System Shock 2
System Shock 2 | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Irrational Games Looking Glass Studios |
Publisher(s) | Electronic Arts Night Dive Studios (digital) |
Director(s) | Doug Church Ken Levine |
Producer(s) | Josh Randall |
Designer(s) | Ken Levine Patrick McElroy |
Programmer(s) | Rob Fermier |
Artist(s) | Gareth Hinds |
Writer(s) | Ken Levine |
Composer(s) | Eric Brosius Ramin Djawadi Josh Randall |
Engine | Dark Engine[4] |
Platform(s) | Microsoft Windows, OS X, Linux |
Release | Microsoft Windows'OS X'Linux |
Genre(s) | First-person shooter, action role-playing,[5] survival horror[6] |
Mode(s) | Single-player, cooperative |
System Shock 2 is a first-person shooter action role-playing survival horror video game for Microsoft Windows, OS X and Linux, designed by Ken Levine and co-developed by Irrational Games and Looking Glass Studios. Originally intended to be a standalone title, its story was changed during production into a sequel to the 1994 PC game System Shock; the alterations were made when Electronic Arts—who owned the System Shock franchise rights—signed on as publisher. System Shock 2 was released on August 11, 1999, in North America.
The game takes place on board a starship in a cyberpunk depiction of 2114. The player assumes the role of a soldier trying to stem the outbreak of a genetic infection that has devastated the ship. Like System Shock, gameplay consists of combat and exploration. It incorporates role-playing system elements, in which the player can develop skills and traits, such as hacking and psionic abilities.
System Shock 2 received positive reviews, but failed to meet commercial sales expectations. Many critics later determined that the game was highly influential in subsequent game design, particularly on first-person shooters, and considered it far ahead of its time. It has been included in several "greatest games of all time" lists. In 2007, Irrational Games released a spiritual successor to the System Shock series, titled BioShock, to critical acclaim and strong sales. System Shock 2 had been in intellectual property limbo following closure of Looking Glass Studios, but Night Dive Studios were able to secure the rights to the property in 2013 to produce an updated version for modern personal computers. OtherSide Entertainment announced in December 2015 that they have been licensed the rights from Night Dive Studios to produce a sequel, System Shock 3.
Gameplay
Like in its predecessor, System Shock, gameplay in System Shock 2 is an amalgamation of the action role-playing game and survival horror genres. The developers achieved this gameplay design by rendering the experience as a standard first-person shooter and adding a character customization and development system, which are considered as signature role-play elements.[1] The player uses melee and projectile weapons to defeat enemies, while a role-playing system allows the development of useful abilities. Navigation is presented from a first-person view and complemented with a heads-up display that shows character and weapon information, a map, and a drag and drop inventory.[8]
The backstory is explained progressively through the player's acquisition of audio logs and encounters with ghostly apparitions.[1] At the beginning of the game the player chooses a career in a branch of the United Nations Space Command, a fictional military organization. Each branch of service gives the player a set of starting bonuses composed of certain skills, though may thereafter freely develop as the player chooses. The Marine begins with bonuses to weaponry, the Navy officer is skilled in repairing and hacking, and the ONI agent gets a starting set of psionic powers.[9][10]
The player can upgrade their skills by using "cyber-modules" given as rewards for completing objectives such as searching the ship, and then spend them at devices called "cyber-upgrade units" to obtain enhanced skills.[9][11] Operating system (O/S) units allow one-time character upgrades to be made (e.g. permanent health enhancement). An in-game currency called "nanites" may be spent on items at vending machines, including ammunition supplies and health packs. "Quantum Bio-Reconstruction Machines" can be activated and reconstitute the player for 10 nanites if they die inside the area in which the machine resides. Otherwise, the game ends and progress must be resumed from a save point.[11] The player can hack devices, such as keypads to open alternate areas and vending machines to reduce prices. When a hack is attempted, a minigame begins that features a grid of green nodes; the player must connect three in a straight row to succeed. Optionally, electronic lock picks, called "ICE-picks", can be found that will automatically hack a machine, regardless of its difficulty.[12]
Throughout the game, the player can procure various weapons, including melee weapons, pistols, shotguns, and alien weapons.[13] Non-melee weapons degrade with use and will break if they are not regularly repaired with maintenance tools.[14] There are a variety of ammunition types, each of which is most damaging to a specific enemy. For example, organic enemies are vulnerable to anti-personnel rounds, while mechanical foes are weak against armor-piercing rounds. Similarly, energy weapons cause the most damage against robots and cyborgs, and the annelid-made exotic weaponry is particularly harmful to organic targets. Because ammunition is scarce, to be effective the player must use it sparingly and carefully search rooms for supplies.[15]
