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Space Papers: Planet's Border Review

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Space Papers: Planet’s Border Review – Alien Immigration Agent Simulator

Case Closed or Files Left Open?

Arash Nahandian by Arash Nahandian
3 years ago
in Games, Mobile, Nintendo, PlayStation, Reviews Games
Reading Time: 8 mins read
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Ever get tired of standing in line at airport security or the DMV? We all know those long waits checking passports or standing in metal detectors can really test your patience. But believe it or not, some clever game developers have turned those mundane experiences into addicting video game worlds gamers can’t get enough of.

Titles like Papers, Please and Not Tonight took the concept of checking IDs and passports at border checkpoints and turned it into a thinking gamer’s delight. Who knew stamping visas and flagging suspicious suitcases could make for such gripping gameplay? Space Papers: Planet’s Border keeps that trend going, bringing the immigration officer simulator genre into a wacky sci-fi setting.

In Space Papers, you’re an officer for an intergalactic border patrol agency. Like any space force worth its salt, your job is screening visitors before they set foot on the planet. That means verifying IDs, checking luggage for contraband, operating advanced body scanners – you know, typical space cop stuff. As travelers from across the galaxy queue up at your station, you’ll need to inspect their documents and possessions thoroughly using various high-tech gadgets. Let the wrong alien through and you could unleash a plague of parasites or worse on the planet!

While the setup may sound serious, Space Papers keeps things pretty tongue-in-cheek. Between its colorful cartoon visuals and constant stream of quirky one-liners from visitors, the game seems aimed more at delivering laughs than hard-hitting social commentary. Whether the lighter tone can sustain the basic gameplay loop long-term remains to be seen. But if you ever wanted to virtually frisk aliens and rifle through their suitcases, Space Papers lets you live out that interstellar dream. Strap in and get ready to clear some extraterrestrials for landing!

Inspecting Interstellar Visitors

Space Papers throws you right into the action at your new gig with the Interstellar Immigration Authority. As newly inducted border agents, it’s up to us to vet alien visitors before they set foot on our galactic outpost. Our space station setup has all the essential tools we’ll need to inspect these interstellar travelers. Let’s break down the process step-by-step:

First up is checking the required documents for each visitor queued in the arrival hall. Using our high-tech console, we flick through various ID cards, passports, visas, and permits to verify identities and immigration statuses. Making sure names, photos, expiration dates all line up takes sharp eyes and quick reflexes as the line piles up. Approving visitors with incomplete credentials or letting potential stowaways slip by will quickly cost you the job at Space Papers Patrol.

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As visitors clear credentials, it’s time to screen luggage and personal belongings at our state-of-the-art security checkpoint. Our scanners generate a detailed manifest of all items in a traveler’s bags or on their person. Some everyday objects may seem harmless to us, but could pose planetary threats we can’t begin to imagine! Checking items against extensive prohibited listings becomes second nature in time. That gooey fruit may look delicious, but fail to confiscate it and you’ll be mopping up intergalactic parasites for weeks!

Finally, higher levels allow us to utilize powerful full body scanners on arriving aliens. Get ready to see all three stomachs and twelve eyeballs in stunning 4D detail! The advanced imaging allows us to spot internal contraband, implantable weapons, even dangerous parasites wriggling around inside unsuspecting hosts. Sure, it may be uncomfortable examining strangers in such vivid detail. But catching even one unwelcome creature makes suffering the horror well worth it!

With our inspection stations prepped, it’s time to start clearing visitors and keeping the planets safe! As we screen arrivals successfully, funds start flowing into upgrade coffers. We’ll need those credits early to increase inspection speed and rewards. Without key upgrades in early levels, queues can spiral out of control quickly. Each planet’s tour of duty contains about 10 stages, with monetary or traveler quotas needed to advance. Hitting those numbers exactly takes precision work, making progression feel earned.

Reaching new planets also unlocks challenging infinite modes. In these endurance runs you’ll need to vet visitor after visitor without rest for minutes on end. Can you spot every irregularity across 50…100…even 200 travelers in a row? Your tired eyes and stressed brain will be pushed to the limit finding out! Brief story elements weave gameplay together loosely, framing events at the agency. But any deep introspection will need to wait – we’ve got a long line of visitors to process!

