is like giving birth, we'd been pregnant for over 2 years. It needed to come out.I think we did quite well with our Steam launch considering marketing is evil voodoo. We don't have any marketing budget or knowledge, but YouTube took care of everything. There were enough big, positive YouTube videos of the game and that is, apparently, all you need.Being on Steam has not been much fun for someone like me with really thin skin and a hobby for worrying about things that don't matter.
I knew it was going to be tough. I don't really have a solution for it except ignore it all, and if you feel brave, visit the forums. Maybe that's the best outcome. Would I be happier if more people like the game? I don't think so.
I'd be smugger. Make games because you love making games.I am glad we didn't go with a publisher.
![Society Society](/uploads/1/2/5/3/125395720/515013298.jpg)
Aside from the money involved, I don't think having a huge spotlight shining on an unfinished game is necessarily a good thing. We made the right choices, for us at least.I'm okay with the time everything is taking because I know how hard it's been for the team at times. We are a bunch of oddballs and there is a reason Atomic Society is a game about persevering against the odds to create something that ends up looking like a shanty town. It will probably be a 5 year project by the time we're done (2 more than I planned) but making games is hard and running a company is quite hard too, especially when it started as a random post by me on Reddit asking if anybody knew how to code.ConclusionThe thing I'm looking forward to now is finishing the game, which I'm hoping we can do by around this time next year, at least in terms of content. Polishing and bug-fixing will take longer no doubt. I have no plans beyond that except perhaps to apply the heaps and heaps of knowledge we've gained making this game to a new project.
We'll have to see how it goes.The nice thing is I love making games, more than ever. I love games more than ever.
I always have this fear that I'll get bored of something and move on, but I never get bored of this. Even after all these years.I'll do my best to make a new blog next month. The next update will come first.Thanks for reading.
Release: October 18Developer: Dilemma StudioPrice: $8.99Wenjia is a China-developed puzzle platformer with hand-drawn graphics and, most importantly, a cat protagonist. There's a superficial resemblance to Ori and the Blind Forest: both are set in a richly detailed 2D forest environment, and both have a quiet and meditative mood. Wenjia appears to be a much simpler game though, or at least, a less complicated one.
While Wenjia can switch between two parallel worlds with the press of a button (think Giana Sisters: Twisted Dreams), the cat is otherwise limited to moving and jumping. It's not often we see games like this coming from China, and the trailer above is undeniably beautiful. Atomic Society. Release: October 15Developer: Far Road GamesPrice: $14.99Launched into Early Access last week, Atomic Society is a post-apocalyptic city builder with a whiff of Frostpunk about it. Because there's a lot more to this than plonking down houses and making sure they've got (irradiated) water: decisions must be made about what's legal and what isn't, and the shape of this post-nuclear society will ultimately be shaped by the player.
'Act as judge over a range of social issues including abortion, murder, vegetarianism, drug use, cannibalism, and several other controversial topics,' the Steam page reads. You'll also be deciding how to address crime, whether by imprisonment, exile or death. Sounds like a recipe for anxiety. The game will remain in Early Access for 12 months. Executive Assault 2.
Release: October 18Developer: Hesketh Studios LtdPrice: $24.99Like its predecessor, Executive Assault 2 mixes real-time strategy with first-person shooting. In other words, you can either be commanding your fleet from a top-down perspective, or taking a more hands-on approach either as a foots soldier, or as the pilot of a starship. There's also a third mode which allows one player to be the RTS-mode CEO and the other a first-person war machine. It's a neat spin on both genres, and the first Executive Assault has a sizeable cult following. This sequel is currently in Early Access, where it will stay for up to 12 months. The final build will feature a single-player campaign. Release: October 18Developer: Caustic RealityPrice: $19.99Infliction is a first-person horror game which, like many others in this post-P.T.
World, is set in an ominous suburban house. Described by studio Caustic Reality as 'an interactive nightmare', the bleak story unfolds via traces of evidence left throughout the house: letters, diaries, photos. 'The story is grounded in real-world domestic tragedy, the fears and hurts that we all know: broken hearts, betrayed trust, grief, and loss,' reads the Steam description. But it's not all about wandering a poorly lit house reading letters: there's something else roaming the house, too. Definitely one to check out for fans of eerie horror.
Release: October 18Developer: DYA GamesPrice: $9.99Here's another horror game, but as the trailer above demonstrates it's a little different to Infliction. Set inside a mansion, Viviette is a pixel-art puzzle game with 'a touch of classic horror'. I'm guessing it's 'a touch' because you won't be getting eviscerated by the undead: Vivette is more focused on unsettling mystery and meditatively paced exploration. I'm a sucker for the gothic-styled pixel art.
You can get this as well.These games were released between October 15 and October 22, 2018. Some online stores give us a small cut if you buy something through one of our links.
![Society Society](/uploads/1/2/5/3/125395720/341018781.jpg)
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