Fragile Allegiance

Preview
Platform:
PC
Genre:
Strategy

Score:

6/10

Graphics

8

Sound

8

Multiplayer

-

Playability

6

Fragile Allegiance Preview

Fragile Allegiance may just be that cheeseburger. Seems the Tetracorp group has opened up a new sector of space to free-for-all planetoid colonization (perhaps they need the money to come up with a company name that doesn't sound like a brand of fish food). Also seems that some aliens invited themselves to the immediate sector and, uh, you can guess most of the rest. Nothing astoundingly new here, but for an empire-builder, Fragile Allegiance is very slick, with a clean, button-based interface. It's a joy to behold: Displays are tight and feature integrated control panels instead of the standard mushrooming mass of overlapping windows; individual colonies are displayed as clusters of buildings usually grouped together in the depression of a crater, rather than the usual iconic representations of industrial strength, military presence, etc. Up to four networked players (competing with each other as well as six NPC alien races) may customize the level of resource manipulation required, diving headfirst into serious micro-/macro-management or simply delegating to the AI routines (or "supervisors") anything heavier than building buildings and moving ships.

For some, handling just those basic duties may be enough; there's a nasty urgency to this game, more in the tone than anything else. Perhaps it's in the scale of the game---individual planetoids, where each individual structure is distinct and visible, rather than whole planets or star systems. Combat, real-time but non-arcade in nature, is conducted between preassigned fleets (with the option to override and run if the military situation seems to be going soggy), in fleet-to-ground actions, or in ballistic missile attacks from one planetoid to another. Fragile Allegiance also offers the player the extra-special nastiness of watching in real time as the Bad Old Aliens (or, more likely, networked opponents) rain stasis rockets and cluster bombs and nukes and even worse things on the (presumably) peace-loving populace of your beautifully-presented outposts. Again, nothing astoundingly new, but Interplay has a short history of imparting something like elegance to a game even if it's not the first of its type; if the customizable levels of management available here don't result in strange play imbalances between hard-core gamers and the just-let-me-move-and-shoot types, Fragile Allegiance will be worth checking out.

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