The tycoon/management genre has undergone a massive resurgence over
the past few years. Whether it’s the uncontrollable chaos of Jurassic
World Evolution, the throwback appeal of Two Point Hospital or the vast
number for tycoon’s games on Roblox, the genre is back in a big way. One
of the more creative titles in this wave of newcomers is Megaquarium.
In this game you’re creating, curating and managing an aquarium –
sometimes part built, sometimes something you’ve created from the
ground up – with the aim of creating the ultimate Aquarium to please
your guests. Originally released on PC back in 2018,
the game went on to win plenty of critical praise. Since then,
developer Twice Circled have teamed with Auroch Digital to bring the
game to consoles – Switch, Xbox One and the PS4 version I’ll be
reviewing here. To cut to the chase – Megaquarium is really quite good.
One of the aspects of the tycoon game genre that often irritates me
is that one of the central concepts is disaster management. You spend
hours building something you’re proud of, only for something to come
along and send it all spiralling into destruction. Some people love
this. It’s often the most tense part of the game that pushes you to
react quickly and asses risks. That’s not the case with Megaquairum.
There’s no water tanks shattering which sends sharks sliding among your
guests. There’s no power cuts or invaders or explosions. It’s a chilled
out experience about creating, strategizing, planning and maintenance.
You do all of this, initially, from a bird’s eye view. Looking down
on your aquarium, you can build walls, tanks, doors, facilities like
toilets and seating as well as food and drinks machines. Everything can
be mapped to a grid within your area. Tanks come in a variety of
different shapes and sizes which determine what kind of aquatic life you
can put in them. Once you’ve done so, you can attach a number of water
heaters, chillers, filters, UR sterilisers, water pumps to remotely
attach equipment, protein skimmers and more in order to condition the
water for their inhabitants. The size, combined with the number of fish
you choose to put in a tank, means you’ll have to attach more equipment.
Once you’ve built a tank, the most interesting aspect of Megaquarium
comes to life – the strategy of housing fish. Each species in this game
has a set of needs. Tropical water fish like their water warm
while others like cold water. Some species need vegetation or rocks in
their tanks to keep them calm. Others need lots of space to swim in
while others are at home in a tiny space. Some of the animals you can
place need rounded tanks – mostly sharks – so they don’t injure
themselves. Coral’s need plenty of UV light provided by lighting rigs
while eel’s and others need caves to hide in. Bigger, predatory fish
will eat others if they get hungry and some species like to be housed
with only their own kind. To keep animals healthy, happy and alive, you
need to balance all of these factors when choosing where to place them.
Each fish you home in your aquarium has a number of benefits. First
and foremost, it increases visitor satisfaction. As a guest to your
aquarium looks upon the fish, golden stars (or red stars if they’re
displeased with what they’re seeing) pop out of their heads called
“Prestige”. The more they’re impressed, the more stars you get. These
stars will culminate into level up’s which will unlock more equipment
and fish that you can research. This is where the other 2 benefits of
housing fish come in – Science and Ecology. Along with Prestige, a guest
viewing a fish grants 1 or both of these resources. For both
categories, you can select a target fish or equipment to unlock and once
you’ve reached the target Science or Ecology, they’ll unlock for
purchase. The system means you’re constantly improving, rejigging and
balancing your Megaquarium with new unlocks that’ll generated even more
Prestige, Science and Ecology.
The main core of the game revolves around 10 aquariums, each of which
sets out a goal for you to achieve before you can move onto the next.
Initially, it’s a blank canvas for you to play around in in order to get
to grips with the mechanics. The fish that are available are easy to
manage with few requirements. Each new aquarium adds another layer of
complexity. One aquarium is already established but has inadequate
equipment. Another aquarium only allows you to acquire the fan favourite
fish by trading others you’ve already placed and grown to adulthood.
Another asks you to transform an old cinema into a thriving tourist
attraction. Each level has its open optional objectives too, tasking you
to complete initially simple but eventually quite challenging tasks
like housing certain sets of animals together. Each level is challenging
in its own way and each build on the mechanics you’ve already mastered.
Recruiting enough staff with the right abilities, putting them in zones
to maximise their efficiency, ensuring you’ve got enough feeding
stations for each of the fish types, making sure guests have enough
toilets and seating, selling gift shop merchandise like balloons or
shark hats in order to generate more money – the layers of complexity
here are numerous but all float by in a gentle progression path.
Tycoon games that have made the Free Willy leap from PC to consoles
haven’t always fared well but Megaquarium has done an admirable job of
putting all your gauges, dials, boxes and the rest of the nubbins
that make up the HUD in intuitive places. It can be a little clunky at
times, moving from messages you’ve received to the objective tabs, for
example, but placing items, tanks, fish, and items is simplistic but
effective.
It’s sometimes a little too simplistic though. Because everything is
locked to grids, there’s a limit to how creative you can be compared to
other games of this ilk. The perfectionists out there might lose a few
hours’ sleep over walls that won’t align exactly with curved tanks
(people still won’t be able to walk past but it does show a gap
visually. The benefit of this however is that Megaquarium lets you get
away with a lot of the little things that other games of this ilk
wouldn’t – if you build a wall and somehow trap a visitor into the staff
side of the area where they’ll get displeased with seeing nothing but
heaters and filters, you can just pick them up and drop them where
they’re supposed to be. Similarly, 3 of the 4 walls in all of your
aquariums can be expanded with a few box drags. This means space never
becomes too much of a consideration and allows you to get creative with
your big features.
Outside of the main levels, there’s also a sandbox mode in
Megaquarium that lets your creativity run wild. This mode is a whole lot
of fun to just create in or to trial out some of the wilder fish
combinations before trying them in the main levels.
Until recently, Megaquarium had a few technical issues on PS4. Some
of the features were buggy, some of the sound effects were
malfunctioning and the last of the 10 aquariums would crash every 15
minutes or so. Now, patched several times, the latest fixing the last of
the annoying issues, Megaquarium now runs like a dream. There’s been
some creative solutions used here – limiting the number of fish you can
have in play at any one time being one – but they’ve worked a treat.
Lastly, I feel the need to mention one of the nicest little touches
in Megaquarium – the first person mode. Zoom in all the way to your
aquarium and you’ll be transported into a guests-eye-view. Here you
can roam around and survey all you’ve made from the ground up to see
what the guests see. You can even ghost in and out of the tanks to check
out the inhabitants, fisheye to eye. It’s here you’ll notice how good
the animations are on the species you’re housed and while they’re not
extravagantly detailed models, they look fin-tastic in their own way.
Megaquarium is a tycoon/management game for those that like to take
things slowly. There’s no running around or avoiding disasters. The most
you’ll have to deal with is is some malfunctioning equipment and
that’s more of an inconvenience than a stressor. Instead, this is a
chill game about a chill topic that lets you get as creative as you can
within its constraints and has done some admirably in its journey from
PC to PS4. It won’t be for everyone – if you prefer your tycoon games
with an element of danger then this one isn’t for you – but if you’re
looking to kick back, look at some fish and make sure everything is
ticking over while some cool tunes play in the background, this is one
to put on your radar.
Megaquarium (PS4) Review – The Pacifisht Tycoon Game
Reviewed by GAME Online
on
February 15, 2020
Rating: 5
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