I don't know if this has been posted yet:
Tom Chick's 1/5 review
http://www.quartertothree.com/fp/2016/05/18/bone-dry-sci-fi-stellaris-game-doesnt-even-work/
I agree with most of what he says.
I'm thinking about just waiting a year and picking it back up. I'm sure it will have enough patches and DLC to fix a lot of it's flaws.
That review pulls no punches, but it also pretty much sums up my feelings of the game at this point. Especially the part about empires lacking personality. It's exciting the first time you meet new empires, but in practice they are all just indistinguishable blobs on the map that mostly act the same regardless of whether or not they love or hate you. The galaxy just ends up feeling empty.
I might start another empire, just to try out a different play-style (insofar that is even possible), but after that I wont be returning until the major content patches start landing.
Not even if the developer has a long history of quickly delivering game-changing patches and updates? Look at Crusader Kings 2, it was barely playable on release, but after three patches it was amazing.
You have to review the game that you have in your hands, not the game that the developer is promising you that you'll have in the future, nor what you imagine that the game might become in the future. Because that is the game that we can actually buy and play. We don't actually know how many patches and expansions it'll take to fix the major problems in Stellaris, nor even if Stellaris
will become a better game in the end.
You can, however, always return to a game once major updates have been published, and see if the updates actually do address the problems that you had with the game. And it is entirely fair to note in reviews that Paradox has a history of continuously improving their own titles, but that should serve as a reminder for people to check back again in the future, not as an excuse for a game's current problems.
It is a flaw in the sense that you might disregard a great game due to bad early reviews.
Or you might just end up with a dud that never really gets any better, and even if it does improve, it may well end up costing you more than if you had just waited for those improvements before buying it. You don't have to purchase the game at launch to get access to those (potential) improvements.