Sand is a bitch.
It gets absolutely everywhere; in your shorts, between your toes, under your tongue, round the back of your eyeball - no place is sacred as far as the golden grain is concerned.
I don't know about you, but that first bite of a gritty ham sandwich on the beach is enough to make me throw my knotted hankie from my head, roll up the windbreaker and head for the car.

The elemental RTS sees you balling up blobs of sand, water, magma and more in an attempt to re-jig a beautiful - but consistently threatening - world. You have to help your little men set up camp or navigate the terrain and all its obstacles.
Turns out if I was God, I'd be all fingers and thumbs; quick to panic and foul-mouthed enough to warrant a parental advisory sticker being slapped on The Bible.
That's because the world of From Dust is based on real-world physics. Actually, scratch that, the engine isn't based on anything - it recreates the movement of matter as perfectly as I'm qualified to judge.
If you need to redirect a river to prevent your tribe from getting their feet wet, you can build a dam of sand - but this isn't some quick-fix, map editor-style system. After you pour you sand into a realistic heap, it will start to spread slowly outwards as the grains at the top roll to the bottom.
Careful distribution is the least of your worries. The sand erodes quicker than morals in a brothel, and it isn't long before water starts trickling down valleys that you've inadvertently created with your fiddling, opening up potential for new catastrophes.
From Dust
03:29 Gamescom tech demo
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The result is something akin to all-powerful plate-spinning; a non-stop dosey doe with Mother Nature which is frantic, frustrating and fountain-loads of fun. It is a never-ending headache, in the most brilliant way.
Indie games are often lauded for showing 'charm', 'imagination' and 'inventiveness'; with Braid, Minecraft and Limbo recent shining examples.
But From Dust takes things to the next natural step. Chahi's tiny team have combined a rip-it-up-and-start-again indie mindset with access to Ubisoft's technology - and applause is due to both publisher and auteur for the combination.
Like Minecraft, From Dust offers a rare, sophisticated gameplay balance that's left me dumbfounded - but it's wrapped in a dazzling engine and graphical sheen that nudges towards Triple-A quality. Conversely, its beauty is made all the more conspicuous by it clearly being shielded from the formulaic necessities that could easily cloud a bigger release. It acts in accordance with nature's law, rather than gaming law - and it's all the more exciting for it.

But more than anything else, 2011 may be the year that brave blockbuster publishers like Ubisoft finally began throwing their indie-minded creators serious resource, in the hope of nurturing the next Minecraft - with a whole lot more polish.

Comments
11 comments so far...
jtake9 on 25 Mar '11 said:
Sand in Keith Vaz's vagina explains a lot!
StonecoldMC on 25 Mar '11 said:
Ive been keeping my eye on this one for a while now and it really does look like its going to be something special!
With Fez and Insane Twisted Shadow Planet and others to come, im almost almost, tempted to say you can keep your AAA big budget releases.
humanhand on 25 Mar '11 said:
It sounds really intreaging, however, I need to see gameplay footage.
Jet92 on 25 Mar '11 said:
heres some from last year http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CfKQCAxizrA
pedroukuk on 25 Mar '11 said:
It can talk the talk but can it walk the walk..................
BenThomasFoster on 25 Mar '11 said:
finally more news on this... seems soooooo goooood
BenJy on 25 Mar '11 said:
Sort of want.
DavidVM on 25 Mar '11 said:
Having just had the s**t bored out of me by the opening stages of Crysis 2 (I don't care how pretty it is, it's still a mediocre shooter with an impenetrable plot), it's games like this that give me some faith in the current gen.
iucidium on 25 Mar '11 said:
This shall be an awesome teaching tool for my son about our wonderful planet.
humanhand on 25 Mar '11 said:
Thanks for the link.
That game looks like it should just be the beginning stages of Civ 6...
justforkicks101 on 26 Mar '11 said: