Stock Markets
Daily Stock Markets News

Dune: Spice Wars review: a diamond in the rough


Frank Herbert’s Dune holds a special place in the gaming community, providing the basis for one of the first true real-time strategy titles, Dune 2: The Building of a Dynasty. Shiro Games is treading on hallowed ground with its latest title, Dune: Spice Wars, and the studio seems to know it. The game’s recent 1.0 release still has some pain points after a year in early access, but it’s clear that Spice Wars was developed with a clear passion and understanding of the assignment.



Dune: Spice Wars is a 4X game, played completely in real time, set against the backdrop of Herbert’s novel. While the game clearly uses established 4X titles like Civilization 6 as a framework, massaging that same formula into an RTS flavored with the Dune universe gives Spice Wars an edge.

Image: Shiro Games/Funcom

At launch, Spice Wars features the Atreides, Harkonnen, and Fremen factions, in addition to Smugglers, House Corrino, and House Ecaz. Each faction operates on the same basic principles but has some unique wrinkles that lend them to a specific play style. For example, while House Atreides can’t pillage settlements, they can peacefully annex them, which is more expensive but yields long-term bonuses. The Fremen, on the other hand, aren’t subject to the same penalties for failing to pay the Emperor’s ever-present spice tax.

Image: Shiro Games/Funcom

The standard game mode, Battle for Arrakis, is supplemented by the protracted two-player Kanly Duel and the more lengthy Conquest Campaign. The gameplay will be familiar enough to seasoned players of the 4X genre, but a series of helpful tooltips and tutorials are also present to fill you in on the basics.

Each procedurally generated map is composed of regions controlled by a single settlement (think city-states from Civ 6). These can be annexed, turning them into extensions of your regime, or pillaged for a quick cash infusion. Each settlement also has randomly assigned traits that may influence how you specialize its infrastructure.

Image: Shiro Games/Funcom via Polygon

The harsh environment of Dune plays into your strategy, too — units deteriorate when outside of your territory too long, which has the added effect of curbing rushes as a viable strategy. The random appearance of sandstorms and sandworms can also effectively shut down operations for large areas of the map.

Expanding, conquering, and researching all in real time may sound overwhelming, but the action on the map occurs at a leisurely pace, and you can pause the action at any time. Things can still get occasionally chaotic, though, usually when you’re attempting to fight wars on multiple fronts.

Image: Shiro Games/Funcom via Polygon

The minute-to-minute combat in Spice Wars is serviceable but lacks precision. Your ranged units make a bad habit of engaging in melee, while your melee units will chase the enemy into their own territory from a defensive position. Beyond your units’ occasional ineptitude, what’s even more frustrating is trying to figure out why you’ve lost. You’re provided with stats for all of your units, but these numbers lack transparency and context. Unlike with a game of Civ, which provides a detailed comparison and breakdown of the math involved, I can’t tell you why having a unit with more armor is good, or what effect fire rate has on the outcome of an engagement.

Image: Shiro Games/Funcom via Polygon

While the martial combat is a bit forgettable, Shiro Games has done a great job turning espionage and policy meetings, the elements that I’d typically ignore in a game of Civ, into engaging metagames within themselves. This truly makes a game of Spice Wars feel like a war of assassins, where having the right agents in place and getting on the right ballot can be the difference between victory and defeat.

Image: Shiro Games/Funcom via Polygon

Aesthetically, Spice Wars looks great, leveraging visual themes inspired by the recent Denis Villeneuve adaptation, and the soundtrack feels like a mashup of the groovy 1984 movie soundtrack paired with the suspenseful rock anthems from the original RTS titles from Westwood Studios. The voice work, unfortunately, lacks the same distinction, with the unit acknowledgments, in particular, ranging in quality from passable to comical.

Image: Shiro Games/Funcom

In its current state, Dune: Spice Wars is novel and entertaining, if altogether imperfect. While the core gameplay won’t shatter anyone’s expectations of the 4X or RTS genres, Spice Wars absolutely nails the feel and…



Read More: Dune: Spice Wars review: a diamond in the rough

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Get more stuff like this
in your inbox

Subscribe to our mailing list and get interesting stuff and updates to your email inbox.

Thank you for subscribing.

Something went wrong.