Global Thermonuclear War 48
Joystiq reports that, from the makers of Darwinia and Uplink comes DEFCON, what appears to be a global nuclear war strategy title. Looks positively Wargames-tastic. From the EvilAvatar post they reference: "The new game, titled DEFCON, is a multiplayer strategy which pitches two players against one another in a game of Global Thermonuclear War. In DEFCON a player must manage their launch silos in an attempt to defend their major cities against nuclear attack while simultaneously launching their own attacks against the other player."
Uplink (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Uplink (Score:5, Informative)
They don't really have much information about DEFCON up yet. But do check out Uplink if DEFCON sounds interesting to you.. It's a cheap game and it works equally well on Linux as Windows.
Good ol' WarGames (Score:3, Funny)
-Joshua
Re:Good ol' WarGames (Score:3, Informative)
"Shall we play a game?"
Re:Good ol' WarGames (Score:2)
Re:Good ol' WarGames (Score:2)
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0086567/quotes [imdb.com]
Useless link, heres the real one. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Useless link, heres the real one. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Useless link, heres the real one. (Score:1, Redundant)
feels like Wargames (Score:2, Funny)
It would be more interesting if... (Score:5, Insightful)
Sorta silly, dontcha think? Trying to generate more pageviews or something?
Re:It would be more interesting if... (Score:1)
Strange game... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Strange game... (Score:3, Funny)
Damn. Foiled again. That's a whopper of a good show, man! (or would it be WOPR?)
Wikipedia has actual info + screens (Score:5, Informative)
Damn, why was this article even posted?
-Isaac
Re:Wikipedia has actual info + screens (Score:2)
remember Nukewar for C64? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:remember Nukewar for C64? (Score:2)
Does anyone remember that old DOS game? (Score:5, Funny)
I can't remember the name of the game though, but it was fascinating (even back when I was 12). Anyone know what that game was called? I can't seem to find it on the web anywhere.
I found it on a 5.25" floppy in my Dad's briefcase, back when he worked for the government when we lived in Arlington, Virginia (or was it the hills of West Virginia?)... Anyway, I'd love to know what the name of that game was (Dad always called it "Simulation"; but I think that's a silly name for a video game, so I never believed him).
Thanks for any help!
Re:Does anyone remember that old DOS game? (Score:2)
Re:Does anyone remember that old DOS game? (Score:1)
Grab google maps API and this javascript atomic yield calculator [stardestroyer.net].
I'd consider it a public service, since most people are under the misconception that modern nuclear arms would take out wide swaths of the entire country, when in reality all modern warhead yields are under 1 megaton.
Re:Does anyone remember that old DOS game? (Score:5, Insightful)
You are probably too young to remember much about the Cold War, but I grew up in the Reagan Era, and yeah we did have incredibly paranoid discussions like "Well the Soviets are targetting the nearby airforce base but luckily we are greater then 11.7 Kilometers from ground zero."
Re:Does anyone remember that old DOS game? (Score:5, Informative)
I don't know what megaton bombs you are talking about, we have very little that is over 1MT, and we don't have 100,000 of anything, even if you count individual warheads and not missiles.
From the Nuclear Weapons FAQ [nuclearweaponarchive.org]
The only thing we have potentially over 1MT is the B83 Bomb, but it's "dial a yield", it can be set.
Everything else we have is under 500kt, many around 150kt We have 8300 warheads not in storage (deployed), about about 1000 more in storage.
Russia has less than 1000 warheads. They are also under 1MT each.
That's no where near 100,000 1MT bombs. This is exactly the kind of myth that should be dispelled.
The entire world stockpile is something more like 10,000 warheads, with the average running about 300kt.
If all were detonated, with absolutely no overlap, it would take out about 325,000 square kilometers. That's about the same land area of the state of New Mexico.
Not huge parts of the world. It could deal a big blow to many major cities though.
Fallout and "nuclear winter" possibilities are not a big thing. Fallout decays quickly to safe levels (measured in weeks), and low yield bombs do not loft dust into the stratosphere, and thus can't create a nuclear winter scenario, as the dust is rained out quickly.
Re:Does anyone remember that old DOS game? (Score:2)
2. Again, I said "The Reagan Era". There are far fewer nuclear weapons today then in the mid-80s, when there were 85,000 nuclear weapons [wikipedia.org] in the world.
I lived near some missle silos. While in Boy Scouts, we used to go to the military base and they would talk about the nuclear weapons program (among other things) and show us some of the non-commissioned, unarmed, unfueled missles. We g
Re:Does anyone remember that old DOS game? (Score:2)
In a back-of-the-envelope calculation, let's assume that the top 300 cities in the world [mongabay.com] get bombed. That's a billion people affected by nuclear weapons. Even a 10% mortality rate is a hellacious death toll. On top of that, Hurricane Katrina showed us what can happen to major cities in disasters. Several tens of percent will die as a result of starvation,
Re:Does anyone remember that old DOS game? (Score:1)
Duck and Cover!!! (Score:2)
At least in the 80's we didn't have to watch those "educational" films about what to do in case of nuclear attack.
Re:Does anyone remember that old DOS game? (Score:3, Interesting)
Do you mean this [nuclearweaponarchive.org]?
Re:Does anyone remember that old DOS game? (Score:2)
Screenshot (Score:3, Funny)
Civilization (Score:2)
Maybe DEFCON can be a mod to civ4, when the nuclear war starts, the interface switches to defcon. I'm just looking for an FPS mod to civ where I get to kill the enemy units 'personally' counterstrike style.
The only winning move (Score:1, Redundant)
easter egg (Score:4, Funny)
Uh. Dreadful memories elope. (Score:2)
Defcon 5 [abime.net] was truly terrible, but it looks like its new namesake actually has pretty similar screens.
Mmmh. Unusual.
Re:Uh. Dreadful memories elope. (Score:2)
So 80's (Score:2)
Strange game. There are no WMD's.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Weak Passwords (Score:2)
No "Joshua" was the login, no password
Always amazed me.... what's the friggin' point of having a weak password for a machine capable of controlling nuclear missiles?!?
It was a backdoor for the programmer to get back into the system, it wasn't supposed to be there.
SuperPower (Score:1)
I am looking forward to Introversion's version