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Space whale city builder Beyond These Stars now lets you visit planets, but not in a colonial waySlips back to 2025 release

Slips back to 2025 release

Image credit:Hooded Horse

Image credit:Hooded Horse

A zoomed-out view of a landscape on the back of a huge star whale in Beyond These Stars

Space whale citybuilderBeyond These Starshas been delayed till 2025, developers Balancing Monkey Games have announced, for there are too many monkeys to balance, and too many astral cetaceans to wrangle before the early access launch. I react to this news with mingled happiness and disappointment. Disappointment at the delay, and happiness, because I hadn’t heard of Beyond These Stars before. To coincide withthe delay announcementthey’ve released a new trailer, below, which talks us through the business of foraging on passing planets. It looks engrossing.

Beyond These Stars - Gameplay TrailerWatch on YouTube

Beyond These Stars - Gameplay Trailer

Cover image for YouTube video

If you missed Kaan’s (RPS in Gamesradar)announcement post from February 2023, Beyond These Stars sees you raising a hex-based settlement on the back of an enormous interstellar animal. The creature is named Kewa, and its hide is rich in resources and buildable terrain.

Beyond These Stars is, in general, very much an eco-fable that strives to avoid any suggestion of conquering territory and stripping it raw. This extends to the choice of resourcing and building options. You’ll have to think about irrigation and topsoil quality while maintaining tree populations to cultivate a healthy atmosphere.

All this sits atop more generic building sim questions that perhaps encourage you to play more callously, such as structure adjacency bonuses and worker travel times. I always find it interesting to read about how games such as this try to resist the build-exploit-expand rhythms of their genre. As for the visual presentation in the trailer: the vital space whale component gets a bit lost behind the menus, but it all seems rather gorgeous, with water spilling through canals and clouds foaming up over forest canopies.

The townsfolk are, moreover, “strictly vegetarian”, so they won’t be eating any of those adorable space chickens and space cows you see onthe Steam page. Nor will they be mining the planets they land on, though this is more for the sake of keeping the focus on Kewa than avoiding any historical parallels. I think there’s perhaps a touch of “having your 4X empire cake and eating it” here, but I respect the commitment to themes and playstyles beyond setting up oil rigs all over.

As for the release delay into 2025, “it’s very important for us that we take the time to implement everything properly for our Early Access launch, and that we do so in a way that doesn’t burn out our team,” the developers write. “Because of this, our initially projected 2024 release date has had to shift.” While you wait, you might want to check outThe Wandering Village.