Friday, July 11, 2014

Need to collect any more nor less, as much as $ 25,000 - a terrible amount of money (just kidding)!


by Mikhail Karpov August 30, 2011
I remember some time ago, NASA announced that there is a development of multiplayer games Astronaut: Moon Mars and Beyond. The purpose of the game is clear as day - that's your future, now sign it. Want to take a walk on Mars? Walk on health, only on a computer screen. Can even relatively serious collective tasks to perform. Sit in a large rover again. reality fighter One would be easier to finance such project again nothing is impossible, but here the problem.
Since the announcement of the project, about it for a long time nothing was heard and suddenly, he suddenly surfaced on Kickstarter. Kickstarter - a resource on which everyone can try to collect money for his own idea. Investors in this idea becomes as easy to guess, the online community. So now NASA still wants citizens to pay for MMO about the "future". Instead offers investors to participate in a closed beta test, and other small "gingerbread."
Need to collect any more nor less, as much as $ 25,000 - a terrible amount of money (just kidding)! However, people seem to be quite willing reality fighter to sacrifice - yesterday gave 10,000, and today is 27 (ie, are exceeding the required amount), and to the end of all this is 42 days (imagine reality fighter how much more nada). All this is going on is to bring the game out of beta and begin to create a complete reality fighter commercial version.
If you do not remember the events of the game unfold in 2035 to the space station. Players will be able to "discover the secret of the greatest threats reality fighter to civilization and to assemble a team and build a base beyond the Earth." Promise reality fighter PvE and PvP (how? For newcomers that I play?). The game will be available for PC, Mac, iOS and consoles in December 2012. Interestingly, should not have to collect money on Kickstarter reality fighter to real space expeditions NASA? ..
"Computerra-line", 1997-2014 If quoting or using any materials, the reference to "Computerra" is obligatory.


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