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        <title><![CDATA[@solarsmash - blog]]></title>
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        <link>https://youemerge.com/solarsmash</link>
        <lastBuildDate>Fri, 24 Apr 2026 20:50:21 -0700</lastBuildDate>
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                <title><![CDATA[Solar Smash: The Most Satisfying Way to Destroy a Planet - @solarsmash]]></title>
                <link>https://youemerge.com/solarsmash/blog/13700/solar-smash-the-most-satisfying-way-to-destroy-a-planet</link>
                <guid>https://youemerge.com/solarsmash/blog/13700</guid>
                <description><![CDATA[Have you ever looked up at the night sky and thought, "What would happen if I fired a laser beam straight at Earth?" No? Just me? Well, either way, there's a game for that — and it's oddly one of the most relaxing experiences you can have on a screen.<br>
What Is This Game, Exactly?<br><br>
Solar Smash is a planet destruction simulator that does exactly what it sounds like. You pick a planet, choose a weapon, and watch the chaos unfold. That's pretty much the whole premise. There's no storyline, no missions, no pressure — just you, a celestial body, and an increasingly ridiculous arsenal of ways to obliterate it.<br>
It sounds destructive (because it is), but there's something genuinely fascinating about the physics, the visuals, and the sheer variety of ways a planet can meet its end. It's part sandbox game, part science curiosity, and honestly a little bit therapeutic after a rough day.<br>
How the Gameplay Works<br><br>
The controls are refreshingly simple. You rotate the planet with one finger (or your mouse), then select a weapon from the panel on the side. From there, you aim and fire.<br>
Your starting weapons are straightforward — meteor showers, laser beams, missile barrages. But as you experiment more, you'll unlock increasingly wild options: black holes, UFO invasions, giant worms that burrow through the planet's core, and even something that looks suspiciously like a Death Star.<br>
Each weapon interacts with the planet differently. Lasers carve clean, glowing slices. Meteors chip away at the surface and leave craters. A black hole slowly pulls the entire planet apart in a swirling, mesmerizing spiral. The visual feedback is genuinely impressive for a free-to-play title.<br>
You can also switch between different planets — Earth, Mars, Jupiter, the Moon — each with its own visual texture and atmosphere that reacts differently to your weapons.<br>
A Few Tips to Get More Out of It<br><br>
Start slow. It's tempting to throw everything at the planet at once, but taking your time with individual weapons lets you actually appreciate the physics and visuals. Try a single laser beam before going full apocalypse mode.<br>
Experiment with angles. Hitting a planet straight-on gives one result; grazing the atmosphere from the side gives something entirely different. The game rewards curiosity.<br>
Try the black hole last. Use every other weapon first, get the planet down to a battered, half-melted rock, then drop the black hole. The final collapse looks genuinely spectacular.<br>
Don't sleep on the UFO swarm. It sounds silly, but watching a coordinated alien invasion chip away at a planet piece by piece is oddly entertaining.<br>
Worth Your Time?<br><br>
If you're looking for a deep narrative experience or competitive gameplay, this probably isn't it. But if you want something low-stakes, visually impressive, and weirdly fun to just mess around with for twenty minutes, Solar Smash absolutely delivers. Sometimes the best games don't ask anything of you — they just let you play.<br>
]]></description>
                <pubDate>Thu, 12 Mar 2026 20:11:40 -0700</pubDate>
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