I'm really not sure what I was expecting from No Man's Sky's next update after Hello Games surprise-released a 
music and audio tool at the end of last year, but I'm almost one hundred percent certain it  wasn't an organic spaceship you can grow from an egg. And yet here we  are, with the Living Ship update due out today on Xbox One, PS4, and PC.
No  Man's Sky's fascinating new mode of transport - a somewhat unnerving  blend of insect and tentacular deep sea monstrosity - can be grown from  Void Eggs, a process initially requiring players to complete the new  Starbirth mission sequence that begins at the Space Anomaly.
Hello  Games notes that Living Ships come with their own unique range of  organic technologies, and that players can hatch and evolve procedural  upgrades in order to grow their own custom ships. Furthermore, multiple  ships can be hatched from additional eggs.
Elsewhere in the new Living Ship update, solar systems are being  imbued with more variety and life. Strange Objects, for instance,  including the likes of giant space skulls and squiggly disco balls, can  now be encountered while travelling between planets. Dropping out of  pulse-flight enables pilots to explore these curious points of interest  and reap exotic rewards.
Players can also encounter passing trader  ships while roaming the depths of space, and these might open  communications to request assistance, trades, or more.
According  to Hello Games, the Living Ship update marks a continued shift toward  more frequent content drops from the studio following the massive, but  long-in-development Next and Beyond updates. "Whilst we continue to work  on more radical things longer term in the background," it says, "we are  experimenting with releasing content we know the community would enjoy  as soon as we're able."
Hello Games' website has the 
full patch notes for the Living Ship update,  and new players eager to hatch their own organic vessel and take to the  stars in slightly squidgy style can currently purchase No Man's Sky on 
Steam and 
GOG for £19.99, half its usual price. It's also £15.74 on the 
PlayStation Store and £19.99 
on Xbox if you have a Live Gold subscription.
 
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