The Making of System Shock 2 97
The British gaming magazine Edge, which has teamed up with the website Next Generation, offers up a piece looking back at the creation of System Shock 2 . The cult classic storytelling horror-themed FPS has survived as a popular and often-referenced game despite the eight years between now and its release. The piece covers the reasons behind that popularity, as well as the 'horror' of an inexperienced team taking on a dauntingly high-profile task: "The original System Shock was one of the games that made Levine want to move into the videogame industry in the first place. What made it so special? 'The feeling of being in a real place,' he raves. 'The feeling of a mystery, of unraveling it - not in an adventure game way, but in the context of an action game. You arrive and... what happened? That's a really good storytelling mechanism.' Austin Grossman and Doug Church's original idea from Shock was something Irrational expanded in its sequel. 'In Shock 1 you were a specific guy, you had a backstory,' Levine notes. 'With Shock 2, I started you out with the classic 'wake up with amnesia'.'"
Bioshock and System Shock (Score:5, Insightful)
I installed it and began playing.
About two hours later I was bored out of my mind at the console-ized, dumbed-down mess that was Bioshock.
I reinstalled System Shock 2.
I played the entire thing through again and loved every second of it. System Shock 2 is without a doubt one of the best games of all time, worthy of any top 10 list as the best FPS-RPG ever. Probably even better than Deus Ex, though that's a hard comparison to make for sure.
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Re:Bioshock and System Shock (Score:5, Informative)
For those who want to play through SS2 again, check out SHTUP [att.net] and Rebirth [strangebedfellows.de].
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Even if some things were dumbed down, in terms of combat BioShock is far more advanced than SS2. There are so many ways you can dispose of your en
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The sounds, the music, the atmosphere, the game engine, all just above and beyond everything else in the genre.
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Re:Bioshock and System Shock (Score:5, Funny)
Agree (Score:1, Redundant)
Although I did finish Bioshock.
Overall I really liked all sorts of aspects of the story in System Shock 2 more as well, beyond just the gameplay - in System Shock 2 you really felt more in-between two larger powers than in Bioshock (hopefully not spoiling too much for people that have not played either game).
I would love to play through System Shock 2 again, but sadly I sold off my copy a few years ago.
Sometimes I wish they would just update graphics and
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http://www.the-underdogs.info/game.php?gameid=3924 [the-underdogs.info]
Re:Bioshock and System Shock (Score:5, Insightful)
As for Bioshock, I recently started playing the game and have been enjoying it quite a bit. I agree that the interface is more like a traditional FPS than System Shock 2 and thus "dumbed down" I suppose, but still more complex than Half Life and similar more pure FPS variants. What I really enjoy about Bioshock, though, is simply the realization of the concept within the game world. How often do you get to explore the shattered remains of a dystopian world inspired by an Ayn Rand novel? About my only potential issue so far are the few scripted "scare" scenarios I've encountered. I'd have preferred if they had been done in such a way that they at least didn't feel quite so scripted. Many of the scariest moments in System Shock 2, for example, were simply an artifact of situations I found myself in and the excellent sound work in the game--the ability to hear critters nearby but not know where they were, etc.
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Um... huh?
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Maybe it is to someone who's never actually heard an Asian person who has trouble with "r" sounds. That (and other) stereotypes aren't just conjured up by someone's imagination.
I can't think of anything else. I guess maybe it's racist against Greasels. Fucking Greasels and their acid spit. They had it coming.
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Re:Bioshock and System Shock (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm not a namby pamby liberal who doesn't go out of his way to be offended by comments or content that doesn't directly apply to me, so I might have missed it.
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Within certain boundaries, yes. I suppose I was just expecting more because of the game's reputation as being nonlinear. For example, one level begins (I believe) in an air duct above a subway station, and ends with the main character's capture after exiting the station. But certain other
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I see BioShock more similar to DeusEx in its intention, and perhaps that is also why I enjoyed the game quite a bit, since by nature I do not think it could be as good as System Shock 2 on doing what SS2 did... but probably better at doing what DeusEx / Bioshock attempted (I still prefer Deus Ex, though).
