Descent: FreeSpace — The Great War
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| Descent: FreeSpace — The Great War | |
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Box cover art for Descent: FreeSpace — The Great War |
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| Developer(s) | Volition, Inc. Amiga version Hyperion Entertainment |
| Publisher(s) | Interplay Entertainment Amiga version Haage & Partner Computer |
| Designer(s) | Adam Pletcher The FreeSpace Team |
| Engine | FreeSpace engine |
| Version | 1.06 (January 05, 1999) |
| Platform(s) | Windows, Amiga |
| Release date | March 19, 1998 Amiga version December 2001[1] Silent Threat October 01, 1998 Battle Pack January 01, 2003 |
| Genre(s) | Space combat simulator |
| Mode(s) | Single-player, multiplayer |
| Rating(s) | ESRB: Everyone (6+) USK: 12+ ELSPA: 3+ OFLC: G8+ |
| Media | 2 CD-ROMs |
| System requirements | 133 MHz CPU, 32 MB RAM, 8X CD-ROM drive, DirectX 5.0, 240 MB available hard disk space, Windows 95 Amiga version PowerPC or 68060 processor, 64 MB (min. 48 MB free) RAM, 8X CD-ROM drive, 3D accelerated graphics card (Warp3D supported) |
| Input methods | Keyboard, mouse, (optional) joystick |
Descent: FreeSpace — The Great War is a 1998 space combat simulation IBM PC compatible computer game developed by Volition, Inc. when it was split off from Parallax Software. Published by Interplay Entertainment, it is also known as Conflict: FreeSpace — The Great War in Europe. In 2001, it was ported to the Amiga platform as FreeSpace — The Great War by Hyperion Entertainment.
The story has the player taking up the role of a human pilot in the Galactic Terran Alliance as it engages in war with the alien Parliamentary Vasudan Empire. Their feud is interrupted by the enigmatic and xenocidal Shivans who slaughter anyone in their sights. Putting aside their differences, the humans and Vasudans form an alliance, and the player is assigned to missions to stop the Shivan's genocidal advance. Featuring huge capital ships which explode spectacularly on destruction, the player pilots a starfighter and fights massive battles alongside competent wingmen amongst the stars to determine the fate of two races.
Descent: FreeSpace was well received as a single-player space simulation that integrated all the desired features of its genre, but its multiplayer mode was plagued by lag and inaccurate tracking of statistics. Its expansion Silent Threat, which comprised additional missions, was also released in 1998. The sequel FreeSpace 2 was released a year later in 1999.
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[edit] Gameplay
Descent: FreeSpace — The Great War (hereafter simply called FreeSpace) puts the player in a starfighter flying out on missions to destroy or protect certain targets. It has sometimes been categorized as a flight simulator, since it has more controls and commands than a typical arcade game.[2] However, its flight model is simple, akin to that of the game TIE Fighter, although it incorporates some elements of Newtonian physics such as precise collision physics.[3][4] In the single-player mode, the player flies through a series of missions in a campaign.
Before flying a mission, the player goes through a briefing, which details the background information and objectives. Ships and weapons can also be selected at this stage, adding an element of strategy to the missions.[5] The main view when flying, is a first-person view from within the cockpit, but the only visible interface is that of the head-up display (HUD). The player can customize the HUD by changing its color, or by toggling the information displays.[6][7]
Missions must be successfully completed for the campaign to advance.[8] However, a mission can be considered successful even if only a few of the primary objectives are completed.[3] Results of a mission can be persistent; an enemy capital ship allowed to flee may turn up in a later mission.[9] Completed missions can be replayed on the in-game mission simulator.[8] Training missions are mixed in with the regular missions (and can be skipped), gradually introducing players to advanced commands and techniques as the missions become more sophisticated.[8][7] The game has been said to be easily playable with the keyboard alone, or together with a mouse or joystick.[5][10]
The game features multiplayer matches online or over a local area network (LAN). Players can either band together to complete cooperative missions, or split up into teams to battle against one another.[11] Voice chat is available, although reviewers advised it to be used only on broadband or LAN.[12] Online gameplay was free over the services offered by Parallax Online, which also kept track of players' statistics and rankings.[10]
[edit] Plot and setting
FreeSpace takes place in a fictional future where humans have discovered how to travel long distances by jumping into subspace, and have spread among the stars as the Galactic Terran Alliance (GTA).[13] The player is thrust into the game during the fourteenth year of war between the GTA and the alien Parliamentary Vasudan Empire. The history behind this war is never explained, to keep opportunities open for unrestricted development of the story in sequels and expansions.[14] The plotline was described by Volition as multi-pathed, which would branch out depending on the player's mission performance.[15] This was intended to enhance the replayability value of the game.
