-EDIT- somehow, this post that I posted in a completely different thread made it here. I'm terribly sorry for the interruption.
Is everyones planet and system going to be the same? If not, will this hinder the abililty to create the creature you want, what if its a hot planet and theres no water or a cold planet and the water is frozen? Oh, correct me if Im wrong, but wasnt it a moon Will colonized once he got the UFO?
I believe that, according to what WW has said/hinted, the home planet (as well as many other words) will be randomly generated to support your creature. In other words, if your creature is land-inhabiting, the home planet (and other planets that will be encountered later) will have more land, while if one's creature lives in the water, there will be more water on your planet, as well as on other planets. As for the home planet being inhospitable, I think that can pretty much be ruled out, since life evolved there (so it would need an enviroment with an atmosphere, water, vegitation, and such).
Cerebral is right. If you are native to the planet then it is impossible for it to be inhospitable. you would have evolved around those elements which means you'd be used to em. And I didn't mean to put what I said in the verb thread, I DID put it in the verb thread; somehow, my post was posted in this thread instead of that one. It's the computer's fault, though how it happened I don't know.
It's not so much about being used to them, but more that they would have to support life for life to have evolved (thus, it couldn't be overly hot, or overly cold, and it would need some vegitation, water, and an atmosphere).
Well the thing you're forgetting is, not all life has to be terran standard. If you have a very thick atmosphere on a planet and life evolves there, then the life will have to have a higher density atmosphere to survive. if your creatures are on an incredibly hot planet, maybe 120 degrees is freezing cold for them. I heard that different creatures will have different needs, depending on their home environment, and a paradise of a world for one species might be a craphole for another. I also think I heard somewhere that yeah, you can have overly dense atmospheres, so I'd assume you can have high gravity and hot and cold planets as well.
I hope they do take into account the gravity of planets/their moons/their stars. It would add a lot to the realism of the game. And, concerning having creatures feel differently about different enviroments, I never thought of it in that perspective. Thanks for clarifying.
Do you think gravity would be different on other planets, it seems reasonable, but complicated I would be suprised if it was in the game.
Oh it wouldn't be complicated to implement at all. In fact, you'd only need one variable. If a planet has a size of 1, it has a gravity of 1. If it has a size of 2, it has gravity 2. See? Easy as pie.
Here's a question: On the levels of terraformality, is 1 impossible to terraform, only terraformable with the Genesis Device, or does it just take the longest?
I believe that 1 (I'm not sure exactly how the systems works; whether it's from 1 to 10, ten being the easiest, or 1 to 10, five being the easiest) means it can't be terraformed at all (even with the G device), since it would be too close/far from the sun for anything to survive. Then, low numbers, like 2 and 3, would mean it would take a long time, and only plants could survive (the planet just wouldn't support animals). Then it goes on from there.
Wait, wait, wait, if gravity could be implemented that would complicate how the artist in the box thinks of how something moves, for instance flying how would you feel if the gravity on the planet eas to high to evolve into an airborne creature, and what of physiques... what i'm saying is gravity would change the way the game's way of thinking dom't you. :indifferent:
I think gravity will always be the same, no matter what... But I wouldn't know know for sure! Actually, I don't think Spore will be that detailed, since the Sims wasn't, really, but you never know... This isn't the Sims! Maybe you're asking excellent questions -- that we'll hopefully find out the actual answers to sooner or later, you know, rather than guessing at them the whole time.
I don't think there should be any planets like Jupiter, that have such powerful gravity you'll sink in and die the second you step foot on it... :indifferent:
Hahaha, that would be a sight! :laughing2: Poor creatures! It could be a creative way to kill off your species if you are one of those evil Spore species-killing players... :shocked: "Hmm this looks like a nice planet... I think I'll check it out... OH NO!!" Shwooop! -- Splat! "Well, finally got rid of that species." :blush:
There's a reason that they're called "gas giants". Solid planets (as far as we know) don't get to be that large, but there's still implications of worlds with maybe 3 to 5 times Earth's gravity, or maybe just a third. Gravity would affect the terraforming (the higher the gravity, the more the atmosphere is held to the planet).
Once again, I must ask to what are you referring? Are you talking about my own posts, or the other posts? Regardless, it all fits into the theme of "Space-Based Questions".