Compara los precios de Battlevoid: Harbinger en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Bugbyte Ltd.. Publicado por Bugbyte Ltd.. Lanzado el 24/2/2016. Disponible en PC, Mac, Linux. Géneros: Action, Indie, Simulation, Strategy.

FTL's scrappier cousin: a roguelite space-combat loop that rewards deliberate fleet-building but punishes RNG-blind commanders with instant, permanent death.

I've run enough fleet-management roguelites to know within the first two hours whether the death spiral is fair or just cheap. Battlevoid: Harbinger sits uncomfortably between those two verdicts, and that tension is what makes it worth talking about. The core loop is a layered hybrid: you hop across a procedurally generated star map in turn-based fashion, pick your fights and trade routes carefully, then drop into real-time pausable space combat whenever fleets collide. Scrap and energy knots harvested from destroyed enemy ships fund weapon upgrades, new modules, and eventually additional ships for your fleet, which caps at three vessels. Carriers with hangar bays can spawn smaller fighter craft mid-battle, destroyers can absorb punishment, and how you distribute firepower across those slots determines whether you limp out of a sector or get turned to debris in seconds. The real-time combat is where the game earns its keep. Lasers, ballistic cannons, missiles, and drone wings light up the screen simultaneously, shields flare visually when they absorb hits, and the pausable flow means you can redirect fire, trigger distress beacons to lure enemies into killzones, or pull back behind a Battlestation for cover without white-knuckling your keyboard. For a game that started life on mobile, the converted PC interface handles targeting and formation management with enough precision to feel deliberate rather than clunky. Weapon loadouts are genuinely distinct: rapid ballistic guns fill space with suppressing fire while slow-velocity high-damage shots punish stationary targets, and each weapon category has its own audio signature so you can read a battle by ear. Here is where the spreadsheet instinct kicks in and finds problems. The fleet cap of three ships severely constrains role differentiation. In deeper genre siblings you can split duties across dedicated carriers, skirmishers, and line ships; here, the math almost always favors stacking raw firepower over niche utility builds. Ship upgrade costs arrive in large single jumps rather than gradual increments, so the mid-game economy feels lumpy. Worse, the RNG can stack badly: your starting credits and experience are randomised, meaning some runs hand you a fighting chance and others are effectively decided before you fire a shot. The permadeath is permanent and the difficulty curve does not apologize, including on the game's own easy setting. Players coming from FTL will also notice the absence of crew management and branching event chains, which removes a significant layer of narrative texture. The new-ship unlock system runs off a flat experience bar rather than organic in-game achievements, which adds an unnecessary grind layer on top of an already punishing run structure. That said, the "one more run" pull is real. Procedural galaxies keep layouts fresh, each alien faction brings different weapon tech and aggression patterns, and once you internalize which weapon combinations cover each other's weaknesses, runs start feeling like actual strategic decisions rather than dice rolls. New players should lean on the Battlestation defensively, prioritize shield generators early, and resist the temptation to rush objectives before the fleet is strong enough to survive ambushes from escalating enemy tiers. The tutorial barely scratches the surface of these systems, so expect the first few hours to feel opaque. Community guides on Steam fill the gap the tutorial leaves, and the game's modest scope means you can internalize the full ruleset in a single weekend. For pure genre-depth seekers, FTL and Starsector both offer richer decision spaces. Harbinger is the leaner, faster option: shorter sessions, lower mechanical ceiling, higher moment-to-moment tension during combat. It is a reasonable entry point for players who want real-time fleet tactics without the commitment of a 200-hour sandbox, provided they accept that the RNG will occasionally end a good run through no fault of their own. Diego, Scout Team

Battlevoid: Harbinger

Battlevoid: Harbinger

24 feb 2016Bugbyte Ltd.
GamerScout opina

FTL's scrappier cousin: a roguelite space-combat loop that rewards deliberate fleet-building but punishes RNG-blind commanders with instant, permanent death.