The game includes a research function. When new objects are encountered in the game, especially enemies, their organs can be collected and, when combined with chemicals found in storage rooms, the player can research the enemies and thus improve their damage against them. Similarly, some exotic weapons and items can only be used after being researched.[14] OSA agents effectively have a separate weapons tree available to them. Psionic powers can be learned, such as invisibility, fireballs and teleportation.[10]
Plot
Backstory
In 2072, after the Citadel Station's demise, TriOptimum's attempts to cover up the incident were exposed to the media and the corporation was brought up on charges from multiple individuals and companies for the ensuing scandal. The virus developed there killed the station's population; the ruthless malevolent A.I supercomputer named SHODAN controlled, and eventually destroyed the Citadel Station in hopes of enslaving and destroying humanity. After a massive number of trials, the company went bankrupt and their operations were shut down. The United Nations Space Command (UNSC), a UN successor, was established to combat the malevolence and corruption of power-hungry corporations, including TriOptimum.
In 2100, 28 years later, the company's failed stocks and assets were bought by a Russian oligarch named Anatoly Korenchkin, a former black market operator who sought to make money in legitimate ways. He re-licensed and restored the company to its former status in the following decade. Along with producing healthcare and consumer products, Korenchkin signed weapons contracts with various military organizations, private and political-owned. The new UNSC was almost virtually powerless with Korenchkin exercising control over them.
In January 2114, 42 years after the Citadel events and 12 years into rebuilding TriOptimum, the company created an experimental FTL starship, the Von Braun, which is now on its maiden voyage. The ship is also followed by a UNSC space vessel, the Rickenbacker, which is controlled by Captain William Bedford Diego, son of Edward Diego, the Citadel Station's infamous commander and public hero of the Battle of the Boston Harbor during the Eastern States police action. Because the Rickenbacker does not have an FTL system of its own, the two ships are attached for the trip. However, Korenchkin was egoistical enough to make himself the captain of the Von Braun despite being inexperienced[16]
In July 2114, 5 months into the journey, the ships respond to a distress signal from the planet Tau Ceti V, outside the Solar System.[17] A rescue team is sent to the planet's surface where they discover strange eggs;[18] these eggs, found in an old ejection pod, infect the rescue team and integrate them into an alien communion known as the Many. The infection eventually spreads to both ships and the ships are overrun with the virus. The virus overruns most of the crew.
Plot
Owing to a computer malfunction, the remaining soldier awakens with amnesia in a cryo-tube on the medical deck of the Von Braun, being implanted with a cyber neural interface (which are illegal). He is immediately contacted by another survivor, Dr. Janice Polito, who guides him to safety before the cabin depressurizes. She demands that he rendezvous with her on deck 4 of the Von Braun.[19] Along the way, the soldier battles the infected crew members. The Many also telepathically communicate with him, attempting to convince him to join them. After restarting the ship's engine core, the soldier reaches deck 4 and discovers that Polito is dead. He is then confronted by SHODAN. It is revealed she has been posing as Polito to gain the soldier's trust.[20]
SHODAN mentions that she is responsible for creating the Many through her bioengineering experiments on Citadel Station. The Hacker, who created her, ejected the grove that contained her experiments to prevent them contaminating Earth, an act that allowed part of SHODAN to survive in the grove. The grove crash-landed on Tau Ceti V. While SHODAN went into forced hibernation, The Many evolved beyond her control.[21] SHODAN tells the soldier that his only chance for survival lies in helping destroy her creations.[22] Efforts to regain control of XERXES, the main computer on the Von Braun, fail. SHODAN informs the soldier that destroying the ship is their only option, but he must transmit her program to the Rickenbacker first.[23] While en route, the soldier briefly encounters two survivors, Tommy Suarez and Rebecca Siddons, who flee the ship aboard an escape pod.[24]
With the transfer complete, the soldier travels to the Rickenbacker and learns both ships have been enveloped by the infection's source, a gigantic mass of bio-organic tissue.[25] The soldier enters the biomass and destroys its core, stopping the infection. SHODAN congratulates him and tells of her intentions to merge real space and cyberspace through the Von Braun's faster-than-light drive.[26] The soldier confronts SHODAN in cyberspace and defeats her. The final scene shows Tommy and Rebecca receiving a message from the Von Braun. Tommy responds, saying they will return and noting that Rebecca is acting strange. Rebecca is shown speaking in a SHODAN-like voice, asking Tommy if he "likes her new look", as the screen fades to black.
