Jump to content

Hellboy: Dogs of the Night: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
SmackBot (talk | contribs)
m Delink dates (WP:MOSUNLINKDATES) using Project:AWB
clean up, replaced: PlayStationPlayStation using AWB
Line 12: Line 12:
|modes =
|modes =
|ratings = [[Entertainment Software Rating Board|ESRB]]: Mature (M)
|ratings = [[Entertainment Software Rating Board|ESRB]]: Mature (M)
|platforms = [[IBM PC compatible|PC]], [[PlayStation]]
|platforms = [[IBM PC compatible|PC]], [[PlayStation (console)|PlayStation]]
|media = CD
|media = CD
|requirements = P233, 32MB RAM, 300MB HDD
|requirements = P233, 32MB RAM, 300MB HDD

Revision as of 19:21, 31 July 2010

Hellboy: Asylum Seeker
File:Hellboy - Asylum Seeker Coverart.png
Developer(s)Cryo Studios North America (PC)
Hoplite Research, LLC (PS1)
Publisher(s)Cryo Studios North America (PC)
Dreamcatcher Interactive (PS1)
Platform(s)PC, PlayStation
ReleaseWindows
December, 2000
PlayStation
April 23, 2003 (US)
Genre(s)Action

Hellboy: Asylum Seeker is a 2003 game, developed by Dreamcatcher Interactive. It is a port of the PC game titled Hellboy: Dogs of the Night (or sometimes just Hellboy, depending on where it was released), developed by Cryo Studios North America, a subsidiary of Cryo Interactive of France, and released in late 2000 to early 2001.

The Hellboy game is based on Dark Horse Comics' science fiction comic book series Hellboy, written and drawn by Mike Mignola.

Commercially, the game was a flop. Having spent four years in development, the graphics and game play were quite dated, and at the time of its release, Hellboy was still a mostly unknown independent comic book series, especially abroad. Other factors contributed to the game's commercial failure, as well: the PC version was riddled with bugs, the PlayStation version was graphically inferior to most PlayStation games released years before, and the control of both games was abysmal at best.

Both Cryo Studios and Cryo Interactive went out of business shortly after Hellboy's PC release, though Dreamcatcher has become a large and mostly successful video game development house and publisher.

See also