Fuelup comparisons among three vehicles owned by me for the duration of ownership: 2020 Subaru Outback XT Onyx Edition, 2022 Ford Maverick XL Hybrid, & 2023 Ford Mustang Mach-E AWD Standard Range
Calculating: MPG/MPGe, Cost per Gallon of gasoline (or equivalent), and then by month to even the odds
Comparison Chart
2020 Outback (Gas)
2022 Maverick (Hybrid)
2023 Mach-E (BEV)
Time Owned
29 months
12 months
23 months
Total Miles Driven
18,503 mi
8,051 mi
15,0007 mi
Total Fuel Volume
941.0 gal
203.3 gal
154.8 gal-E* (5,216.2 kWh)
Total Fuel Cost
$3,243.92
$774.93
$1,229.31
MPG/MPGe
19.7 MPG
39.6 MPG
97 MPGe
Cost per Gallon (or kWh)
$3.45
$3.81
$0.24
Miles Driven per Month
638 mi
670 mi
653 mi
Fuel Volume per Month
32.4 gal
16.9 gal
6.7 gal-E (226.8 kWh)
Fuel Cost per Month
$111.86
$64.58
$53.54
Total Maintenance Cost
$596.62
$362.54
$465.39
Fun Cost(Additions)
$2623.03
$2536.99
$1032.88
*gal-E = gallons gasoline equivalent
Basic Vehicle Statistics
2020 Outback (Gas)
2022 Maverick (Hybrid)
2023 Mach-E (BEV)
Engine
2.4L F-4cyl Turbo CVT AWD
2.5L I-4cyl FHEV FWD
1-spd DD Electric AWD
HP
260 hp @ 5,600 rpm
162 hp @ 5,600 rpm*
266 hp
Torque
277 lb-ft @ 2,000 rpm
155 lb-ft @ 4,000 rpm
428 lb-ft
Fuel Capacity
18.5 gal
13.8 gal
70kWh
Fuel Economy (city/hwy/comb)
23/30/26
42/33/37
99/86/93
Range (EPA)
481 mi
511 mi
224 mi
Weight
3,884 lb
3,674 lb
4,498 lb
Wheelbase
108.1 in
121.1 in
117.5 in
Length
191.3 in
199.7 in
185.6 in
Width (with mirror)
82.0 in
83.5 in
74.1 in
Height
66.4 in
68.7 in
64.0 in
Tow Rating
3,500 lb
2,000 lb
–
*191hp total hybrid power delivery; DD = Direct Drive; Fun fact: 70 kWh = 2.1-gal gasoline
Analysis
Easy to see that the data favors electrified vehicles: cheaper, less fuel consumed, better MPGs
Cost per gallon of gas (or equivalent) goes increases the more electrified the vehicle. Keep in mind, overall cost is less
Maintenace costs decrease with increased electrification. However, both electrified vehicles were owned for less time than the gasoline car
Released on September 15, 2022 for Steam and Nintendo Switch, then later on March 30, 2023 for PS4 and Xbox, Ankora Lost Days is the 3rd game released by CHIBIG. It stays in the same world as Summer in Mara (2020) and Deiland: Pocket Planet (2021), following the exploits of Junior Ranger Mûn who managed to crash her ship on Ankora, the home world of the Anks. Similar to its predecessors, Ankora Lost Days is an adventure game with crafting, leveling, cooking, and fighting elements along with terraforming. Mûn works to not only find the missing pieces of her ship to send a distress signal to her Interstellar Patrol comrades, but to help the Anks save their world.
Rating: 3 out of 5
Price: Paid $7.49 out of MSRP $14.99
Recommended: Eh…yes if you’re a series fan. No, otherwise
One Word Description: Repetitive
Pros: Part of the Mara world, Mûn is a recurring character, gardening, crafting, no item limits on bag, decent game graphics, many quests, caters to completionists
Cons: Fetch quests, random drops, difficult to find the one item necessary for every room, slow, fishing, annoying music, hunger, stamina, and drink bars, mind-numbing
Game Review
The game starts with Mûn, having crash landed, exploring the world, which is grid-based both in each room and on the map. She makes her way over to the tutorial section where a nice Ank merchant directs her through crafting some basic tools. After that, the storyline starts, and Mûn is tasked with some tasks before Koda, the Chief Ank dies. Then it’s Harvir who is her main taskmaster. Each room has terraforming or building obstacles that must be overcome in order to access new rooms. Fighting through enemies, opening up new rooms, restoring Ank “villages,” and fulfilling everyone’s quests unlock new recipes for food, items, tools, and weapons. Finding and restoring quick jump pedestals as well as fishing boats all help to traverse the map. Now, there is NO optional quest in this game. Every quest needs to be done in order to unlock craftable recipes. If you get stuck, it’s likely you need to fulfill someone’s task to move forward. The end of the game culminates in a big 2-boss fight that was laughably easy. 100% completion!