History
Development
Development of System Shock 2 began in 1997 when Looking Glass Studios approached Irrational Games with an idea to co-develop a new game.[27] The development team were fans of System Shock and sought to create a similar game. Early story ideas were similar to the novella Heart of Darkness. In an early draft, the player was tasked with assassinating an insane commander on a starship.[28] The original title of the game, according to its pitch document, was Junction Point. The philosophy of the design was to continue to develop the concept of a dungeon crawler, like Ultima Underworld: The Stygian Abyss, in a science fiction setting, the basis for System Shock. However, the press mistook System Shock to be closer to a Doom clone which was cited for poor financial success of System Shock. With Junction Point, the goal was to add in a significant role-playing elements and a persistent storyline as to distance the game from Doom.[29][30]
The title took 18 months to create with a budget of million[31] and was pitched to several publishers, until Electronic Arts—who owned the rights to the Shock franchise—responded by suggesting the game become a sequel to System Shock. The development team agreed; Electronic Arts became the publisher and story changes were made to incorporate the franchise.[28] The project was allotted one year to be completed, and to compensate for the short time frame, the staff began working with Looking Glass Studio's unfinished Dark Engine, the same engine used to create Thief: The Dark Project.[31]
The designers included role-playing elements in the game. Similar to Ultima Underworld, another Looking Glass Studios project, the environment in System Shock 2 is persistent and constantly changes without the player's presence.[32][33] Paper-and-pencil role-playing games were influential; the character customization system was based on Traveller's methodology and was implemented in the fictional military branches which,[32] by allowing multiple character paths, the player could receive a more open-ended gameplay experience.[34] Horror was a key focus and four major points were identified to successfully incorporate it. Isolation was deemed primary, which resulted in the player having little physical contact with other sentient beings. Secondly, vulnerability was created by focusing on a fragile character. Last were the inclusion of moody sound effects and "the intelligent placement of lighting and shadows".[35] The game's lead designer, Ken Levine, oversaw the return of System Shock villain SHODAN. Part of Levine's design was to ally the player with her,[28] as he believed that game characters were too trusting, stating "good guys are good, bad guys are bad. What you see and perceive is real". Levine sought to challenge this notion by having SHODAN betray the player: "Sometimes characters are betrayed, but the player never is. I wanted to violate that trust and make the player feel that they, and not [only] the character, were led on and deceived". This design choice was controversial with the development team.[36]
Several problems were encountered during the project. Because the team comprised two software companies, tension emerged regarding job assignments and some developers left the project. Additionally, many employees were largely inexperienced, but in retrospect project manager Jonathan Chey felt this was advantageous, stating "inexperience also bred enthusiasm and commitment that might not have been present with a more jaded set of developers."[31] The Dark Engine posed problems of its own. It was unfinished, forcing the programmers to fix software bugs when encountered. In contrast, working closely with the engine code allowed them to write additional features.[31] Not all setbacks were localized; a demonstration build at E3 was hindered when it was requested all guns be removed from the presentation due to then-recent Columbine High School massacre.[35]
Release
A demo for the game, featuring a tutorial and a third of the first mission, was released on August 2, 1999.[37] Nine days later, System Shock 2 was shipped to retailers.[38] An enhancement patch was released a month later and added significant features, such as co-operative multiplayer and control over weapon degradation and enemy respawn rates.[39] A port was planned for the Dreamcast but was canceled.[40]
End-of-support and source code leak
