Chernobylite: Early-Access-Termin steht fest
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Re: Chernobylite: Early-Access-Termin steht fest
Die Entwickler haben sich das Wort nicht ausgedacht. Nochmal: Das Zeug gibt es wirklich.
Re: Chernobylite: Early-Access-Termin steht fest
Was für ein "Zeug"? Lass und nicht dumm sterben, komm schon
No cost too great. No mind to think. No will to break. No voice to cry suffering.
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Re: Chernobylite: Early-Access-Termin steht fest
Aaaaaah, cool, Danke! (also, nicht cool, aber Merci für die Info ^^)
No cost too great. No mind to think. No will to break. No voice to cry suffering.
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Re: Chernobylite: Early-Access-Termin steht fest
Re: Chernobylite: Early-Access-Termin steht fest
Als ich nach dem Wort suchte, gab es tatschlich nur Meldungen zum Spiel ^^
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Re: Chernobylite: Early-Access-Termin steht fest
Achso... ist ein Forbes-Artikel vom 14.09.19 - ich kopier hier einfach mal den Text rein:
Spoiler
Show
On the morning of Saturday, 26 April 1986, Reactor 4 of the Wladimir Iljitsch Lenin Atomic Power Station near the town of Chernobyl in modern Ukraine experienced a "minor accident." As the cooling system was shut down, part of a scheduled safety test, the reactor experienced a catastrophic core meltdown, exploded and parts of the nuclear fuel were released into the atmosphere. Firefighters, doctors and nurses rushed to the plant not aware of the danger. As authorities realized the extent of the catastrophe, more than 16,000 policemen and military personnel where sent to the power plant to extinguish the fire, remove the radioactive debris and enclose the ruin in a protective shell made of steel and concrete. Confirmed 31 people died from radiation sickness in the first days after the accident. The long-term effects on the 16,000 "liquidators" and evacuated 100,000 people from the towns of Chernobyl and Pripyat are still poorly understood, however, an increase of various cancer types was blamed on the released radioactivity. The effects on the fauna and flora inside the evacuated region are still today studied by geneticists, ecologists, botanists and zoologists. Even areas thousands of kilometers away from Chernobyl are still today contaminated with radioactive particles, transported by the wind in a large plume over Europe.
As the cooling system of the reactor was shut down and the insertion of control rods into the reactor core failed, the nuclear fission went out of control, releasing enough heat to melt the fuel rods, cases, core containment vessel and anything else nearby, including the concrete floor of the reactor building. The fuel pellets inside the fuel rods are almost entirely made of uranium-oxide while the encasing in which the pellets are placed is made of zirconium alloys. Melting at over 1,200°C the uranium and zirconium, together with melted metal, formed radioactive lava burning through the steel hull of the reactor and concrete foundations at a speed of 30 cm (12") per hour. Concrete doesn't melt, but decomposes and becomes brittle at high temperatures. Part of the concrete was incorporated in the lava flow, explaining its high content of silicates, minerals composed mostly of silicon, aluminum and magnesium. Due to its chemical composition and high temperature, the lava-like material has a very low viscosity. When lava has low viscosity, it can flow very easily as demonstrated by stalactites hanging from valves and tubes in the destroyed reactor core.
Corium lava flowing out a safety valve within the Chernobyl plant.
Corium lava flowing out a safety valve within the Chernobyl plant. INSP
Four hundred miners were brought to Chernobyl to dig a tunnel underneath. It was feared that the radioactive lava would burn through the containment structure and contaminate the groundwater. Only later it was discovered that the lava flow stopped after 3 meters (9 feet). Chemical reactions and evaporating water cooled the mixture below 1,100°C, below the decomposition temperature of the concrete.
About eight months after the incident and with the help of a remotely operated camera, the solidified lava was discovered in the ruins of the reactor building. Externally resembling tree bark and grey in color, the mass was nicknamed the Elephant’s Foot. At the time of its discovery, radioactivity near the Elephant’s Foot was approximately 10,000 roentgens (average background radiation is about 35 microrontgens), a dose so high, only minutes of exposure would prove fatal. In 1996, radioactivity levels were low enough to visit the reactor's basement and took some photographs. The photos are blurry due to radiation damage. The lava-like material resulting from a nuclear meltdown is also named corium, after the core of the reactor. An unknown uranium-zirconium-silicate found in the corium of Chernobyl was named later chernobylite. Chernobylite is highly radioactive due to its high uranium content and contamination by fission products. Corium will likely remain radioactive for the next decades to centuries.
