For a game about spaceships, Kerbal Space Program‘s latest expansion has a curiously terrestrial focus not to mention name: Breaking Ground. Out now, it doesn’t do much for spaceflight but does give more to do once you’ve actually landed somewher eout there. Along with new ground-based deployable scientific research gadgets, it adds surface formations to study and, most importantly, robotic pistons and joints and things. Remember: robotics components are for serious scientific expeditions only. Don’t get any ideas about building a giant mechanical tarantula to skitter around mission control. And if you’re using a mod to add multiplayer, don’t you and your pals have any ideas about starting a Robot Wars on the Mun. Science only, okay.
Squad say the Breaking Ground expansion “is focused on increasing the objective possibilities once celestial bodies have been reached by adding more interesting scientific endeavors and expanding the toolset.” So munmen will plop down science gadgets for experiments and roam around scanning the landscape for interesting rock formations to study. This is still Kerbal, so apparently ramming into things to create seismic shocks counts as science.
What most interests me is that feature several Kerbal mods added ages ago: robotics. Roboparts arriving in Breaking Ground are “hinge, piston, rotor, and rotational servo in various sizes,” I’m told, letting players add all sorts of mechanical doodads to their creations. They also have a controller system to program and synchronise components, creating complex movements and behaviours.
Note: that doesn’t mean you should go building warbots, remember? “CorSPACE” here was very responsible with this spidercar:
Kerbal Space Program Demo
As promised way back when, this and all other expansions are free to players who bought Kerbal by the end of April 2013.
Newcomers (well, relative newcomers) can get the Breaking Ground expansion from Steamthe game’s own site for £13/€15/$15. To lure in actual newcomers, the base game has a 75% discount for the next week on Steam. The first expansion, Breaking Ground, is half-price there too and everything’s available all together cheap in the Complete Edition.
I’ll just go perform my routine check on the piston storage cupboard an- oh god no. Hey! “Banana Dog”! No! This is irresponsible!
The History and Parts Pack DLC for Kerbal Space Program: Enhanced Edition launched for the PS4 and Xbox One systems.
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Who could have imagined that a space program simulator, populated and run by a humanoid race called Kerbal, would have achieved such incredible success? Surprisingly, the reason for its success is not the silliness of the premise, but the seriousness of the gameplay mechanics, which are incredibly well detailed.
It’s not like some roller-coaster tycoon or city building game. It’s much more like a proper simulation, and that’s exactly what people wanted to play, without even knowing it.
The game is alive through the communities
Even if the game was initially released on PC, Mac, and Linux, console version finally made their appearance under the name Kerbal Space Program: Enhanced Edition, which had all the content made available. Now, the first DLC called History and Parts Pack has arrived.
As the name suggests, this is inspired by our history, and the space race than eventually brought us to the Moon.
“The pack adds a variety of new content to the game, including 10 missions inspired by humankind’s most daring historical events, new parts to experiment with from the historic Space Race, and a fresh suit to enhance your Kerbal’s style. In addition, also included are new launch sites, including a Mun Launch Site currently only available in the console version of the game.”
Space exploration is in itself a marvelous experience, and it’s difficult to see who it could be made more fun, but it turns out that’s ease in Kerbal Space Program. It doesn’t matter if you have a PC or a console, you’re going to learn something and you're going to have fun at the same time.
This page contains a list of cheats, codes, Easter eggs, tips, and other secrets for Kerbal Space Program for PC. If you've discovered a cheat you'd like to add to the page, or have a correction, please click EDIT and add it.
Extra Science Points[edit]
Alter your game files at your own risk and ALWAYS make backups!
On your computer, navigate to your save fils for Kerbal Space Program, and look for the 'persistnet.sfs' file, which you should open with a text editing program. Next, scroll down to Scenario and you will see something like this:
name = ResearchAndDevelopment scene = 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 sci = 250.80179
Change the sci value to whatever number you wish, while keeping it realistic and leaving the decimal value in place. Then save the file and load the game to enjoy the benefits.
Submitted by: lostinspace1493
Debug Mode[edit]
Press ALT+F12 to access the debug console, which you can use to enjoy unlimited fuel, unbreakable joints, and other helpful perks.
Submitted by: Deadite02
Comments
In the three years since Kerbal Space Program officially launched on Steam, Daniel 'ShadowZone' has spent a cumulative 166 days playing it. That kind of streak feels right at home in the endless multiplayer battles of DOTA 2 or MMOs like World of Warcraft. But to spend 4,000 hours playing a single-player space simulator seemed impossible to me. When I first spied the 39-year-old father of two discussing his playtime on Twitter, I wanted him to answer one simple question: What do you even do in Kerbal Space Program for that length of time? Well if you're Daniel, you spend it building staggeringly complex machines to then launch on missions so daring it'd make Arthur C. Clarke sweat—all while rediscovering that childish sense of wonder that makes space so captivating to begin with.
