Your data. Your choice.

If you select «Essential cookies only», we’ll use cookies and similar technologies to collect information about your device and how you use our website. We need this information to allow you to log in securely and use basic functions such as the shopping cart.

By accepting all cookies, you’re allowing us to use this data to show you personalised offers, improve our website, and display targeted adverts on our website and on other websites or apps. Some data may also be shared with third parties and advertising partners as part of this process.

Miju Games / "The Planet Crafter"
Review

The Planet Crafter: playing God on a living, breathing planet

Debora Pape
16.4.2024
Translation: Katherine Martin

Whether it’s base building, terraforming or sheer survival, there’s plenty to do in The Planet Crafter. The game rewards my efforts with a changing environment.

I’m sitting in a tiny capsule, rocketing towards a red planet – my new home. What awaits me there is a depressing, rocky landscape with zero signs of life. I’m scarcely out of the capsule when I’m confronted with the threat of death by suffocation. But I don’t let that put me off. After all, I’ve got my sights set on a goal: to create a green paradise on the planet.

My first days on a dead planet

I start my ambitious terraforming project with the most important thing: staying alive. Your character can die from a lack of oxygen, hunger or thirst. With this in mind, I grab my multifunctional tool and use it to collect resources such as iron, silicon and titanium, which are lying all over the ground. This can be used to build modular accommodation from containers. Inside these containers, there’s unlimited oxygen and space for storage boxes and equipment.

Another thing you can use this space for is a craft station, which enables you to build better equipment, including a larger oxygen tank. This, in turn, helps you expand your radius for gathering resources. To get drinking water, I melt ice. Though a few packs of astronaut food in my inventory initially satisfy my hunger, I move on to growing zucchinis and beans later.

My sense of ambition quickly begins to stir – I want better equipment and I want my base to look good. It could definitely use some windows and furniture. And it’s got to be organised too. The resources I’ve gathered need to be stowed away somewhere handy, where they’re easy to find again. Luckily, you can label the boxes. However, as the game reminds me with its gentle hints on objectives in the corner of the screen, there’s more to life here than DIY.

Terraforming made easy

Creating a world here on my private planet, I feel like a god. I put up a screen in my base to display my steadily increasing terraforming parameters and the milestones I’ll achieve next.

Building meets exploration

For all these wonderful terraforming machines to work, they need electricity. A small solar panel is all it takes to power my base initially, but I soon wind up needing a whole forest of them. In the medium term, I need a nuclear fusion reactor.

As long as the base has power, you can make steady progress. The terraforming machines do what they’re supposed to do – even without my intervention – and I keep on reaching terraforming milestones. Hitting these goals gives me access to new and improved machines and base modules that speed up the process. But they also require more power. As a result, I’m forced to go off in search of rare resources.

Exploration is an important aspect of The Planet Crafter. On my forays across the non-procedurally generated map, I explore caves, abandoned bases and crashed spaceships. I soon start cursing my seemingly constantly overfilled inventory. Finding little outposts with storage boxes is essential for my progress.

Collecting resources is an important part of the game, but it doesn’t turn into a tedious grind. Basic resources are always close by. Hunting for rare resources involves exploring new areas, so it never gets boring either. Nevertheless, I can still adjust the level of difficulty, frequency of resources and terraforming duration in the settings to suit my preferences.

Having previously enjoyed terraforming in Green Planet, the Surviving Mars DLC, it’s the same story with The Planet Crafter. It’s a leisurely game with no battles and genuine rewards – my efforts transform a dead game world into a living oasis.

Header image: Miju Games / "The Planet Crafter"

11 people like this article


User Avatar
User Avatar

Feels just as comfortable in front of a gaming PC as she does in a hammock in the garden. Likes the Roman Empire, container ships and science fiction books. Focuses mostly on unearthing news stories about IT and smart products.


Review

Which films, shows, books, games or board games are genuinely great? Recommendations from our personal experience.

Show all

These articles might also interest you

  • Review

    Dark, gripping and simply unbelievably good: "The Drifter" tested

    by Philipp Rüegg

  • Review

    Pleasure and frustration go hand in hand in origami platformer Hirogami

    by Kevin Hofer

  • Review

    "Ruffy and the Riverside": "Zelda" puzzle in a colourful "Banjo Kazooie" setting

    by Cassie Mammone