The introduction movie serves as a prologue, giving players an idea of the story right from the start. It establishes a Terran-Vasudan war, and gives a short glimpse of the fearsome alien Shivans. The player flies several combat missions against the Vasudans before encountering the Shivan advance elements who indiscriminately attack the two races. Unable to target or even damage the Shivans with their primary weapons, players must embark on several missions for the new Terran-Vasudan alliance to catch up with the Shivan's technological superiority,[16] while fending off a Vasudan death cult, the Hammer of Light.[17] The player becomes instrumental in capturing the Shivan cruiser SC Taranis.[18] The promise of rewards for capturing the Taranis turns out to be a MacGuffin. Its capture only serves as an introduction for the game's main boss, the Shivan superdestroyer SD Lucifer. The Lucifer makes its entrance by destroying the captured Taranis and many other allied ships, putting an end to the encouraging mood which was being built up till then.[19]
At certain points during the campaign, monologues by members of an extinct race, the Ancients, are told in pre-rendered cutscenes.[20] With an undertone of sadness, they detail the Ancients' encounters with the Shivans millennia ago, suggesting the long history of the Shivans' actions, and their effects on developing sentient species.[21] They also foreshadow the destruction of a homeworld and, more importantly, reveal the secret to destroying the Lucifer.[22] The destruction of the Lucifer in the subspace between the Sol and Delta Serpentis jump nodes marks a twist in the ending; the subspace corridor is destroyed and Sol is cut off from the Terran survivors outside who must face the possibility of meeting the Shivans again.[23] The expansion Silent Threat continues the story in a straight-forward manner. The player joins the Galactic Terran Intelligence (GTI) while the Terran-Vasudan alliance is in a fragile state, and is told to preserve the alliance by ruthlessly pacifying rebellious elements and fending off remnants of the Shivan forces.[24] However, it all turns out to be a cover-up,[25] as the GTI is plotting a coup,[26] and has constructed a Terran-Shivan hybrid superdestroyer of their own, the GTD Hades, which the player must destroy.[27]
[edit] Development
FreeSpace was Volition's first project after Parallax Software's split into them and Outrage Entertainment.[15] It is not part of the Descent computer game series, and contained none of the ideas or materials from them.[28][29] It was only prefixed with Descent to avoid trademark issues with Mijenix Corporation's "FreeSpace", a disk compression utility.[30][31] Volition also used the term "FreeSpace" in the game to initially describe what became later known as subspace.[14] The game was conceived by Adam Pletcher, with all the features of space simulator games his team had found to be fun. Their primary inspirations, the games TIE Fighter and Wing Commander made their way into the game's flight model,[15] along with the influence of historical WWII dogfights. Themes from the fiction of Star Wars, Space: Above and Beyond, and Ender's Game form a part in shaping the background and story of the FreeSpace world. The chaotic battles between masses of ships commonly found in science-fiction anime became one of the features of FreeSpace.[32]
Apogee Software announced on December 12, 1997 they would be exclusively publishing FreeSpace for the first three months before handing the publishing rights back to Interplay Entertainment.[33] This was part of their agreement with Interplay for the latter's purchase of the rights to Descent, and Apogee decided to release FreeSpace as shareware with them as the merchant of the registered version. Interplay, however, bought the full rights to FreeSpace from Apogee in late April, 1998, keeping the ownership of the game solely to themselves.[34]
Initially staffed with a crew of five, the project grew to encompass 17 people.[31] The game's code was built from scratch. Most of the software modules were interlinked with each other, increasing the job's complexity and difficulty. The code incorporated little portions of Descent's code for specific functions.[28] Kulas, who had worked on several versions of Flight Simulator and Descent, brought his experience into the game's artificial intelligence (AI). The game's difficulty levels are based on advancing the AI rather than simply increasing damage and "hit points" of enemies.[35] Realism was incorporated into the game's physics such that an impact on one part of a starfighter's body will send it spinning, unlike the "sphere-based collision nonsense". Due to time and budget constraints, many of the initially planned cutscenes and stories were cut from the final product.[36] Examples of such cuts include a campaign path where the Terran-Vasudan alliance goes on a retreat, and scenes of racial tension within the alliance.[37] Despite the promise of a deathmatch mode for multiplayer,[20] it was cut from the final product.[11] The expansion Silent Threat also suffered the same fate of cuts due to budgetary and time concerns.[30]