'I'm kind of a space nerd—I always have been,' Daniel tells me over Discord. 'That's been my drive that made me stick with this game. It's not easy, though. I could build these cool things, but I was not content with just looking at them in the hangar. I wanted to see them in action. That gets complicated and then things explode. Sometimes it's fun, but sometimes it's really frustrating.'
For the past few years, Daniel has been sharing his forays into Kerbal Space Program's miniaturized homage to our solar system on YouTube. He tells me that his channel first started gaining traction when he published a video showing off his to-scale build of Mass Effect's Normandy spaceship complete with modeled interior and functioning escape pods (just in case the Collectors invade). Call of duty black ops 4. Since then it's been a slow burn as his ideas have gotten even more ambitious, sometimes with nearly catastrophic results.
In space no one can hear you scream…
..But I'm pretty sure Daniel's wife and children have heard him now and again. His videos don't prop him up as a master Kerbal Space engineer, but more often play out like a sizzle reel of constant failure that documents his numerous attempts to get one of his rockets off of the launch pad. Suffering through Daniel's failures is worth it, though. Not just because I love the way he fills the long stretches of silence as his rockets perform elaborate stage separations with theatrical commentary, but because there's always that moment late into most videos when, seemingly against all odds, things finally work.
As the years have gone by, the missions Daniel has embarked on have gotten only more and more intimidating. He tells me the story of one of his first builds, a battlecruiser, that he finally got into space and then, on a whim, decided to try to get it to one of the most distant planets in the system. 'I just fired up the engines and went for it,' he tells me. Miraculously, Daniel made it. He was surprised by how strongly he felt a sense of pride and accomplishment in what he had just done. Engine.dll para 32 bits. It was a feeling that he wanted to chase.
Compared to his more recent projects, that meager battlecruiser looks like the German V-2 rocket next to the engineered glory of the recently launched Delta IV Heavy. Take his Ozymandias series, for example, where Daniel tasked himself with building a mega-ship that could take him to the Kerbal equivalent of Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto, and their respective moons. 'It was a really complex mission in regards to planning and dealing with all the logistics,' Daniel tells me. 'I'm really proud that I was able to pull it off.'
Though the original version of Kerbal Space Program doesn't include these worlds, Daniel used the Outer Planets mod to add them in and then set his sights on landing an intrepid Kerbal (the tiny humanoids that pilot these ships) on each of these 17 new planets and moons.
It's hard to overstate what an enormous challenge this was. First, Daniel had to design and engineer a ship that could escape the gravitational well of the planet Kerbin, where his space center is located. That would be easy if this were just any old rocket, but Daniel needed one that could also hold a crew of ten Kerbals while fitting enough fuel reserves to handle each of the burns he'd need to realign the rocket and get it into orbit surrounding each planet and back home. 'There are a few mods that help you with building, like Kerbal Engineer Redux,' Daniel explains. 'But in the end you have to do the math yourself. You have to calculate [by hand] if you can make that burn to the next planet. Will you have enough fuel? Will the lander have enough thrust to get back into space?'
For that, Daniel uses an Excel spreadsheet to handle everything—making Kerbal Space Program officially the second space game to require knowledge of Excel to play competently. 'Planning it took weeks because I only have a limited time of when I can play and how long I can play—a few hours maximum every day,' Daniel explains. Having to juggle the responsibilities of being a good father, husband, and having a full-time job at a software development company means Daniel can only play rocket scientist in the evening after the kids are sleeping. During those few pockets of play time, the Ozymandias went through eight disastrous iterations before Daniel finally designed one that could carry the required amount of fuel and adequately escape Kerbin's atmosphere without destabilizing and violently exploding. He was finally ready to begin the mission.
If you've never played Kerbal Space Program, it's important to understand how much reverence it has for simulating the natural laws that govern real-world space travel. Simulated forces like wind resistance, gravitational pull, and thrust all have to be accounted for when designing a shuttle. And once you get the damn thing into space, even the slightest human error can be disastrous—just like in real life. It's not rocket science, but it is damn close.
Daniel spent weeks of his life perfecting all of that math, mapping orbital trajectories to slingshot the Ozymandias from one planet to the other. 'There's this excitement when you try something out that you've worked on for a really, really long time,' he says. 'You have it on the launch pad for the first time and you hit launch, and all that anticipation that has built up. There's this feeling of trepidation, and then relief and excitement when you realize—yes, this is going to work!'
