How To Fuel Ship Starbound

Posted on
How To Fuel Ship Starbound Average ratng: 4,5/5 9278 votes
  1. How To Fuel Up Your Ship In Starbound
  2. Starbound Ftl Fuel
  3. Starbound How To Fuel Ship 2018

(smithing) then you fly to a moon (this doesn't cost fuel) and go mine the crystal and the liquid if upgraded for fuel. You will be able to use those to fuel up your ship. In multiplayer, you need to be in party. If you mean friendly ship as in a ship in space, you need a mech.

Starbound
Developer(s)Chucklefish
Publisher(s)Chucklefish
Director(s)Finn Brice
Producer(s)
Designer(s)Stephen Alexander
Programmer(s)
  • Catherine West
  • Michael Reilly
  • Bart van der Werf
  • Tom Coxon
  • Alex Lawson
  • William Lundstedt
Artist(s)
  • George Wyman
  • Doris Carrascosa
  • Lili Ibrahim
  • Adam Riches
  • Ricky Johnsonn
  • Jay Baylis
Writer(s)
Composer(s)Curtis Schweitzer
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows, OS X, Linux, PlayStation 4, PlayStation Vita, Xbox One
Release
  • Windows, OS X, Linux
  • 22 July 2016
  • PS4, PS Vita, Xbox One
  • TBA
Genre(s)Action-adventure
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

How To Fuel Up Your Ship In Starbound

Starbound is an action-adventurevideo game developed and published by Chucklefish. Starbound takes place in a two-dimensional, procedurally generated universe which the player is able to explore in order to obtain new weapons, armor, and items, and to visit towns and villages inhabited by various intelligent lifeforms. Starbound was released out of early access in July 2016 for Microsoft Windows, OS X, and Linux, and is in development for Xbox One, PlayStation 4, and PlayStation Vita.

Starbound Ftl Fuel

  • 4Reception

Synopsis[edit]

Starbound begins with the player inside a spacecraft after the destruction of Earth, home of an intergalactic peacekeeping organization known as the Terrene Protectorate, while just having graduated from its ranks. With nothing to guide it, the shuttle shoots into space without direction, becoming lost in a sea of stars. The space shuttle orbits a habitable planet and an adventure begins that takes the player hurtling across the universe. Starbound contains both quests and story driven missions, buried inside its vast sandbox universe.[1] The space shuttle acts as the player's vehicle while exploring the galaxy, containing a teleport pad the player can use to teleport down to the planets the shuttle is visiting, a ship locker for storing items, a fuel panel for refueling the ship and a cockpit for piloting the ship. The interior of the ship is also fully customizable, with items and blocks able to be freely placed within the ship.

Gameplay[edit]

Exploration and settlement gameplay in Starbound. Players can navigate, explore and mine procedurally-generated terrain (left) to gather resources and create settlements, including constructing houses and leasing rooms to NPC tenants and villagers (right).

Many gameplay elements and features, such as items, enemies, and planets, use procedural generation in order to provide a variety of content.[2] The game features story-based missions, quests, free world exploration, enemies to fight, and the ability to interact with and terraform the environment. Player class is defined by items that the player is wearing.[3]

The player also has the ability to farm and sell crops, build buildings, and charge rent to traveling NPCs.

Starbound How To Fuel Ship 2018

Development[edit]

Starbound was announced by Chucklefish director Finn Brice in February 2012,[4] with a tiered, Kickstarter-style, pre-order opening via the Humble Store on 13 April 2013. Tier options included a copy of the game, an invite to the beta, and a download of the game's soundtrack, as well as game-related 'rewards', such as naming an in-game non-player character, designing a hat or weapon, and having a statue of oneself designed to be placed in the game.[5] Within 24 hours of the pre-order opening, over 10,000 people backed the game, contributing over $230,000 to fund the game's development.[6]

By May 2013, the Starbound pre-order had reached all three of its stretch goals by raising over $1,000,000.[7] The game entered an early access beta on Steam on 4 December 2013, receiving over $2,000,000 in pre-orders prior to its launch.[8]Starbound is written in C++ and uses a custom game engine.[9] The soundtrack was composed by American composer Curtis Schweitzer.[10] The game was officially released out of early access on 22 July 2016.[11] The game will also be ported for the PlayStation 4, PlayStation Vita, and Xbox One at a later time.[12][13][14]

Reception[edit]

Reception
Aggregate score
AggregatorScore
Metacritic81/100[18]
Review scores
PublicationScore
Game Informer8.5/10[15]
IGN9.1/10[16]
PC Gamer (US)84/100[17]
Edit on wikidata

Starbound received 'generally favorable' reviews upon its release, according to video game review aggregatorMetacritic. IGN praised Starbound's crafting, exploration, and combat mechanics, comparing it to Terraria.[16] Christopher Livingston of PC Gamer disagreed about the combat mechanics, calling them 'lacking', but stated that Starbound was a charming space sandbox that would keep players entertained for hours.[17] Nathan Grayson of Kotaku also disagreed with IGN about the game's combat, calling it 'basic', but praised its exploration elements, calling the universe 'strange and unpredictable' enough that players would never quite grow tired of it.[19]

