Create and evolve your own digital lifeforms! Watch or interact as your creations adapt and thrive in a world governed by the laws of physics. Download now and start your own evolutionary journey!
All Reviews:
Positive (10) - 100% of the 10 user reviews for this game are positive.
Release Date:
Sep 16, 2022
Developer:
Publisher:

Sign in to add this item to your wishlist, follow it, or mark it as ignored

Early Access Game

Get instant access and start playing; get involved with this game as it develops.

Note: This Early Access game is not complete and may or may not change further. If you are not excited to play this game in its current state, then you should wait to see if the game progresses further in development. Learn more

What the developers have to say:

Why Early Access?

“EvoLife is an ambitious evolution simulation project. Simulating life on a cell level with realistic hard body and fluid physics is an experiment enabled by leading edge technologies. By the nature of the tech stack used it is difficult to debug, and I need your help to catch the bugs that slipped by. As a sandbox game each and every gamer plays it a little bit differently. I'm excited to see how others play with it and develop tools and features to make any style of play smooth and free flowing. My goal is to be able to reliably evolve multicellular organisms from different starting points. Currently there are cells connecting in the style of filamentous algae but no real cell differentiation is happening.
I came a long way during these years developing my hobby project, my dream, my vision. I will continue to work on it. I am going to make it work and I am going to make it blazing fast. I dream of a big big digital aquarium with millions and millions of cells, thousands of multi-cellular organisms coexisting with the simplest unicellular life forms peacefully living day by day as a main decorative element of my living room.”

Approximately how long will this game be in Early Access?

“Early Access is expected to last 18 to 24 months.”

How is the full version planned to differ from the Early Access version?

“Additional features I want to implement for the 1.0 version:
- cells producing biominerals (shells, bones, houses)
- cells healing
- more simulation constans settable from gui
- cells transporting energy and hormones trough connections
- organelles depending on other organelles already present (organelle lvl up tree)
- better cell decision visualization
- more intuitive gui”

What is the current state of the Early Access version?

“It is fully playable. You can create a world (settable size), generate a 2d landscape using the built in perlin noise based world generator or build it by hand yourself, the world is interactive and editable. You can view and edit species dna, add cells with different dnas to the world, and watch them prosper or perish depending on the environment you created. You can turn on evolution, which randomly mutates (parameters settable) the dna of the cells. You can save your game state and load it back.”

Will the game be priced differently during and after Early Access?

“I plan to gradually raise the price as features are implemented.”

How are you planning on involving the Community in your development process?

“I want to create a passionate community and involve people by listening to their feedback and bug reports, identify different play styles and focus development to support each of them.”
Read more

Buy EvoLife

 
See all discussions

Report bugs and leave feedback for this game on the discussion boards

About This Game

EvoLife - Evolution Simulator

For this simulation my vision was to simulate a whole ecosystem of cells. There are many grid-like simulations, where artificial life exists in a grid. There are many game-like simulations where whole creatures are simulated. Sadly none of these fills the niche I am interested in.

I am specifically interested in the boundary of single celled and multicellular life. How did multicellular life come to be? How cells work together as an organism? How many ways can multicellularity evolve? There are only theories as the answer lies in the un-fossilized past.

To achieve this I simulate individual cells, and their individual organelles. I do not want to force multicellularity by having dedicated types of cells. Each cell can perform multiple things, can decide which organelles to grow. I want single celled life to be just as feasible and diverse as multicellular. I want the local environment to decide how the most successful life form should look like.

I choose deep sea vents as the setting for my game, deep underwater. At the beginning of the simulation, random species are generated and spawned in. Sadly most of the random generated DNA is garbage, and most species die out very fast. But after a while, there are some winners. First these are very simple creatures, as there are a lot of gas bubbles and dead cells floating around, and both can be broken down for energy, with the correct type of organelle. There is a chance that DNA mutates when a cell divides. If we are patient, complexity emerges. Food becomes more and more scarce. Species differentiate, as they find different niches to fill.

This simulator is my pet project, 10 years in the making! It is running entirely on the video card. You don't need a supercomputer, just a mid range card to simulate hundreds of thousands of cells. The world in the trailer is the result of running the biggest world preset on my RX 6750 XT for a week. It is available as a built-in save game, named “Early multicellular”. Hopefully the advancement of video cards makes even bigger worlds a possibility!

System Requirements

    Minimum:
    • Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
    • OS: Windows 10 64bit
    • Memory: 1 GB RAM
    • Graphics: OpenGL 4.3+ capable
    • Storage: 1 GB available space
    • Additional Notes: Tested and working on Ubuntu 22.04 with Wine
    Recommended:
    • Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
    • OS: Windows 10+ 64bit
    • Memory: 2 GB RAM
    • Graphics: OpenGL 4.3+ capable, 2GB VRAM
    • Storage: 1 GB available space

What Curators Say

2 Curators have reviewed this product. Click here to see them.

Customer reviews

Review Type


Purchase Type


Language


Date Range
To view reviews within a date range, please click and drag a selection on a graph above or click on a specific bar.

Show graph



Playtime
Filter reviews by the user's playtime when the review was written:



No minimum to No maximum
Display As:
Show graph
 
Hide graph
 
Filters
Excluding Off-topic Review Activity
Playtime:
There are no more reviews that match the filters set above
Adjust the filters above to see other reviews
Loading reviews...