Alright rookie, looks like you’re all set for duty! Grab some coffee, stretch those document-flicking fingers, and let’s clear some aliens. Just another busy day at the office for the Space Papers Patrol!

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Examining the Evidence

Going in, Space Papers’ premise seems sharp. We’ve all endured interminable security checks and border crossings in real life. So putting those bureaucratic banalities center-stage has some inherent appeal. Early missions make good as you settle into comfortable inspection rhythms. Stamping clearance forms and toggling between various scanners provides that “just one more” compulsion. Yet as the initial career high fades, creeping issues deflate the experience. What appears a snappy inspection simulator soon reveals itself as a repetitive exercise in monotony. Like an eager detective pondering motives at a crime scene, let’s examine the evidence.

Space Papers: Planet's Border Review

First point of interest – when gameplay variety flatlines shortly after introduction. At first, new inspection tools like luggage X-rays or body scanners add incremental challenge. But the puzzles presented rapidly lose novelty once the basics are understood. Without meaningful escalation, tasks become rote button prompts lacking thought or agency. Where regulating suitcase fruits initially entertains, sanctioning the same contraband for the 80th time breeds indifference. With little influx of new travelers, items, or inspection techniques, the core loop goes stale.detective ponders motives at a crime scene, let’s examine the evidence.

Our next avenue of investigation – the visual stagnation arresting immersion. Space Papers’ silly sci-fi aesthetic charms at launch with its quirky aliens and interstellar setting. But the artistic assets show their limitations against repetition. Recycled character models and familiar environments mean little visual variety visit to visit. Like the gameplay, the Test Facility’s visual thrills are short-lived, leaving a derivative impression in memory. Without ongoing environmental or artistic development, inspection stations start resembling gaudy office spaces than wondrous space outposts.

Now a quick inspection of reported software issues. Though playable on both stationary and handheld Switch, touch controls are oddly omitted. This baffling decision frustrates when pinpoint document reads demand unwieldy analog manipulation. Plus, the tactile joy of fingerprinting visitors works far better than flicking joysticks. Beyond missing inputs, unresponsive controls plague interactions, disrupting otherwise smooth flows. For a title where split-second verification is vital, such technical oversights disappoint. Without patches, frustrated players may soon close case files on Space Papers.

Finally, evaluating gameplay value against purchase price. With runtimes averaging 2-3 hours, buyers might balk at the $8 entry cost given the limited content. But comparatively, few other budget eShop titles provide equal diversion. Lacking the depth of Papers, Please et al, Space Papers compensates with pick-up-and-play accessibility few immersive sims match. For gaming on the go, short play sessions can justify the discounted price, if expectations stay modest. Consider it less AAA investigation than airport paperback – slightly silly fun that entertains briefly if consumed in the right mindset.

Case Closed?

As we compile case notes for final appraisal, Space Papers reveals itself a serviceable – if uninspired – genre entry. While momentarily diverting, the title fails building enduring engagement. Beyond gameplay grievances, it lacks the maturity and complexity of superior predecessors. Does this investigation compellingly cross-examine key criticisms, or leave loose threads dangling? Donning jurist robes, let’s deliberate a final verdict.

Space Papers: Planet's Border Review

Exhibit A – Space Papers squanders its intriguing setup once the initial buzz fades. Early investigations entertain by repurposing mundane civic duties for comedic effect. Clever writing and vibrant visuals sell the wacky bureaucrat fantasy superbly out the gate. Yet without expanding those ideas meaningfully, proceedings grow stale within hours. Where acclaimed contemporaries allow convergent narratives to unfold alongside core mechanics, Space Papers rests on shaky one-note foundations. Few surprises await midway, leaving players hungering for added gameplay formats, story variability, or impactful choices that never arrive. What begins as novelty curdles into monotony at lightning speed.

Next, the issue of disastrous replay value sabotaging lasting enjoyment. At a mere 2-3 hours, single playthroughs stretch content thin as is. However, the precise level scripting allows scenarios be memorized through repeated failure, removing all subsequent challenge. When passersby and contraband cease being unpredictable, inspection becomes connect-the-dots, indifferent ticking boxes sans stimulation. Such adherence to formula fails fostering ongoing achievement and mastery. Without leverage for long-haul investment, Space Papers relegates itself short-stay amusement, not an enduring portal into fantastic realms.