By December 2016, Starbound had sold over 2.5 million copies.[20]

Awards[edit]

AwardResult
Indie Game Magazine's Most Anticipated Game of 2013Won[21][22]
No. 1 Indie of The Year 2013Won[23]

References[edit]

  1. ^'About Starbound'. Chucklefish Studios. Archived from the original on 30 April 2013. Retrieved 28 April 2013.
  2. ^'Twitter / Tiyuri: 'So, Fridays will be 'tweet ...''. 13 July 2012. Retrieved 23 August 2012.
  3. ^Nathan Meunier (24 May 2012). 'Preview: Starbound'. GameSpy.com. Retrieved 28 April 2013.
  4. ^Priestman, Chris (17 February 2012). 'Tiyuri Unveils His Upcoming Game 'Starbound''. Indie Game Magazine. indiegamemag.com. Archived from the original on 5 July 2013. Retrieved 13 April 2013.
  5. ^Rossignol, Jim (13 April 2013). 'Starbound Pre-Orders Prove Somewhat Popular'. Rock, Paper, Shotgun. rockpapershotgun.com. Retrieved 13 April 2013.
  6. ^Sykes, Tom (13 April 2013). 'Starbound pre-orders bring in over $230,000, game seems 'bound' for success - News - PC Gamer'. PC Gamer. pcgamer.com. Retrieved 13 April 2013.
  7. ^'Starbound Pre-Order'. Playstarbound.com. Archived from the original on 10 April 2014. Retrieved 23 April 2014.
  8. ^Matulef, Jeffrey (4 December 2013). 'Starbound beta lands on PC, Mac and Linux today'. EuroGamer. eurogamer.net. Retrieved 4 December 2013.
  9. ^'FAQ - Starbound'. Chucklefish. Retrieved 13 April 2013.
  10. ^Reilly, Michael (16 June 2012). 'Music in Starbound'. playstarbound.com. Retrieved 13 April 2013.
  11. ^'Starbound is Leaving Orbit on 22 July'. playstarbound.com. Retrieved 8 July 2016.
  12. ^Raze, Ashton (20 August 2013). 'Starbound: Extraterrestrial Sandbox Adventure Coming to PS4'. PlayStation.com. Retrieved 20 August 2013.
  13. ^McWhertor, Michael (20 August 2013). 'Fez, Starbound and Velocity 2X coming to PS Vita'. Polygon. Retrieved 20 August 2013.
  14. ^Morris, Tatiana (4 August 2015). 'ARK: Survival Evolved, Starbound and more headed to Xbox One, Windows 10'. GameZone. Retrieved 21 January 2016.
  15. ^Tack, Daniel. 'Starbound'. Game Informer. Retrieved 15 September 2018.
  16. ^ abPlagge, Kallie (24 March 2016). 'Starbound Review'. IGN. Retrieved 29 September 2016.
  17. ^ abLivingston, Christopher. 'Starbound Review'. PC Gamer. Retrieved 29 September 2016.
  18. ^'Starbound for PC Reviews'. Metacritic. Retrieved 29 September 2016.
  19. ^Grayson, Nathan. 'Starbound: The Kotaku Review'. Kotaku. Retrieved 29 September 2016.
  20. ^Wawro, Alex (23 January 2017). 'Chucklefish's Starbound surpasses 2.5 million copies sold'. Gamasutra. Retrieved 23 January 2017.
  21. ^Gnade, Mike (2013). 'The Best Indie Games of 2012 Chosen by You in Issue 30'. The Indie Game Magazine (30): 14. Retrieved 2 February 2013.
  22. ^Mike, Gnade (4 February 2013). 'IGM Readers Choice: The Best Indie Games of the Year 2012'. indiegamemag.com. Retrieved 10 February 2013.
  23. ^'Indie of The Year 2013 feature'. Indie DB. 27 December 2013. Retrieved 23 November 2015.

External links[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Starbound&oldid=883814601'

I want to go to another galaxy in starbound but i cant because i dont know how to put the fuel into my ship and where! I have the fuel. I just need to know how to put the fuel into the spaceship.

HelenaHelena

2 Answers

There is a console right behind the cockpit seat. Pressing 'E' next to it will open the dialog to drop the fuel into.

Once you drop fuel into one of the slots, click the 'Fuel' button, and it will convert the material into Fuel, that you can then use to warp to another planet or system.

Just in-case you need any more help, here is a video with a walkthrough: Here

onewhoonewho
How to fuel ship in starbound

since 1.0 you need to:

  • beam down on your original planet
  • find core fragments
  • find the portal to the ark
  • go to the ark
  • complete some early main quests (the erchius mining facility) to repair the FLT drive
  • go to a moon (does not require fuel to travel in the same solar system)
  • mine fuel from the moon
  • Interact with the fuel panel in your ship by pressing E
  • Drop fuel and convert it
Marco PappalardoMarco Pappalardo

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged starbound or ask your own question.