phkb wrote: ↑Wed Mar 18, 2020 5:45 am
And from the OP's first post:
I spent a lot of time playing Elite on the C64...
<snip>
In Oolite, it doesn't even seem possible... <snip>
That series of statements suggests to me that Elite/Oolite was being directly compared and something closer to the Elite experience was expected, so setting expectations can be a valuable thing.
Whilst it may be true that Oolite is not Elite, nor is it aiming to be such, I think it is an inevitable consequence that it be compared to Elite, the game it was named after and draws enormous inspiration from.
As Wikipedia puts it:
Oolite is a free and open source 3D space trading and combat simulator in the spirit of Elite. It is, as the name suggests, Object Oriented [E]lite,
And further,
Among Oolite's several similarities to its source, the gaming experience is enhanced by the context set in Elite's original manual, and the accompanying novella, The Dark Wheel.
In terms of setting expectations, whilst the Oolite wiki distances Oolite perhaps a little further...
Oolite is a space sim game, available for Mac OS X, Linux and Windows.
... comparisons quickly become inevitable as a heritage soon emerges...
It was written by Giles Williams as a response to the withdrawal of Elite: The New Kind from the internet. Although inspired by the work of Christian Pinder, following David Braben and Ian Bell, the work is an independent interpretation and expansion of the original game.
In all cases, this is page 1 stuff. If it's inaccurate then someone should edit it but I would suggest that both sources provide an adequate summary.
The new star wars films are not the same as the old star wars films (although arguably one of them tried so hard to be that it was all the worse for it

) but by God are they going to be compared to them.
This is almost entirely inescapable for Oolite with regards to those who have played Elite. Given that so many here appear to have done so, it's an inevitable source of comparison.
I remember being chastened (along with others) that "Oolite <> Frontier". Again, it's true, but it's also true that comparisons and even inspiration will be drawn when you have a game in which you can take a contract in a cobra mk 3 or trade it in to buy a python, because Frontier did all that first.
So yes, Oolite != Elite but it remains an unofficial sequel of a sort.
Some may balk at that statement but I think it's true both in terms of drawing inspiration from the original and also in terms of outright lifting of names, designs and even 'plot' (e.g. missions). If it's not true then rather unfortunate, long words beginning with p or short ones beginning with t, both having legal connotations, begin to suggest themselves, and I think they would both be grossly unfair.
The retro appeal of flying a Cobra mk III to Zaonce, combined with the new features and possibilities provided, is why many here love Oolite: a game that is almost defined by this balance of old and new - both figuratively and (as quoted above) literally.
So another hearty thanks to phkb and all the devs for all the work they do to keep the good ship Oolite afloat!
I'm off to Leesti to test out some new fangled (yet retro-styled) gizmo in the old mk III.