Cerys


Fulgora's moon of puzzles. Ancient wrecks embedded in thick ice can seemingly be repaired, including a colossal nuclear reactor that could transform the possibilities on the surface... if you can get it working. Cerys is a complete and polished mod that does not modify the vanilla game in any way, so is easy to include in existing saves.

Content
2 days ago
2.0
48.3K
Factorio: Space Age Icon Space Age Mod
Planets Logistics Environment Mining Fluids Manufacturing Power

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8 hours ago

I've just finished Cerys, so I thought I'd post my thoughts.

I spent a lot of time fumbling around, trying to work out how to even make progress. Trying to remember what recycled into what, how to get each resource, hand-feeding things into recyclers, etc. Fulgora's recycling mechanic, added to blocking external supplies, locking out logi bots until fairly late, the freezing mechanics, unmovable heating towers, etc made Cerys significantly more difficult than I remember Fulgora being.

I felt like getting to the point where I could power the reactor consistently was too hard. I got there in the end and built a much larger base, but I nearly just left once I'd limped along far enough to get the science I needed.

A few things on Cerys are intended to be mysteries especially early on, but I think there's a couple of things that aren't supposed to be but just aren't well explained. It was only by complete chance that I spotted the gamma radiation entity in Factoriopedia - I had just resigned myself to constantly taking damage and stacking personal shields hours earlier. Being able to use concrete in shallow water was another - I found that out after I was almost done with Cerys by reading the changelog. I don't know how you'd discover that except by accident. Super force build doesn't place concrete like it does landfill or ice platform.

I feel like mineral leaching is intended to be a good source of iron, but it drinks so much sulfuric acid that I mostly wound up crushing asteroid chunks instead.

Anyway, just my experience with Cerys.

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