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Scrap Mechanic is a sandbox video game developed for Windows by Swedish[3] game studio and publisher Axolot Games, in which players can build machines, vehicles, and buildings, and share their creations online. The initial version of the game, released on January 20, 2016, was a creative mode with unlimited access to all available parts for building. On the day of its release, it was the top-selling game on Steam[4] and is estimated to have 1–2 million sales.[5] The survival mode update for the game, with new game mechanics including wildlife, scavenging, farming, and cooking, as well as an underwater biome, was released on May 7, 2020.[6] It was the third-best-selling game on Steam the week after the update.[7]

Scrap Mechanic
Promotional cover art
Developer(s)Axolot Games
Publisher(s)Axolot Games
Director(s)Kacper Antonius
Pontus Holmbom[1][2]
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows
ReleaseJanuary 20, 2016 (early access)
Genre(s)Sandbox, survival
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

Gameplay

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Players begin at the site of a crashed spaceship, with very few items. Inside the crashed spaceship the player must find a Master Battery—which is located in a ruin nearby—and place it into the Master Battery Socket located in the crashed spaceship, by doing this, the player activates the Mini Craftbot, and the Ship Terminal. The Mini Craftbot is a more simple and smaller version of the Craftbot with limited functionality, primarily focused on allowing players to build a basic vehicle to begin exploring the world. The Ship Terminal allows players to receive the Logbook which indicates the time of day, the day they're on, the beacons that players place down, and various important locations. Players must search for supplies and food in order to survive.

The Mechanic Station is the location where the various crafting stations can be made. This includes the Craftbot, the Dressbot, made for making cloths, the Refinebot for refining raw materials, and the Cookbot, for combining raw foods into recipes. In addition, a Resource Collector can crafted which is used for collecting and storing various resources and transferring them to Refinebot.

The Farmers Hideout is the location where trading is performed for items such as the spud guns, garment boxes, seeds and ammunition (potatoes).

Other locations include structures such as the Silo District or Ruin City filled with enemy, loot crates, and ruin chests; the Farmers Hideout, where items can be purchased; the Farmers Shacks that can be harvested for blocks, parts and other resources; and Warehouses, large buildings storing more advanced supplies.[8]

Creative mode

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In creative mode, players start with full access to an unlimited supply of all items in the game, allowing for the creation of a variety of buildings, vehicles, and machines, none of which require energy or fuel to function. There are no enemies nor animals in the world naturally, but they can be spawned by the player with spawn capsules. In this mode, players cannot be injured or die. There are also harvestable crops from survival mode such as trees and stone as well as crafting stations, allowing for players to test all sorts of contraptions. Creations can be saved and shared via the Steam workshop.[9]

Challenge mode

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In challenge mode, players will try and get through 50 levels by building or fixing contraptions using the limited materials they are given. A challenge builder is also available for players to build and share their own challenge levels through the Steam workshop. Challenge levels can be downloaded and published in the Steam workshop. Originally, challenge mode was a developer's experiment with encryption mechanics, not allowing buildings to be deleted, which has evolved into its whole separate game mode.

Plot

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The survival backstory depicts the setting of the game. It portrays a robot maintenance mechanic that has been sent to an agricultural planet which supplies food to the metropolitan planets. The crew has been tasked to maintain fully autonomous farming robots which overrun the planet. However, as the spacecraft comes in for a landing it loses control and crashes. The mechanic survives the impact however becomes stranded and finds out the robots working in the fields have become hostile and start attacking the mechanics. The goal is now to survive on the planet, using the mechanics quick thinking, creativity and environment as an advantage to stay alive from the savage robots.

Development

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Scrap Mechanic formerly used the OGRE rendering engine, which stands for Object-Oriented Graphics Rendering Engine.[10] It was used alongside a custom plugin named Bullet, which is an external physics engine responsible for all of the physics calculations.[11]

However, the engine was changed with the first major update. The new in-house rendering engine had been in development since August and was made to fix numerous bugs, mostly related to certain integrated Intel cards, which some players had issues with.[12]

Reception

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Angus Morrison of PC Gamer compared the game to Minecraft, noting that in the context of the latter's lack of mechanical building conditions, the game might be attractive to players who like to build mechanics.[13]

Nathan Grayson of Kotaku said that the game "struck him as a game intrepid builders won't tire of anytime soon," and claimed that he was looking forward to seeing what comes of it,[4] Curtis Pyke of MGN called the game "a farming simulator meets tower defense game".[14]

References

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  1. ^ Blixt, Tobias (May 3, 2021). "Axolot pitchade för Mojang och fick nobben – nu omsätter de 341 miljoner". Breakit (in Swedish). Retrieved August 8, 2023.
  2. ^ "Scrap Mechanic (Video Game 2016) - Full Cast & Crew". IMDb. Retrieved August 8, 2023.
  3. ^ "Info". Axolot Games. Archived from the original on July 28, 2021. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  4. ^ a b Grayson, Nathan (January 20, 2016). "A Game About Building Crazy Cars Is Tearing Up Steam's Charts Right Now". Kotaku. Archived from the original on May 4, 2020.
  5. ^ "Scrap Mechanic · AppID: 387990". SteamDB. Retrieved 2020-05-05.
  6. ^ "Scrap Mechanic: Welcome to the machine-filled creative paradise of Scrap Mechanic, a multiplayer sandbox game with imagination and ingenuity at its core". Scrap Mechanic. Retrieved 2023-02-16.
  7. ^ Partleton, Kayleigh (May 18, 2020). "CHARTS: Halo The Master Chief Collection shoots its way to the top". PC Games Insider. Retrieved July 2, 2024.
  8. ^ Ackroyd, Luke (August 13, 2022). "8 Things We Wish We Knew Before Playing Scrap Mechanic". TheGamer. Archived from the original on August 15, 2022. Retrieved August 22, 2022.
  9. ^ Sykes, Tom (July 17, 2016). "Scrap Mechanic gets Steam Workshop support". PC Gamer. Retrieved August 22, 2022.
  10. ^ "12 graphics and rendering tools to make your game shine". MCV. 2014-06-20. ISSN 1469-4832. Retrieved 2023-03-23.
  11. ^ "Bullet is a professional free 3D Real-Time Multiphysics Library - Google Code Archive". code.google.com. Retrieved 2023-03-23.
  12. ^ "Scrap Mechanic: Welcome to the machine-filled creative paradise of Scrap Mechanic, a multiplayer sandbox game with imagination and ingenuity at its core". Scrap Mechanic. Retrieved 2023-03-23.
  13. ^ Morrison, Angus (December 2, 2015). "Build your own Autobot with Scrap Mechanic's Controller". PC Gamer. Retrieved August 22, 2022.
  14. ^ Pyke, Curtis (27 February 2021). "Scrap Mechanic – Game Review". mgn.gg. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
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