For a completionist, this game is great. You pretty much can’t beat it without getting 100%! There’s no need to go back and get or do anything more.
Game Goods
Flow: The beginning is crazy frustrating without the necessary items and tools to traverse the map. However, it flows well, and soon, money is easy to come by and everything can just be bought. By the mid-end of the game, bridges are a worry of the past and it’s smooth sailing from there. Each room holds onto the revisions you’ve established nicely. Increased stats really help.
Text: If you’re one to pay attention, there’s a lot of read. Each Ank has its own story, problems, and personality. Sadly, I found myself not caring in the least about the text even though someone clearly spent a lot of time fleshing it out, and just button mashed my way through them to get on with the game.
Addicting: Inexplicably addicting. I spent most of the game cussing at it, but I kept wanting to play. Why? I don’t know! I would have given it a 2 out of 5, but I bumped it to 3 because for whatever reason, I just couldn’t get it out of my mind when I wasn’t playing it!
Game Gripes
Random: Ugh. Again with the randomness being a problem with these games! Every herb, every drop, every monster spawn is random! Will you get that flax you so desperately need for the damn bridges that are required in basically every room? Maybe, maybe not!
Frustrating: Oh man. Frustrating is the key word for much of this game. From not being able to find that one single item that’s needed for rope building, to endless back and forth fetch quests, to those 2 GODDAMN rooms (mostly that one stupid room) that look traversable only to find that you actually can’t go through them, but you forget every single time you look at the map, to Mûn’s insanely slow walking speed, to her initially, criminally low stamina bar…this game is just a barrel of laughs. No. It’s full of tears. TEARS. Halfway through the game, I almost quit several times, and kept muttering curse words under my breath as I continued to play because I’m a completionist, dammit.
Lost: Yep. True to its namesake and plot, you’re just lost most of the time. Every room looks the same, every Ank looks the same.
Buggy: I fell off a few ledges when running on the sides. Thankfully the game resets after a while.
Bad Menu/Interface: Switching among tools was clunky even though it should have been straight forward. Sometimes it would switch twice instead of once with one button push. The menu cursor was very laggy. Given how much map reliance there is in the game, there is no dedicated map button. Instead, you have to open the menu and tab then over to the map, which would work and sometimes wouldn’t. Mûn should also have been given a perpetual running feature or at least a toggle.
Art: It’s like several different people created art for this game. The Start menu art is great! Mûn is like she is portrayed in the other games. Unfortunately, the animated scene Mûn, the gameplay Mûn, the status gauge Mûn, and the text character art Mûn are completely different from each other. I, myself, particularly disliked the portrayal you see most often: the text character art. The excessive emotions were honestly off-putting. Both that and the status gauge face make her look like a little girl and not the young woman she’s supposed to be. I found myself skipping through all the text so I wouldn’t have to look at her ugly mug. Why create a character and then change it 2 games in?
Repetitive/Boring: When it comes down to it, the biggest barrier for this game is the game at its core: fetch quests. That’s all there is to it. The entire game is about fetch quests. I’m all for side quests, but dang, all the backtracking and trying to remember the best paths…To be fair, I should have known better because all 3 games by CHIBIG so far have been fetch quest games. The story is super flimsy. You only hear of the main baddie towards the end, and he doesn’t really seem all that bad given the other Anks just sit on their butts and tell Mûn what to do.
In Conclusion
I cannot, in good conscience, recommend this game to the average gamer. It’s way too repetitive, and the main plot is as thin as cheap toilet paper. The only people I’d recommend it to are those who have played the other 2 games and are ensconced in the lore. With that said, the peculiar addictiveness of the game influenced me to finish it all the way despite several attempts to just quit. There’s just something about it… You know what I find interesting is that Summer in Mara came out first in 2020, and yet, of the three games, it is the most solid and most fun one of them all. It runs the smoothest and is much more intriguing. I was appalled to see that Ankora Lost Days came out in 2022. I would have bet money on it going Deiland then Ankora then Summer in Mara. I hope that CHIBIG’s next games (their website shows 3 new games coming out this year) are better because these last two have been rather disappointing in my opinion.