Volition aimed for a quality release and promised to deliver a product without major bugs. Minor bugs would be fixed in a prompt manner.[15] The shipped game, however, had deficiencies admitted by the team, such as the multiplayer code, and a few design issues.[30] The game underwent four patches, which rid much of the bugs and improved the multiplayer performance.[38] Complaints about an online mission giving unfair scores led to Volition removing the mission from scoring play.[39] Another patch allowed EAX capability to be enabled for Creative Sound Blaster sound cards.[40] Interplay played its part in drumming up the community's interest by holding contests, and expanding material for the FreeSpace universe.[38] Meanwhile, Volition created official star maps, and released Vasudan voice clips and story development notes. Interplay hired science-fiction writers such as Fred Saberhagen, Simon Hawke, and Jeff Grubb to write weekly FreeSpace stories for two months.[41] Prepping the way for Silent Threat's release, Interplay held a contest from July 28 to August 25, 1998, in which the submitted fan-designed missions could win their authors prizes such as free copies of Silent Threat, FreeSpace apparel, and gaming hardware.[42] Entries were judged by a panel from PC Gamer, and qualified entries constituted half of the missions in Silent Threat.[43][24]
On December 14, 1999, Hyperion Entertainment announced their acquisition of the license to port FreeSpace to the Amiga system.[44] The publisher was changed to Haage & Partner Computer on October 18, 2001.[45] Despite the game's official release being announced for December 2001,[46] the approval to do so could only be gotten on January 07, 2002.[47] The game was shipped without a printed manual,[8] but had additional German and French language support.[48] Hyperion had stated they would port over Silent Threat if the FreeSpace port sold well. To date, Silent Threat has yet to be ported over to the Amiga platform.
[edit] Reception
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82.0%[51] |
FreeSpace, which was placed 20th in PC Gamer UK's 1999 Top 100 Awards,[52] was frequently compared against Wing Commander: Prophecy and X-Wing vs. TIE Fighter in its reviews, and stood up well against them. It has been said to be a combination of the two games, but possessing the better qualities of each; the player is just a pilot caught up in an overarching plot fighting amongst fleets of starships.[9][6] As the game took inspiration from space simulation classics and offered comparatively little of its own innovation, it was called unoriginal by a few reviewers.[2][5]
Most of the reviewers glossed over the game's story but a few found it lacking the depth needed to captivate the player.[6][7] There are suggestions that the game would have been much better if the player had a greater obvious role in controlling the outcome of the story. Without this impetus, the reviewers found themselves simply playing a "very sweet looking arcade title",[7] and felt detached from their wingmen and environment.[4] This feeling was made worse in Silent Threat with its "cold and inhuman" briefings and non-player characters.[24]
Several reviewers called FreeSpace's graphics beautiful, claiming asteroids are realistically rendered against softly glowing nebulae, while galaxies and stars of varying colors lay in the background.[7][12][48][10] Others felt differently, stating the 3D effects were less spectacular than the software rendered version, the nebulae were unconvincing, and the ships' textures were blurry and lacking detail.[2][53][3] However, reviewers unanimously agreed the explosions in FreeSpace were the most spectacular they have ever seen. They were impressed with how a ship undergoing destruction would have electricity arcing over the hull, buckling under multiple small explosions before bursting in a large fireball with debris being flung out, leaving wreckage where the ship once stood. Sharky Extreme was dismayed by the game's inability to go beyond 640x480 screen size.[5] The game's AI received much praise from reviewers.[50] The player's wingmen were competent on their own and could be trusted with orders, even to the extent of co-ordinating attacks on capital ships.[9][8][3] Likewise, the player's enemies acted in concert with each other to achieve their squadron's objectives.[54][10][7]
Despite one reviewer's glowing praise for the FreeSpace's online multiplayer over cable modems,[10] the majority at that time were on dial-up access and roundly condemned the online multiplayer mode. The chief complaint was lag.[55] GameSpot's Desslock was amazed the game dared to advertise as being able to support 16 players online when it could not even support two players on 56k modems. Combatsim.com's Fitzgerald called the multiplayer "bug ridden" after experiencing many of his shots not registering hits or kills on enemy ships after over 40 minutes of play; all of it due to lag.[7] Other reviewers found their situations similar with their guns only firing seconds after depressing the trigger, and their ships randomly jumping over the playing area.[56][4]
Silent Threat was judged to be a decent but uninspired add-on. The campaign missions were either standard escort or destroy missions, and offered no new equipment which were unable to compete against the older equipment.[57][24] The stand-alone missions, however, were toasted for the way they were conceived. The contest-winning entries gave breadth to the game's variety of missions, and encouraged greater community participation. This was made possible with the free editor, FreeSpace Editor (FRED), which has been called the best of its kind. With the ability to import personal audio and 3D animation files, the editor allows users the same capability as Volition to create their own missions.[4] The possibilities offered by the editor resulted in a call to the community to stop the flood of "Battle of Endor"-type missions, and to design missions following Volition's Jason Hoffoss' Zen philosophy of accomplishing more with less.[58]
[edit] References
- ^ Amiga Flame staff (n.d.). Released Games of 2001. Amiga Flame. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ a b c Greg Miller (n.d.). Review of:Descent: FREESPACE (The Great War). PC Alamode. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ a b c d Stoo (November 2002). A Force for Good — review of Conflict: Freespace. A Force for Good. Retrieved on 2007-11-09.