System Shock 2 was fundamentally a thriller FPS - its design and its intention allowed it to be quite non-linear because, besides the atmosphere, it didn't have a narrative to tell. It felt to
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Take for example Oblivion. There are a lot of things that were downright annoying because of design choices for the console. Fortunately some interface mods fixed some of that. You mention Dues Ex, well the interface in the first was fairly well done but the second had some issues due to the console
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I think the "consoleized" complaint refers more to game design or gameplay. I hate traditionally PC games being consoleized, but I didn't really notice it much in Bioshock. At least nothing jumped out at me, as opposed to Oblivion.
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I've played through BioShock four and a half times now. It'd be five, but first I've got to finish Halo 3 on Legendary. Which will happen right after I finish The Orange Box twice, the second time with developer commentary on. Oh what wonderful problems to be having!
Meanwhile, you go right on hating. Whatever keeps you warm at night.
Hans
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Whether taking one's negative opinions as facts counts as hating? I'll agree that it can be argued about.
Hans
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Meanwhile, you go right on spewing bile. Whatever keeps you warm at night.
Better?
Hans
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Forgot to use Preview, huh?
Please explain how something is simultaneously way less complex than its spiritual predecessor and not dumbed-down.
I'm not saying that it's a bad game, I'm just saying that that sentence is logically contradictory.
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I'll save GP some time:
Dumbed-down is not the same as less complex. Dumbed-down is not the opposite of complex. Dumbed down means 'Made More Stupider' whereas less complex means 'not quite so intricate.' GP was indicating this point, and stating that it had plenty of artistic and stylistic merit in its own right. Doom is not Risk dumbed-down. Doom is Doom. Risk is Risk.
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Regardless, saying Bioshock is a dumbed-down, consoleized mess is a load of shit. If that's a dumbed-down, consolized mess, every FPS ever made is. It's a perfectly fine FPS with some RPG elements thrown in, there's nothing consoleized or dumbed-down about it.
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I can only imagine that you think Halo is the ne plus ultra of first person shooters.
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And I do happen to think that the Halo series (the PC versions, not the Xbox versions) represents the pinnacle of FPS games. And I've played all the shooters people say are better (Half-Life, for example). Any other stereotypes you've drawn about me that you'd like me to debunk?
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You have a lot to learn. The only thing Halo did different was those sticky plasma grenades.
You want a REAL FPS? Look up Tribes or Tribes 2 and go from there.
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Would you kindly play through the game again and pay more attention to the plot?
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Now, if someone would just RERELEASE SS2 on a new engine. Heck, the same engine BioShock uses. I think that would do very well - as long as they don't dumb it down for consoles.
Hell, rerelease DX1 as well.
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I love Deus Ex. (Don't talk to me about Deus Ex 2, it didn't happen).
But SS2 "probably" better?
Even now, 8 years on, from time to time I'll see something (a hallway in a building, the layout of a foyer, or just a feeling of a dark night) that sparks a little voice at the back of my mind: "Silence the discord..." Sure, I have memories of playing Deus Ex, but nothing as vivid or lasting.
I've sought out survival horror games an
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I'd accuse you of nostalgic bias, but that might force me to contemplate Chrono Trigger not being the best game of all time, so never mind.
This game looks like a total rip-off of Bioshock (Score:2, Funny)
What a great game. (Score:3)
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I won't have an opportunity this weekend, but come Monday evening I'll be happy to check it out and post my findings here, if they're wanted.
Hans
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Hans
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With Thief 2 (which also uses the Dark Engine) you have to change the processor affinity so it just runs on one processor rather than both of them, otherwise the game will crash when you load the engine itself. To do this in Thief I Alt-Tabbed out of the main menu, opened task manager and adjusted the affinity (right-click on the process) and that solved my
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Through the Looking Glass [ttlg.com] has a comprehensive forum of things to try to get SS2 working but
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I just noticed that the thre
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- You need to set compatibility mode for Windows 2000 on the executable (from the properties window).