That feeling of relief was short-lived, though. After reaching the ringed planet of Sarnus, Daniel prepared for his most difficult descent of the whole journey to a moon called Slate. First he had to save-scrub through a few disastrous landing attempts, but then he realized that he had made a miscalculation during his planning phase and his lander didn't have enough fuel to reach a high enough orbit around the moon for pickup. No autosave was going to help him avoid that blunder. For the lone Kerbal on board, death seemed inevitable.
But then Daniel tried something truly audacious: Using the Kerbal's suit thrusters, he had just enough fuel to push it into just the right orbital trajectory that a rescue mission using the Ozymandias was possible. Though it lacks a lot of the tension, the rescue is like something ripped straight out of Andy Weir's novel, The Martian. I point that out to Daniel and when he tells me he has another series where he recreates the exact circumstances and journey of the fictional astronaut Mark Watney, I burst out laughing.
Kerbal Space Program Free Download
His next mission is even more ambitious. Daniel is recreating 2001: A Space Odyssey shot-for-shot using his whole to-scale models of the ringed space station and the Discovery One spaceship. Like everything Daniel attempts, it hasn't been easy. Getting structures of that size into space has proved daunting, but he's making good progress.
'There's a saying: Space is hard,' Daniel says. 'And I think Kerbal Space Program captures that perfectly. Even though it's a lot easier than real-world space exploration is, the challenges are real. You really have to think about things like payload fractions and thrust-to-weight ratios. There is actually a small part of physics that you have to comprehend in order to make anything work. You have to understand that you need enough thrust to get this thing off of the planet. You have to understand that an orbit is basically shooting stuff in space and then keeping it at a velocity so it doesn't fall back down.'
The sincerest form of flattery
All that time that Daniel spends playing astronaut in front of his computer isn't just idle fun, though. He tells me that it comes from a deeply rooted fascination with the mysteries of our universe and humanity's attempt to unravel them. A few days ago, Daniel was watching a video on the popular YouTube channel Smarter Every Day. The host, Destin Sandlin, had been invited by the United Launch Alliance to film the rollback of the Delta IV Heavy rocket that, on August 12, launched the Parker Solar Probe toward the sun. During that video, Sandlin asks about the message printed on the side of the Delta IV Heavy that reads 'In memory of Andrew A. Dantzler.' United Launch Alliance CEO Tory Bruno tells Sandlin that Dantzler was the one who came up with the complex trajectory the Parker Solar Probe would use to reach the sun. 'Without him, we would not be standing here today,' Bruno says.
Later in the video, Bruno expands on that sentiment: 'When we're launching a mission like this, the Parker Solar Probe, this is someone's life work … That's a pretty big responsibility and it weighs heavy on our guys.' Daniel says Bruno's response deeply resonated with him—not because the 166 days of his Kerbal space career compares to the achievements of these engineers and scientists, but because Kerbal Space Program opened his eyes to what an enormous challenge exploring space really is. He's felt the crushing defeat of watching weeks of effort evaporate into flames mid-flight. How much more painful, then, when those flames consume your entire life's work? 'They have worked decades on perfecting the science and testing their hypothesis and its culminated in this spacecraft,' Daniel explains. 'That really stuck with me.'
Kerbal Space Program is a window that gives Daniel a view to a whole universe he'll never be able to explore. But it also gives him a deeper sense of gratitude for those who do. 'My parents took me to Kennedy Space Center back in the early '90s,' he recalls. 'I was 11 back then. And it's still a vivid memory to me. There was this gigantic crawler for the space shuttle and we stood in front of that, and 11-year-old me looking at that thing I was like, how did they even build that?'
That profound moment has stayed with Daniel all his life, but growing older has a way of dulling what used to fill us with wonder. Despite always having an appetite for science fiction, it wasn't until Daniel booted up Kerbal Space Program for the first time that he reconnected with that restless sense of curiosity about our universe. 'Kerbal Space Program reminded me again of my passion for space,' he says, confessing to me that, as silly as it may be, his greatest dream is to go to space himself one day. 'I'm well aware that since I'm neither an astronaut or rich it probably won't happen in my lifetime. But one can still dream.'
Short of winning the lottery or being involved in somehow goofier real-life version of the movie Armageddon only with software developers instead of oil drillers, I don't see it happening. But I love that, despite being a game about launching silly green humanoids into space, Kerbal Space Program can nurture that kind of passion. It's wonderful that even though Daniel might never perform a spacewalk high above our own blue planet, he can still live out that dream in the quiet hours of the night… after he's put the kids to bed, of course.