Curiosity now allows players to replace destroyed cubes

Oh, Peter Molyneux. You really do know how to play us.

The latest update to Curiosity now allows players to re-grow areas of the cube.

The idea of Curiosity was to keep chipping away until we found the inside of the cube. A herculean effort, admittedly, but at least we knew there was a conclusion.

As it turns out, that conclusion is a lot further away than we expected. In theory, it may not even happen. In addition to paying for large areas of the cube to be destroyed, in Curiosity, players can now pay to re-grow other areas of the cube. It’s a bold move to introduce this deep into the game’s release, and even 22Cans don’t know how it will play out

“We don’t know quite what will happen in this war of attrition. Curiosity may very well rapidly degrade to reveal its innermost secret or maybe the effects of automatically removing cubelets will be neutralised by players keen to keep Curiosity going.”

When the next layer is revealed, removed and added cubes will feature on it.

£0.69 will add 10,000 cublets. £4.99 adds 100,000 and £7.49 adds 500,000. The same prices will remove the same amounts of cubelets.

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According to Eurogamerusers have so far paid to remove 13,780,000 cubelets and add another 4,680,000, decreasing the next layer by 9.1 million in total.

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