![]() Riggs, your big hulking mech who is constantly expositing to your cynical scientist protagonist. As soon as you think you are good to go, waves of those aggressive alien creatures are gunning for your hard work, so you must build walls to defend and turrets to slay the enemy hordes. So, you need to choose between unreliable renewable energy - like wind turbines and solar panels - or big and easy-to-manage power plants that you must place on your precious ore deposits. You need to grab resources like Carbonite and Ironium by building mines on deposits. It's a basic 'mine, build, mine' loop, really. You start with a hub, as per most RTS games, and you have to construct other buildings around it to facilitate your colonisation of a very pretty, but very hostile, alien planet. It gives you a simple set of tasks: build a base, protect the base, explore outside the base. That is where The Riftbreaker succeeds emphatically in it opening hours. It's almost a shame that you're going to enjoy rebuilding your previous mess of buildings into a sensible, neat, and efficient construction - you don't really deserve it, you violent human. Developer EXOR Studios made you a simple risk-and-reward RTS about resource management, and you are watching your reward be shredded through the window of your mech-suit. all wiped out because you strayed too far and were too busy being mean to the alien locals to notice. all those solar panels, AI hubs, and perfectly placed gates. All those walls, turrets, and wind turbines you constructed. Your base is halfway back across this alien planet and everything you built over the first hour and a half is being torn down by the vengeful wildlife. You see, while you were busy venturing into the unknown, you became short-sighted in your wrathful glee. Riggs - your mech AI - who tells you your base is under siege. Once you are done with the killing, you get a ping from Mr. The Riftbreaker is colourful, gross, and certainly moreish in its early stages. Shards of wood from the trees spray around you, tracing bullets slash through ferns, and you sidestep splashes of toxic gunk flung at you. We also share information about your use of our website with our social media, advertising and analytics partners.The Riftbreaker EXOR Studios Xbox Cloud Gaming First Impressions Xbox Game Pass First impressions Strategy Kes Eylers-Stephenson You stride out from the undergrowth in your mech, wildly slashing at evil lizards and laughing maniacally as blood coats the towering cliffs and vivacious green forestry. We use cookies to personalize content and ads, provide social media features, and analyze the use of our website. This helps us measure the effectiveness of our marketing campaigns. Microsoft Advertising uses these cookies to anonymously identify user sessions. It also serves behaviorally targeted ads on other websites, similar to most specialized online marketing companies. The Facebook cookie is used by it's parent company Meta to monitor behavior on this website in order to serve targeted ads to its users when they are logged into its services. Google will use this information for the purpose of evaluating your use of the website, compiling reports on website activity for us and providing other services relating to website activity and internet usage. The purpose of Google Analytics is to analyze the traffic on our website. ![]() Security (protection against CSRF Cross-Site Request Forgery) ![]() Stores login sessions (so that the server knows that this browser is logged into a user account) which cookies were accepted and rejected). Storage of the selection in the cookie banner (i.e. ![]() being associated with traffic metrics and page response times. Random ID which serves to improve our technical services by i.e. Server load balancing, geographical distribution and redundancy
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