As the cooling system of the reactor was shut down and the insertion of control rods into the reactor core failed, the nuclear fission went out of control, releasing enough heat to melt the fuel rods, cases, core containment vessel and anything else nearby, including the concrete floor of the reactor building. The fuel pellets inside the fuel rods are almost entirely made of uranium-oxide while the encasing in which the pellets are placed is made of zirconium alloys. Melting at over 1,200°C the uranium and zirconium, together with melted metal, formed radioactive lava burning through the steel hull of the reactor and concrete foundations at a speed of 30 cm (12") per hour. Concrete doesn't melt, but decomposes and becomes brittle at high temperatures. Part of the concrete was incorporated in the lava flow, explaining its high content of silicates, minerals composed mostly of silicon, aluminum and magnesium. Due to its chemical composition and high temperature, the lava-like material has a very low viscosity. When lava has low viscosity, it can flow very easily as demonstrated by stalactites hanging from valves and tubes in the destroyed reactor core.
Corium lava flowing out a safety valve within the Chernobyl plant.
Corium lava flowing out a safety valve within the Chernobyl plant. INSP
Four hundred miners were brought to Chernobyl to dig a tunnel underneath. It was feared that the radioactive lava would burn through the containment structure and contaminate the groundwater. Only later it was discovered that the lava flow stopped after 3 meters (9 feet). Chemical reactions and evaporating water cooled the mixture below 1,100°C, below the decomposition temperature of the concrete.
About eight months after the incident and with the help of a remotely operated camera, the solidified lava was discovered in the ruins of the reactor building. Externally resembling tree bark and grey in color, the mass was nicknamed the Elephant’s Foot. At the time of its discovery, radioactivity near the Elephant’s Foot was approximately 10,000 roentgens (average background radiation is about 35 microrontgens), a dose so high, only minutes of exposure would prove fatal. In 1996, radioactivity levels were low enough to visit the reactor's basement and took some photographs. The photos are blurry due to radiation damage. The lava-like material resulting from a nuclear meltdown is also named corium, after the core of the reactor. An unknown uranium-zirconium-silicate found in the corium of Chernobyl was named later chernobylite. Chernobylite is highly radioactive due to its high uranium content and contamination by fission products. Corium will likely remain radioactive for the next decades to centuries.
No cost too great. No mind to think. No will to break. No voice to cry suffering.
Re: Chernobylite: Early-Access-Termin steht fest
Dachte ich mir auch. Das Spiel sieht wirklich interessant aus, aber wer hat den Namen gewählt? Klingt wie ein unvertrauensvolles Miniprojekt von überambitionierten Studenten.
Aber sonst sieht das ganze schon (fast zu) gut aus. Stalker war ja das perfekte Beispiel dafür wie hoch die Schmerzgrenze für Bugs und allgemeine Unzulänglichkeiten liegen kann, wenn Setting und Atmosphäre stimmen.
Denn auch wenn ich die Stalker Spiele geliebt habe: Objektiv waren die sicher alles andere als gut.
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Re: Chernobylite: Early-Access-Termin steht fest
Echt? Das wusste ich nicht. Ich fand es ok, so abfeiern wie du würde ich das aber nicht. Vor allem war es eher ein kleines game, das sollte ein Stalker 2 aber nicht werden. 5 Stunden durch Prypjat geht gar nicht.James Dean hat geschrieben: ↑15.09.2019 18:51 Das ist von den Machern des verdammt großartigen Geteven, eines der besten Spiele der letzten Jahre, was die inhaltliche Präsentation und Atmosphäre betrifft. Bin sehr gespannt, ob sie die Qualität des damaligen Gameplaytrailers beibehalten können.
Aber gut, sie können was, nur langst auch für die großen Schuhe?
Re: Chernobylite: Early-Access-Termin steht fest
Ja, den gleichen Eindruck hatten einige von uns auch ^^
Woher der Name stammt, kannst Du aus dem Forbes-Artiel entnehmen, der über Deinem Post steht
No cost too great. No mind to think. No will to break. No voice to cry suffering.