- You need to ensure that it only uses one CPU core. One way to do this is to start the game and before doing anything use the task manager to set CPU affinity to one core only. Alternatively, I've made a small
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Hey! I'm a fat SS2 loving attic dweller, you insensitive clod!
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Actually, "Panting and sweating as you stand still in my corridors" would have been just as accurate.
Fun System Shock Fact : Shodan deliberately disabled as many elevators as she could, because she figured instead of hunting down the access codes in radioactive areas filled with Cyborg Death Nannies* and the zombies from Thief BUT FROM THE FUTUR
I played SS2 once.. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I played SS2 once.. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:I played SS2 once.. (Score:5, Funny)
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Dude, that intro sequence is like 30 minutes the first time through. And anyway, SS2 is definitely one of the best games of all time. I'm sorry it frustrated you so much.
Given the choice between friends and System Shock 2, I would probably go with friends. Probably.
Re:I played SS2 once.. (Score:5, Funny)
Back in, oh, 2001, I was playing through Shock 2 for the first time. I was at university at the time, and I got a summer job in a book warehouse, picking out textbooks to ship out to various schools around the place. The job involved trotting around this big building grabbing books out of various aisles and throwing them onto a conveyor.
One day I was heading down an aisle in which the lights had packed in for some reason. It was dark. Not a problem, I have no fear of this. I walk down the aisle looking for the book that's on my order sheet.
At this point I spot a red light on the ceiling.
SHIT! I immediately duck to the floor and take cover behind my cart-o'-books, and reach for my gun to shoot out the camera...
At this point I realise that (a) I don't have a gun, (b) that isn't a camera but an LED indicating that a lamp is live, (c) I'm a bit of a pillock.
But for just a second or two, it was bloody terrifying. Thanks to the game designers for getting me so involved in their world. Salt the fries :-)
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It was about 2 am, and I was a little *too edgy* to continue playing, and far too wired to sleep, so I turned on the TV and stuck in some video to calm down to. I must have dozed off, and when the player hit the end of tape, and kicked into auto-re
The original was the best (Score:5, Insightful)
The reason it was so good was that for the first time in a game, you weren't in a game. Doom shared that a bit, was one of the first games you could just play without reading the manual. Doom was "real". What I mean by that is that a door looked like a door, worked like a door. Med packs were clearly visible and so on. Compare this to say a driving sim, where you do not have working mirrors, you can only see straight ahead, you have to drive by jerking the wheel hard left or hard right. Doom was "natural".
System shock was not, but it is the first game I remember where you really felt part of the world. Since then I learned that EVERY fps that you are alone. Think about this, even in Alien VS Predator, as either the alien or the marine, you are alone. Not so in System Shock. At one point you are reading mails from someone trying to find a safe spot, as you progress you are getting closer and closer and hope to find them alive. You don't offcourse, solo FPS is solo, but still, for a moment you felt like others were in the space station with you. A magic moment in a PC game. Perhaps even better then actually having an AI with you, this woman never got in my way, didn't commit suicide, didn't get stuck, yet I felt she was another human in this alien world.
But this is about System Shock 2 right? Can I be honest? Didn't like it as much as the original, it was too much. I would have preffered they spend more time on the bugs and less time on the three different main classes and all the various options. Nice and all but endless choice is too often an excuse for not enough flesh in the story. Shodan is back? Yeah, okay, she was nice and crazy and all but we knew her already. There was no shock. Also, the first time you were a hacker, so no wonder you were a bit crap in the beginning with combat, this time you are a soldier, so why do you still suck?
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You don't suck. You just don't rock as much as you're used to from Quake. You can't run at 60mph, your punches aren't as hard as a sledgehammer... But if you're a soldier you do massive damage with weapons, if a sailor you can rewire all the turrets in the game to do your bidding, if a psion then you can fling cryo blasts around the place at will.
Th
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Ultima Underworld? (Score:2)
The guns broke down to fast in SS2 (Score:2)
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Just finished it...no, really (Score:1)
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I'd still say Deus Ex is bet
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N-n-n-n-no, h-hacker.
Didn't like System Shock (Score:1)
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