It's an interesting issue, this one.
Back in the day (29 years ago? Ye Gods!) getting a game meant getting a cassette and a written sheet/booklet/extended cassette box inlay of instructions. Luckily, the loading time meant you had plenty of idle minutes to sit and read through it.
These days, practically every game (including the casual flash-type ones) has some form of in-game tutorial, especially now that a lot of the time you don't have a physical copy of the game at all, if you've got it via Steam or somesuch, so there's no way to get a physical instruction document into the player's hands. Might some form of built-in tutorial be worth considering, either the "assisted play" type or a short video file? Of course, that means that the thing has to a)be made, and b)be added into the installer package, but to be fair, by modern standards Oolite is a
tiny download. As for making it...
Unfortunately, reading
anything is on the decline and is pretty unlikely to start picking back up again. We can bemoan this state of affairs all we like, but that doesn't stop it being true. Sticking to instructional pdf's and the like and saying "just read it! It's not hard to do!" while harrumphing and complaining about lack of literacy will only leave progressively more and more people behind. Adapt and evolve, or gradually become extinct? Look at how far the game itself has evolved.
Mind you, feel free to ignore this completely - I'm blithely bringing up in-game tutorials or videos with absolutely no skill or concept of what would be involved!
