

True to its name, the patch notes include a massive list of bug fixes, AI improvements, tweaks and changes. As a nice bonus, however, today also brings in the 2.8 "Butler" update. All things considered, improving planetary stability by erecting monuments on tomb worlds actually sounds quite pleasant.Īs a simple species pack and not a full-blown expansion, that's about it for the Necroids DLC. Death Cults let you sacrifice populations to enable powerful edicts, while grand reanimated armies let you throw walls of zombies up against enemies without worrying too much over bodycount.

A nice batch of visuals and themes to help you lean into the role of the most ghoulish rascals in the galaxy, sure, but evil requires more than just a scary face.Ī new Origin, Necrophage, grants you one primary species that subsumes all it comes into contact with, with a number of civic options for ensnaring the masses in their tombs. You need to be as fast as possible in order to colonize the most useful of the planets ahead of the enemy.Obviously inspired by Vin Diesel classic The Chronicles Of Riddick, the Necromongers Necroids are a new species archetype, complete with their own portraits, backdrops, names and ship designs. But be very careful, because not all systems are useful and friendly. Hundreds of thousands of different planets will open before you, which tend to be generated randomly. But a series of rather disappointing events will take place, as a result of which a cruel war will unleash between you and your rivals, where you will fight for the right to possess the title of ruler of the entire universe. You will be engaged in the colonization of new found systems that are viable and filled with useful resources. Initially, you have to go on a long journey to explore the vast and boundless outer space. Stellaris: Galaxy Edition is a multi-scale strategy game where all events will take place in real time. CPU: AMD Athlon II X4 640 3.0 GHz / Intel Core 2 Quad 9400 2.66 GHz
