The Survivalist: ARK’s Homestead update builds on disappointment

    
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After all the time waiting for Studio Wildcard to deliver on its promise of integrating the super popular S+ building mod into the core of ARK: Survival Evolved, it finally happened! Few players were left believing it actually would, especially after the deployment of the studio’s newest pet project, Atlas.

Perhaps against better judgment, I held out a slim hope, so I was pretty happy when that hope was rewarded a couple of weeks ago with the release of the Homestead update. Sadly, that feeling was short lived. I logged in.

No, it wasn’t quite that bad. Although I felt I kept my expectations fairly low (after all, I know where all the development time and money is going, and it isn’t ARK), this big building update didn’t seem quite so big. Maybe it’s mostly underwhelming because of the year-and-a-half wait we’ve had for it to be added. Perhaps it was just too little, too late. It left a taste of disappointment for what could have been. And one thing it could have been was a shred of hope that WildCard cared anything about its inaugural game or players.

The long road

While the S+ itself had been around much longer, WildCard first announced its planned integration of the building mod at TwitchCon 2017 while showing off the recently announced Aberration expansion. In order to help facilitate the integration, the studio said it would work closely with the mod’s creator. Considering Orionson announced in February 2018 that he started working officially with WildCard, I’d say that is pretty close! That was great news for fans who were eager to get S+ in the core game and on official servers; surely this was the best way for that to happen. (He also noted that work on mods outside of Studio WildCard would cease, but surely S+ would still have love since that was a focus in the studio, right? Wrong. See below.)

Now, WildCard was open from that first announcement that not all of the S+ features could be integrated into the game. And it emphasized this on three separate occasions. Mirroring the announcement the previous October, WildCard’s programmer took to Reddit in June 2018 to re-emphasize the statement and ask players which pieces they’d most want to see.

“We aren’t planning to do a full Structures+ integration because of the number of systems and mechanics that it would change. That said, we’re actively investigating which pieces of it would make the most sense to cherry pick and integrate or build into the full game. Posting the bits that you’d most like to see is helpful.”

Then again in August, the studio repeated the same warning to folks with the added fact that any improvements wouldn’t come until after the Extinction expansion launched. Come November we got Extinction (with a few extinction-related bugs). And then it wasn’t until March 2019, 17 months after the announcement, that the S+ integration finally made it into ARK.

Why such a delay? There is no doubt that Studio WildCard turned the bulk of its attention to its newest cash-collector project, Atlas. (This was certainly the teased sequel that the studio tried to backtrack on clear back in November 2017.) In December 2018, we had confirmation as Orionsun — the mod’s creator — clearly informed the player base that he had been working on Atlas specifically with S+. Pretty much rubbing salt in the wounds of those who kept waiting for ARK to get its promised features and optimization, Orionsun stated, “I will say that the building system in Atlas is not only everything I wanted to do in ARK but also so much more.” Yeah. As any but the most die-hard Studio WildCard apologists already knew, ARK and its improvements seem to have been just tossed to the wayside in favor of the new shiny. I am pretty sure if the team wanted to really devote some time to it, it could have been done quicker. Even the creator of it, who was brought on board to do just that, was instead working on Atlas as a focus.

I hate to be a skeptic, but I almost have to wonder if it only finally came out because two other other survival games had really huge updates that week (Conan Exiles had a massive one and Space Engineers launched out of Early Access with big improvements) and ARK wanted to get in on the attention.

Construction that made the cut

Even though I doubted the day would come, I was excited when the S+ integration was finally launched. I still held out a teensy bit of hope that it would be awesome. After all, building is my favorite part of the game, and things to make building better is always better!

As soon as the update hit, I was ready to show it off. And that is what I did, though admittedly I held back a bit so I could do it live on OPTV. This may or may not have been wise as my disappointment in some aspects was pretty pronounced. While I was excited about the new items (yay for triangles and skylights!), after such a long wait, it felt like just a pittance of them arrived. As I delved deeper, I did find a bit more to the update, but not enough to fully compensate for those disappointments.

