New World Paradise -v0.1.3.1- By Dingodeer Access
DingoDeer continues to develop the project through Patreon , where higher-tier supporters (such as Marine, Admiral, or Celestial Dragon tiers) receive early access to new builds. Public releases and devlogs are typically hosted on Itch.io . New World Paradise by DingoDeer - Games
. As of version 0.1.3.1, the story centers on a protagonist who survives a catastrophic event and must rebuild a life on a tropical island. Core Story Premise The Awakening
Look for loose rocks and sticks on the ground before trying to harvest big blocks.
Download Link: [Official DingoDeer Patreon Page] (Always support developers directly to avoid malware from third-party sites.) New World Paradise -v0.1.3.1- By DingoDeer
: Initially, the goal is pure survival—gathering resources, building a basic shelter, and managing hunger and thirst. Community Building
Basic dialogue trees, introductory Marine failure prologue, initial rough 2D art assets. Feature Expansion
For players looking to dive into -v0.1.3.1-, it is important to note that this build is most stable on clean installs. While it maintains backward compatibility with some save files from the 0.1.2 era, DingoDeer recommends starting a new journey to experience the revised resource distribution properly. As always, ensure your mod manager is updated to the latest version to avoid conflict with the new asset structures. The Road Ahead DingoDeer continues to develop the project through Patreon
: 4.5/5
True to the "trainer" genre, New World Paradise blends visual novel storytelling with management elements:
Crafting is more involved, making every tool and shelter feel earned. 🏗️ What’s New in v0.1.3.1? As of version 0
Stripped of your high standing, you are penalized and forced to complete tedious, grueling administrative and physical tasks to redeem yourself.
Paradoxically, Paradise remained unresolved. It resisted closure by being generous with mystery. It asked something small and human—consent, reciprocity, curiosity—and in return offered a world that changed when one learned to pay attention. The settlers realized that no paradise is a final product; it is an ongoing conversation.