- ^ a b c d Warren Liu (1998-09-20). Review: Descent: FreeSpace — The Great War. GamersWanted.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ a b c d Anders Hammervald (1999-04-26). Conflict: Freespace Review. Sharky Extreme. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ a b c Beth Wasden (n.d.). Descent: FreeSpace — The Great War. All Game Guide. Retrieved on 2007-10-26.
- ^ a b c d e f g Maurice Fitzgerald (1998-07-17). Descent Freespace. Combatsim.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-18.
- ^ a b c d e Seppo Typpö (n.d.). FreeSpace — The Great War. The Amiga Games Database. Retrieved on 2007-11-18.
- ^ a b c Reevus (n.d.). Descent: FreeSpace — The Great War. SKOAR!. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ a b c d e TraderX (1998-06-07). Review: Descent: Freespace. Game Over Online Magazine. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ a b c Stefan "Desslock" Janicki (1998-07-22). Descent: FreeSpace — The Great War. GameSpot. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ a b c Mark Cooke (2004-06-05). Descent: Freespace — PC. Game Revolution. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ Volition staff (1998-02-26). FreeSpace Reference Bible (Word 97) pp. 4. Volition, Inc.. Retrieved on 2007-11-09.
- ^ a b Volition staff (1998-02-26). FreeSpace Reference Bible (Word 97) pp. 2. Volition, Inc.. Retrieved on 2007-11-09.
- ^ a b c d Mike Fine. "Descent: Free "Speech". An Interview with Adam Pletcher", 3D Gamers, 1998-05-01. Retrieved on 2007-10-31.
- ^ Matt (n.d.). Descent Freespace Review. Coolinfo.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ Hammer of Light: We are the Hammer of Light. The prophecy is your doom. Volition, Inc.. Descent: FreeSpace — The Great War. Interplay Entertainment. PC. (1998-03-19)
- ^ Admiral Wolf: Congratulations, Alpha 1. You were instrumental in the first capture of a major Shivan vessel! Volition, Inc.. Descent: FreeSpace — The Great War. Interplay Entertainment. PC. (1998-03-19)
- ^ Admiral Shima: I wish your reassignments could have come under better circumstances. The loss of the Galatea is a great blow to all of us. We've lost many friends and loved ones. We also lost many great pilots. Volition, Inc.. Descent: FreeSpace — The Great War. Interplay Entertainment. PC. (1998-03-19)
- ^ a b GamePower staff (1998-01-29). GamePower talks to FreeSpace producer. GamePower. Retrieved on 2007-11-18.
- ^ Volition staff (1998-02-26). FreeSpace Reference Bible (Word 97) pp. 25. Volition, Inc.. Retrieved on 2007-11-09.
- ^ Brett Quinton (2002-09-20). Descent: FreeSpace — The Great War. PC Gameworld. Retrieved on 2007-11-09.
- ^ Protagonist: All the jump points from Earth have been destroyed. But the Shivans can rebuild them. I’m told we can expect them again. But not in my lifetime. Such is liberation. May you live to see your home. Volition, Inc.. Descent: FreeSpace — The Great War. Interplay Entertainment. PC. (1998-03-19)
- ^ a b c d Warren Liu (1998-10-14). Review: Descent: Freespace - Silent Threat. GamersWanted.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ Admiral Scott: Therefore, we suspect the Loki-class fighters were engaged in a GTI cover up. The attack on your wing in the Beta Aquilae system may have been a botched attempt to cover up the Einstein's existence. Volition, Inc.. Descent: FreeSpace — Silent Threat. Interplay Entertainment. PC. (1998-10-01)
- ^ GTA Commander: The conspiracy is not confined to a rogue element within the GTI, but involves officers in the highest echelon of the intelligence directorate. Although their objectives remain unclear, command believes the conspirators intend to overthrow the GTA government and dissolve the GTA treaty. Volition, Inc.. Descent: FreeSpace — Silent Threat. Interplay Entertainment. PC. (1998-10-01)
- ^ GTA Commander: Reconnaissance also has evidence of a large-scale prototype construction involving Shivan technology, but no data regarding the configuration and capability of this vessel could be gathered. Volition, Inc.. Descent: FreeSpace — Silent Threat. Interplay Entertainment. PC. (1998-10-01)
- ^ a b Asrale (2000-09-11). Volition Interview. PlanetDescent. Retrieved on 2007-10-31.
