With the end of the year approaching, Hello Games’ exploratory space sim No Man’s Sky is, in what is quickly becoming a tradition, overhauling all of its limited-time Expedition events starting in 2024 for the next ten weeks. That means you have another chance to rush through and earn its various rewards if you missed them the first time.
And I mean genius. While expeditions typically last around six weeks, No Man’s Sky’s latest Redux event is moving through this year’s offerings at a rate of one every fortnight. Additionally, things are already underway with Omega, which kicked off Expeditions 2024 in February, now available and running until December 11.
Omega can be accessed (as is the case with all future Expeditions) through the terminal in No Man’s Sky’s Community Space Anomaly and, among its many rewards, gives players the chance to earn the flashy Starborn starship. . Before we cover the highlights of each expedition, here is the full Redux schedule:
- Omega: November 27 – December 11
- Adrift: December 11 – December 25
- Liquidators: December 25 – January 8
- Aquarius: January 8 – January 22
- The Damned: January 22 – February 5
Rewards from Adrift, which leaves players stranded alone in an empty universe, include an enchanted frigate known as the Ship of the Damned. Liquidators, meanwhile, features organic chitlin armor that can be earned when players embark on a Starship Troopers-style bug hunt across the stars.
As for Aquarius, it’s a fairly uneventful expedition that’s mainly concerned with introducing No Man’s Sky’s new fishing system, and rewards here include the lost fisherman’s fishing gear and an octopus-inspired bobblehead for your game board. starship. Finally, there’s The Cursed, a horror-themed expedition set in a collapsing reality populated by spectral entities. The rewards here are pretty nifty, including Cthulhu-style horror exosuit customization, bioluminescent pets, and the UFO-like Boundary Herald starship.
Hello Games’ Expedition Redux event is now underway on all platforms, and follows yesterday’s news that No Man’s Sky finally, eight years after its difficult launch, managed to reach the “Very Positive” review threshold on Steam . Reaching the coveted “Overwhelmingly Positive” rating will be a challenge given the way Steam ratings are calculated, but who knows: Hello Games has confirmed that it still has “a lot more in store” for No Man’s Sky.