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Acerca de Battlevoid: Harbinger

I've run enough fleet-management roguelites to know within the first two hours whether the death spiral is fair or just cheap. Battlevoid: Harbinger sits uncomfortably between those two verdicts, and that tension is what makes it worth talking about. The core loop is a layered hybrid: you hop across a procedurally generated star map in turn-based fashion, pick your fights and trade routes carefully, then drop into real-time pausable space combat whenever fleets collide. Scrap and energy knots harvested from destroyed enemy ships fund weapon upgrades, new modules, and eventually additional ships for your fleet, which caps at three vessels. Carriers with hangar bays can spawn smaller fighter craft mid-battle, destroyers can absorb punishment, and how you distribute firepower across those slots determines whether you limp out of a sector or get turned to debris in seconds. The real-time combat is where the game earns its keep. Lasers, ballistic cannons, missiles, and drone wings light up the screen simultaneously, shields flare visually when they absorb hits, and the pausable flow means you can redirect fire, trigger distress beacons to lure enemies into killzones, or pull back behind a Battlestation for cover without white-knuckling your keyboard. For a game that started life on mobile, the converted PC interface handles targeting and formation management with enough precision to feel deliberate rather than clunky. Weapon loadouts are genuinely distinct: rapid ballistic guns fill space with suppressing fire while slow-velocity high-damage shots punish stationary targets, and each weapon category has its own audio signature so you can read a battle by ear. Here is where the spreadsheet instinct kicks in and finds problems. The fleet cap of three ships severely constrains role differentiation. In deeper genre siblings you can split duties across dedicated carriers, skirmishers, and line ships; here, the math almost always favors stacking raw firepower over niche utility builds. Ship upgrade costs arrive in large single jumps rather than gradual increments, so the mid-game economy feels lumpy. Worse, the RNG can stack badly: your starting credits and experience are randomised, meaning some runs hand you a fighting chance and others are effectively decided before you fire a shot. The permadeath is permanent and the difficulty curve does not apologize, including on the game's own easy setting. Players coming from FTL will also notice the absence of crew management and branching event chains, which removes a significant layer of narrative texture. The new-ship unlock system runs off a flat experience bar rather than organic in-game achievements, which adds an unnecessary grind layer on top of an already punishing run structure. That said, the "one more run" pull is real. Procedural galaxies keep layouts fresh, each alien faction brings different weapon tech and aggression patterns, and once you internalize which weapon combinations cover each other's weaknesses, runs start feeling like actual strategic decisions rather than dice rolls. New players should lean on the Battlestation defensively, prioritize shield generators early, and resist the temptation to rush objectives before the fleet is strong enough to survive ambushes from escalating enemy tiers. The tutorial barely scratches the surface of these systems, so expect the first few hours to feel opaque. Community guides on Steam fill the gap the tutorial leaves, and the game's modest scope means you can internalize the full ruleset in a single weekend. For pure genre-depth seekers, FTL and Starsector both offer richer decision spaces. Harbinger is the leaner, faster option: shorter sessions, lower mechanical ceiling, higher moment-to-moment tension during combat. It is a reasonable entry point for players who want real-time fleet tactics without the commitment of a 200-hour sandbox, provided they accept that the RNG will occasionally end a good run through no fault of their own.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Etiquetas

singleplayerachievementscloud-savestier:sub-5Fleet ManagementReal-Time with PausePermadeathProcedural Star MapHard DifficultyMobile PortBallistic WeaponsCarrier GameplayShort-Run Roguelite

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows 10/7/XP/Vista
Memory
1 GB RAM
Storage
250 MB available space
Graphics
128MB 3D OpenGL 2.0 Compatible video card
Processor
1.8 Ghz Processor

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Bugbyte Ltd.
Distribuidora
Bugbyte Ltd.
Fecha de lanzamiento
24 feb 2016

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Battlevoid: Harbinger está disponible en PC, Mac, Linux.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Battlevoid: Harbinger?

Battlevoid: Harbinger se lanzó el 24 de febrero de 2016.

¿Quién desarrolló Battlevoid: Harbinger?

Battlevoid: Harbinger fue desarrollado por Bugbyte Ltd..