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Opinion

Once Human aims to be «the» next forever game – but is it good enough?

Philipp Rüegg
12/7/2024
Translation: Katherine Martin

Once Human is an online survival game involving base building, crafting and huge boss enemies. It’s free to play – and it’s keen to be your one and only. As it turns out, you’ll barely have time to play anything on the side if you start Once Human.

First came The First Descendent, then came Zenless Zone Zero and now we have Once Human. That’s three prestigious free-to-play games to be released this year alone. Games of this kind can only be successful when as many people as possible spend as much time as possible playing them – and spend as much dough as possible while they’re doing it.

These games welcome you with open arms and an easy start. The thing is, they can only work if somebody foots the bill. As a result, every new free-to-play title fancies itself as the next forever game à la Fortnite, Minecraft or Rust.

Once Human, however, might just be tripped up by its own greed – a voracious appetite for data. At the start of the game, you have to agree to the terms of service. There’s nothing unusual about this per se. However, Once Human’s TOS have stopped the game’s Steam rating from rising above «mixed».

Despite data protection concerns, Once Human has almost made it into the top ten most-played games on Steam, where it’s available in addition to the Epic and Windows Store. After playing the game for almost 10 hours, I’d say this isn’t for nothing. Once Human is an online survival game with all the things a survival game entails. You can build your own base, mine resources, craft weapons and items and explore the game’s huge world alongside other players.

Once Human is a typical free-to-play hamster wheel. The world is massive, with things to discover around every corner. My quest log is full to bursting and I never have enough resources to build everything I want. What I’ve done so far has been fun.

Once Human’s favelas

I still haven’t warmed to the high population density. In a post-apocalyptic survival game, I don’t want to have a ton of neighbours a stone’s throw away from me in every direction.

It’s worst near important quest areas or dungeons. The roads leading there are littered on both sides with small camps serving as revitalisation points. It makes me feel like I’ve taken a wrong turn and wound up in a Brazilian favela.

This aside, I’m still motivated to delve further into the world of Once Human. I’m up to my ears in checklists to work through, countless resources and menus crammed with upgrade and skill options. That’s why I’m asking myself, as I do with every new free-to-play title: is this game good enough to become a forever game for a critical mass? Because «good» isn’t good enough. Plus, Once Human has data protection concerns to contend with.

Once Human is available for PC and will soon also be released for Android and iOS.

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As a child, I wasn't allowed to have any consoles. It was only with the arrival of the family's 486 PC that the magical world of gaming opened up to me. Today, I'm overcompensating accordingly. Only a lack of time and money prevents me from trying out every game there is and decorating my shelf with rare retro consoles. 


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