Finally, comparatively underdeveloped mechanics communicating overall lack of depth. Space Papers follows previous efforts closely, but without capturing what made those memorable. By focusing solely on simulated bureaucracy to generate action, it loses sight of the worldbuilding intricacies glossing bureaucratic games as Papers Please. Devoid of strong place identity or sociopolitical commentary, our outposts feel sterile and transient. Such thin narrative context fails spurring empathy beyond functioning as abstract scoring engines. Coupled with simplified, stagnant progression, Space Papers plays as empty process sim, failing investing players substantially in duties or outcomes. Roleplaying a mere functionary only entertains briefly; without meaningful stakes or spirited locales, tedium prevails.

Alright agents, let’s wrap up our debriefing. While moderately effective early, Space Papers fails building on that short-term intrigue. Between limited content, predictable scoring, and slim worldbuilding, the experience leaves wanting relative to heritage. Fans seeking a deeper emotional connection or enduring gameplay challenge may want to transfer this case to cold files for now. But casual visitors keen light investigation could still discover brief enjoyment in parts. Either way, I’m recommending we keep eyes peeled for future patches and outings that expand concepts more thoroughly!

Final Briefing

Well agents, this latest investigation proved enlightening, if not earth shaking. While Space Papers brought temporary enjoyment to the job, its shortcomings leave us seeking more substantial experiences down the road. Still, as an accessibly priced genre sampler, interested rookies could fill a few idle hours within its silly sci-fi confines. Let’s recap key findings and file away lessons for future interstellar border patrol cases.

Space Papers: Planet's Border Review

For all its faults, Space Papers nails basic incompetent bureaucracy simulator appeal in its breezy opening acts. The loop of validating otherworldly docs and possessions offers straight-laced fun, even if the gags grow stale quickly. Difficulty spikes moderately as new mechanics enter, rewarding sharp decisions briefly before repetition dullstheir edge. While fans of Papers, Please and other acclaimed efforts won’t find the same narrative impact or lasting challenge, Space Papers works fine as a lightweight waiting room diversion.

Just don’t expect much replay value or progression beyond those early honeymoon investigations. The static environments, scant customization and bare bones supporting elements leave little incentive retracing steps. And with scenarios playing out near identically each round, mastery arrives fast. Still, as an appetizer sampling the general appeal of border patrol gaming tropes, Space Papers satisfies.

In the end, it’s a serviceable genre adoption that never fully realizes ambitions. Middling production values and slim content stretch its $8asking fee for non-fans. Yet as a low-stakes change of investigative pace, new recruits could enjoy a quick jaunt through its wacky alien inspection antics. Just set expectations accordingly going in and keep an eye out for clearance sales to maximize value. And here’s hoping if the Space Papers Patrol expands operations in future, some added complexity and variety gets shuttled along for the ride next go. We’ve got a promising concept and framework here – with a few more cases under its belt, this team could really take off.

Well detectives, let’s file away this report and head back on intergalactic border beat. Those starport terminals won’t staff themselves! Until next case, keep eyes peeled and passports stamped – the safety of the galaxy is in our hands!

The Review

Space Papers: Planet's Border

6 Score

Like an impatient traveler stuck in a TSA line, Space Papers: Planet's Border offers some solid document checking fun before repetitive scans cause boredom to set in. Its wacky aliens and silly sci-fi setting provide moderate entertainment for genre newcomers or gaming commuters. But shallow progression and limited variability cut enjoyment short before the credits arrive. Fans of deep narrative experiences should warp elsewhere, but casual visitors may enjoy a quick ticket to this eccentric spaceport.

PROS

  • Addictive, enjoyable gameplay at first
  • Entertaining concept and premise
  • Colorful, humorous visual aesthetic
  • Budget-friendly price point

CONS

  • Highly repetitive gameplay loops
  • Lack of progression in mechanics
  • Technical issues with controls
  • Short overall gameplay length

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0

Tags: FeaturedPuzzle Video GameQubicGamesSpace Papers: Planet’s BorderTapps Games
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