Games you destroy building
Eventually it all adds up to an entire town bustling with activity under your watchful eye. Some construction simulators use a physics engine. Make sure that your attempts at architecture don't create fantasies that could never exist in the real world.
For the most part the buildings your erect serve a function in the game. Some provide you with an ability to go along with their placement on the map. You're not supposed to fill the vast digital emptiness with garbage after all. At least you should try and avoid that. What the items in these house or city building games actually do varies from game to game. For the most part, you can figure it out by how and when you're supposed to use them. Houses, fortresses and castles are generally build to protect people from bad weather and warring adversaries.
If you need to protect your people from dangers or other unpleasentness, you want to build those. You use towers and barracks to defend against attacks. Often you need a farm to feed the population. Sometimes competing tribes are eager to put you into the ground. Then you will have to find ways to stand up to them. If you have farms or great factories, you will produce some kind of good.
In the video game players are given the ability to create medieval siege engines with the sole purpose of laying down destruction to a fortress.
There will be a lot of trial and error as you attempt to build that fabled death machine capable of wiping out an entire army. Players are battling against forces that have kept most of the humanity into a dark oppression where liberation awaits after ending the tyranny of the Earth Defense Force.
Set in an open-world environment, developers aimed to offer gamers a fast-paced action combat with true physics-based destruction. Earth Empire is a real-time strategy video game that allows players to take control of a civilization through , years of human history.
Your civilization will start from their humble beginnings of gathering resources to ending any faction threat that dares to challenge their authority. Universal Sandbox is another physics-based video game, though this title is set in space. Players will create new worlds and wonders while also having free control to destroy planets by altering their climate to even set up a collision with another world or sun.
The Civilization series has continued to gain popularity with each new installment. In Civilization V, gamers sit down on a throne as a ruler who must guide their civilization into bliss and prosperity. Epic Battle Simulator is a massive sandbox that allows players to create battles.
The sky is the limit for the video game as you can set up battles between thousands of Orcs, Trolls, Medieval soldiers, Roman Centurions, to even chickens. Just as we mentioned with Fallout 4, the franchise is centered on the destruction of humanity. Players are simply acting as one of the few remnants of the human world where they are tasked with a variety of quests during their exploration of the barren wasteland.
With no restrictions, Rico can end the suffering by delivering pure carnage to the dictator General Di Ravello. Luckily our suave protagonist has the arsenal and equipment to support a small army. The Force Unleashed gives you your first taste of power by putting you in Darth Vader's black military boots, letting you unleash hellish fury on the Wookie homeworld of Kashyyyk. Blow open massive wooden gates and watch the splinters rain down, cut trees into toothpicks, and pick up and launch Chewbacca's buddies off a cliff sorry!
But it doesn't stop there. Eventually, you'll take control of Vader's apprentice and learn a whole new array of explosive abilities - like grabbing a Star Destroyer out of the sky and slamming it into the ground. Is it over-the-top? Is it stupid? Is it fun? You bet your nerfherding butt it is. Of course Red Faction is on this list. What started as an average shooter with some terrain-deforming ideas, Red Faction didn't fully come into its own until its third outing.
It was cool to be able to blow up pretty much any wall or other obstacle that stood in your way, but its gameplay was too linear, its options too limiting. With Guerrilla, you're not funneled down corridors - instead, you're given a whole planet to destroy. While Guerrilla doesn't let you make a dent in the surrounding terrain, it does let you take out entire goddamn buildings if you're so inclined. Just grab your sledgehammer, take out a few supports, and blammo - that three story building is now lying in pieces on the ground.
And it's not just buildings. Cover can be blown away with a well-placed grenade, bridges can be levelled with a few rockets - pretty much any man-made structure can be turned into so much debris with a good smacking. It never gets old. Sometimes you just want to watch the world burn. These games let you do it without leaving the house - or hurting anyone. That's the important bit.
How do you like to live out your most destructive fantasies? Let me know in the comments below! When we first heard the term levolution we thought it'd be another bit of meaningless slang that we'd forget about in a day, but after seeing it in action its become synonymous with destructible environments. Remember when the developers showed off Battlefield 4 for the first time and made an entire skyscraper crumble on top of player's heads in a multiplayer match?
After that, people were saying levolution so much that it just got ingrained in our heads. Then the levolution got even more intense with level flooding dam breaks and battleships crashing into islands. On top of the big, set-piece Levolution, Battlefield 4 destruction also works on a smaller scale. Even if vaporizing a chain-link fence with a combat knife isn't entirely realistic, it's still a ton of fun, and chipping away on concrete cover with a barrage of gunfire, blowing a hole in a wall with an RPG, and completely leveling a small building are some of the most satisfying experiences you can have in a shooter.
Turns out that being a builder also means that you have to be a destroyer, too. That's what games like Minecraft taught us--the entire world can be punched away as you gather resources to craft zombie killing weapons or monuments to your favorite gaming website. There is no limit to the amount of destruction you can wreak in Minecraft, either. Want to chop down every tree in a forest, punch a pig to death, or dig a hole that goes directly to hell? If you have the time and the drive, you can do all of that.
But destruction is just one side of the game. Once you gather all of that material from your rampage you can start rebuilding the world as you see fit only to knock it all down again. Some games are content to let you blow up buildings, or incinerate a jeep with a rocket launcher. That's cool; explosions are generally the go-to for demolishing a destructible environment. But fire, the destroyer of all things, never really lives up to its potential in games. Usually, it just sits in a single place, contained within invisible walls.
Maybe it'll hurt you if you're dumb enough to stand in it. But that isn't the case with Far Cry 2. See, in real life, if you take a flamethrower to a patch of dry grass, you can bet your ass said field will erupt in flames.
Far Cry 2 makes--nay, lets --fire act as it should. Throw a molotov into a field watch as the flames spread realistically, opening up many tactical options for evading enemies and even burning them alive. It may be a different kind of destruction, but holy hell is it awesome. The Worms games are all about destroying your enemies in the most creative and convenient ways possible.
You can play as a variety of classes, each with their own way of using explosives to send enemies flying off the stage. Missiles, grenades, and all sorts of things that go BOOM will not only blast away your foes, but they also take a chunk out of the environment. Hell, even shotguns and pistols blast parts of the world away with every bullet, but that's not all--you can use this mechanic to your advantage and to deadly effect.
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