
- #CLOUDPUNK RESET ANDERSON PATCH#
- #CLOUDPUNK RESET ANDERSON FULL#
- #CLOUDPUNK RESET ANDERSON FREE#
Gaia Online's house feature has several models, an expansion option, and a furniture store with Ridiculously Human Robots as attendants.
#CLOUDPUNK RESET ANDERSON FREE#
With recent updates, free companies (guilds) who own living space can unlock minigames and special crafting options. There are no game benefits to doing so, but it's nice to have a place to invite guests, and copies of certain vendors can be installed to save you a walk.
Final Fantasy XIV lets you purchase a space ranging from a single room to a mansion, then fill it with an amazing array of furniture, many kinds of which can even be repainted. No sane Adventurer would go without a snazzy living space. Furnishings became even more popular after the Storage system (a free room for gear from furniture) was drastically improved, allowing 80 Storage without causing your Mog Safe to have a heart attack. #CLOUDPUNK RESET ANDERSON PATCH#
Oddly enough, you could customize as much as you want, but you couldn't let anyone in for years until a patch was made. The furniture also gives a special enhancement for you.
Final Fantasy XI lets you do whatever you want with your Mog RoomHouse. Just be prepared to defend, because hostiles can attack and take over your hard-earned station. If your alliance claims sovereignty over a solar system, they can put their efforts together to produce an immensely expensive and useful Outpost -essentially a player-built space station. You can then add on modules such as turrets, auxiliary power arrays, shipyards, refineries, or moon miners, as well as other things. In EVE Online, you (or your corporation, which is pretty much a clan) have the ability to buy and anchor a player-owned starbase, abbreviated POS, starting with a control tower.
This may end up costing a lot, especially for solo and small group attempts.
City of Heroes lets you decorate your Supergroup base as you see fit, with both functional and purely decorative items. Not only can PCs hire apartments and stuff them with all kinds of furniture and items, most objects in the game can also be arranged as to be placed in just this or that manner using the arrange command. Armageddon (MUD) takes this trope to the extreme. Most of the additions are preset, but there are also mounts for weapons, bows, and shields. In The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, you can buy a house in Hateno village and decorate it. You can change its exterior look, the layout of its rooms, and what furniture is in it, and whenever you beat certain challenges in the game you get silver or gold keys that let you buy more furniture types. The Wii game Go Vacation by Bandai Namco lets you have your own villa once you play half the minigames in the game though you don't have to beat them all. #CLOUDPUNK RESET ANDERSON FULL#
Although they're placed in preset places, you can buy quite a lot of items including arcade minigames which are necessary for full completion.
Indie Metroidvania An Untitled Story lets you decorate a personal room by purchasing furniture. The sequel expands it to give you a choice of three different styles for each item. Overlord offered a limited version of this with your tower, once you had upgraded or bought an item that was pretty much it with only the flags capable of switching. Castlevania: Curse Of Darkness is the next in line for this, except that you only have chairs to decorate your room. It's a borderline example, though - you couldn't choose the placement of the items.
It didn't fit with the rest of the game very well (and doesn't make sense character wise, Juste, as a Belmont, is in a position to know the castle will disappear/fall apart when he's done). Castlevania: Harmony of Dissonance had a room which you could decorate.