So what was included in Homestead? There might be other building pieces I’ve missed, but here’s the crux: You’ve got the triangle foundations, ceilings, and roofs that enable you to make rounded towers. There are double doors, fence supports, large wall pieces (four walls high), and genuine stairs. Stairs! You’ve got bendable pipe and electrical cable pieces that would have saved me a bajillion headaches when building my Aberration cliff castle! Tek also received a special storage box that holds only one item, but nearly 2000 stacks of it. Talk about a godsend for builders! I like the ability to to tell what is what at a glance, and the fact that they are stackable is also awesome.

Other interesting features includes the ability to change the texture and look of the square foundations, the ability to instantly pick up a misplaced item, and the ability to convert stars to a ramp of equal size. The foundations and stair changes can be done at will; however, the pick up feature has a very limited time frame.

The sad stuff

Of course I did not expect things to be perfect. Nor, with the fact that this is WildCard, did I necessarily expect much. But I still hoped! And I expected disappointments. There the studio did not disappoint. What are some of these disappointments? Here are my main ones:

  • The large wall pieces don’t match the regular wall pieces, so they look out of place. And the one I’d so love to have a large wall for, the greenhouse, doesn’t have one. Thatch is also left out.
  • Only the square foundations can have their texture changed. The triangles cannot, nor can the wall pieces. This looks especially bad if you want an uniform look.
  • If you attach a triangle roof a single-story doorframe, you can’t get in without crouching — even as a short character! This is especially annoying when moving about a build.
  • The double doors are only on a single foundation, so you don’t really get a larger door. You still need to use dino doors of you want a larger opening to your abode, and these do not have snap points on top to continue building.
  • The timer to pick up placed items is only 30 seconds — helpful if you snap it wrong but not if you place a couple more and discover that things won’t line up. Up to five minutes would have been so much nicer.
  • Other storage does not get the ability to snap together and stack.

One of the S+ suggestions I would have loved to see implemented was fuel-less torches. When you decorate with a ton of those, running around every little bit to keep refueling them is a nightmare. Toggling the visibility of pipes and cables would have been oh-so-awesome as well (although you’d have to wonder if you could find them again if you needed to redecorate!).

S+ development is dead

Perhaps you got too frustrated waiting for Studio WildCard to make good on its S+ promises. Maybe you were disappointed with the core game version missing some vital elements once it finally did launch. So you decided to just keep playing on the original mod. Well, sadly that may not be the safest route either: There’s a chance your S+ mod is going to break and there will be no one there to fix it.

When Orionsun announced his addition to Atlas in February, after considering the new constraints on his time and his lack of desire to play ARK, he also announced his decision to stop any work on the actual S+ mod itself.  “I no longer wish to spend time making content updates which is effectively stopping development on the mod,” he stated in a reply to that thread. “This doesn’t mean the mod is dead, it means [it’s] no longer receiving updates.” Orionsun, however, is making allowances for other modders to step in and continue work on it so it won’t break beyond repair. He continued, “I will not be altering S+ nor doing an alternate version. I will be releasing the source code though after the next update so there will likely be more options for people at that point.”

Perhaps WildCard will be able to fix the issues when they crop up. Orionsun stated, “People also tend to worry that Wildcard will push an update and it will break S+ but that has already happened multiple times and every time Wildcard has fixed the issue quickly.” Or perhaps it won’t break. After all, ARK is receiving so little development attention, maybe there will never reach a point when the codes clash. Maybe. But having little to no development being somehow a good thing is pretty darn sad.

In the survival genre, there are at least 1001 ways to die, and MJ Guthrie is bound to experience them all — in the interests of sharing them with you! The Survivalist chronicles life and death struggles against all forms of apocalypse, outbreak, mutation, weather, and prehistoric wildlife. And let’s not forget the two-legged enemies! Tune in here and on OPTV to see who feeds better: MJ or the Death Counter.
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