- ^ Tom Chick (1998-01-29). FreeSpace Preview. GamePower. Retrieved on 2007-11-18.
- ^ a b c Michael Diedrich (Zarathud) (1998-11-20). Chat with Volition. FreeSpace Watch. Retrieved on 2007-10-30.
- ^ a b Gwar (1998-01-03). Interview with Dan Wentz. Descentia. Retrieved on 2007-11-18.
- ^ Chris Jensen (1998-01-28). FreeSpace Preview. Ogr.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-18.
- ^ PC Gamer staff. "Apogee has rights on FreeSpace", PC Gamer, 1997-12-12. Retrieved on 2007-11-18.
- ^ Samuel Stoddard (2005-09-30). The Apogee FAQ. Hall of Light Amiga database. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ Jason Ocampo (1998-01-03). FreeSpace Preview. Strategy Plus. Retrieved on 2007-11-18.
- ^ Volition staff (1998-02-26). FreeSpace Reference Bible (Word 97) pp. 7. Volition, Inc.. Retrieved on 2007-11-09.
- ^ Volition staff (1998-02-26). FreeSpace Reference Bible (Word 97) pp. 19–21. Volition, Inc.. Retrieved on 2007-11-09.
- ^ a b Michael Diedrich (Zarathud) (1999-09-13). FreeSpace Chronicled - The First Three Months. FreeSpace Watch. Retrieved on 2007-11-14.
- ^ Volition staff (1999-01-15). The Meeting. Volition, Inc.. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ GameSpot staff (1999-02-25). Descent Freespace v1.06 EAX Sound Patch. GameSpot. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ Interplay staff (1998-11-17). FreeSpace Stories. Interplay Entertainment. Retrieved on 2007-11-14.
- ^ Interplay staff (1998-11-18). Descent: FreeSpace Mission Design Contest. Interplay Entertainment. Retrieved on 2007-11-14.
- ^ FreeSpace Watch staff (n.d.). Silent Threat Information. FreeSpace Watch. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ Hyperion Entertainment (1999-12-14). "Hyperion licences "Freespace: The Great War" for Amiga". Press release. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ Haage & Partner Computer staff (2001-12-31). News Archive 2001. Haage & Partner Computer. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ Amiga Flame staff (n.d.). Released Games of 2001. Amiga Flame. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ Haage & Partner Computer staff (2002-07-10). News Archive 2002. Haage & Partner Computer. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ a b c Sutton, Mick (February 18, 2002). "Descent: Freespace" (PDF). Total Amiga (10): pp. 30–32. Essex, England: South Essex Amiga Link.
- ^ Michael E. Ryan (2000-11-24). Review: Descent: Freespace. GamePro. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ a b Richie Shoemaker (2001-08-13). Conflict: FreeSpace — The Great War. Computer and Video Games. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ Descent: FreeSpace — The Great War Reviews. Game Rankings. Retrieved on 2007-11-12.
- ^ PC Gamer UK staff (June 1999). "The Top 100 Awards". PC Gamer UK.
- ^ Randy Widell (n.d.). Descent: FreeSpace. GameGenie.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ Stephen Fulljames (2001-08-15). Descent: Freespace. Computer and Video Games. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ Joe Koenig (Elemental) (1998-06-10). The Major Problem: LAG!. FreeSpace Watch. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ Reevus (n.d.). Descent: FreeSpace — The Great War. SKOAR!. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ Reevus (n.d.). Descent: Freespace Silent Threat. SKOAR!. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
- ^ Michael Diedrich (Zarathud) (1998-08-05). FRED and the Battle of Endor Syndrome. FreeSpace Watch. Retrieved on 2007-11-13.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Official FreeSpace — The Great War website
- FreeSpace — The Great War — Hyperion Entertainment's website for the Amiga port
- Descent: FreeSpace — The Great War at MobyGames
- Descent: FreeSpace — The Great War at the Internet Movie Database

