Forget Gandhi and nukes. Here, you battle alien Siege Worms, develop sentient AI, and genetically modify your citizens to survive miasma clouds. The game’s tagline, "We must go," captures its desperate, hopeful tone. The original Beyond Earth launched to mixed reviews. Critics praised the atmosphere but felt the diplomacy was shallow and the ocean tiles were wasted space. Enter Rising Tide (released late 2015).
For the uninitiated, this specific build (version 1124035) represents the definitive, complete, and most polished way to play Firaxis’ spiritual successor to Alpha Centauri . Here is everything you need to know about this version, the two essential DLCs, and why this 2014 PC title deserves a second look in the modern gaming era. Released in 2014, Civilization: Beyond Earth breaks the mold of leading the Romans or the Egyptians. Instead, humanity has exhausted Earth’s resources. You lead one of several colonial expeditions (sponsors) to a hostile alien planet simply called "This New World." Forget Gandhi and nukes
Do not buy the vanilla "Beyond Earth" alone. You must get the Rising Tide expansion and version 1124035 to have fun. The base game is a 6/10; this specific version is a solid 8.5/10. Conclusion Sid Meiers Civilization Beyond Earth Rising Tide v 1124035 2 DLC 2014 PC New represents a specific, perfect moment in strategy gaming. It is the bug-fixed, expanded, balanced vision that Firaxis originally intended. If you crave a Civilization game where you stop worrying about Gandhi’s nuclear policy and start worrying about whether to upload your consciousness to a planetary network or turn into a giant alien worm, this is your game. The original Beyond Earth launched to mixed reviews