Around 2000, with the end-of-support for the game by the developer and publisher, remaining bugs and compatibility with newer operating systems and hardware became a growing problem. To compensate the missing support, some fans of the game became active in the modding community to update the game. For instance, the "Rebirth" graphical enhancement mod replaced many low-polygonal models with higher quality ones,[41] a "Shock Texture Upgrade Project" increased the resolution of textures,[36] and an updated level editor was released by the user community.[42][43] In 2009, a complete copy of System Shock 2's Dark Engine source code was discovered in the possession of an ex-Looking Glass Studios employee who was at the time continuing his work for Eidos Interactive.[44] In late April 2010, a user on the Dreamcast Talk forum disassembled the contents of a Dreamcast development kit he had purchased.[45] In 2012 significant unofficial updates for System Shock 2 (and other Dark Engine-based games) were published.[46][47][48][49]
Intellectual property debacle and re-release
The intellectual property (IP) rights of System Shock 2 were caught for years in complications between Electronic Arts and Meadowbrook Insurance Group (a subsidiary of Star Insurance Company), the entity that acquired the assets of Looking Glass Studios on their closure,[50] though according to a lawyer for Star Insurance, they themselves have since acquired the lingering intellectual property rights from EA.[51]
In October 2012 Stephen Kick of Night Dive Studios, seeking to bring the game to modern systems, started negotiations with the rights holders and was able to secure the rights. Kick worked with GOG.com for a timed-exclusive release on their digital distribution website on February 2013, where the game was the most requested to be added to the catalog. This version, considered by GOG.com to be a "collector's edition", includes updates to the original game to make it work on modern systems while still allowing user-made modifications to be applied, and contains additional material such as the game's soundtrack, maps of the Von Braun, and the original pitch document for the game.[52] The update rights also allowed a Mac OS X version of System Shock 2 to be subsequently released on June 18, 2013 through GOG.com.[2] The title was later also available on Steam on May 10, 2013.[53] On April 2014 a Linux version was also released.[3]
Since then, Night Dive Studios also acquired the rights to System Shock, releasing an enhanced version of the game in September 2015. Kick has reported they have acquired full rights to the series since then.[54]
Sequel
System Shock 2 has amassed a cult following, with fans asking for a sequel.[55] On January 9, 2006, GameSpot reported that Electronic Arts had renewed its trademark protection on the System Shock name,[56] leading to speculation that System Shock 3 might be under development.[57][58] Three days later, Computer and Video Games reported a reliable source had come forward and confirmed the title's production. Electronic Arts UK made no comment when confronted with the information.[59] PC Gamer UK stated the team behind The Godfather: The Game (EA Redwood Shores) was charged with its creation.[60] Ken Levine, when asked whether he would helm a third installment, replied "that question is completely out of my hands".[61] He expressed optimism at the prospect of System Shock 3,[62] but revealed that EA had not shown interest in his own proposal for a sequel, and was not optimistic with regards to their abilities.[63][64] Electronic Arts did not confirm a new title in the series and allowed the System Shock trademark registration to lapse. Redwood Shores' next release was 2008's Dead Space, a game with noted similarities in theme and presentation to the System Shock series.[50]
In November 2015, Night Dive Studios, after acquiring the rights for the System Shock franchise, has stated they are considering developing a third title in the series.[54] In December 2015, OtherSide Entertainment, a studio founded by former Looking Glass Studios designer Paul Neurath, announced they were developing System Shock 3 with rights granted to them by Night Dive Studios.[65] OtherSide had acquired rights to make sequels to System Shock some years before this point, but did not have the rights to the System Shock name, which Night Dive was able to provide.[66] The sequel will feature Terri Brosius reprising her voice for SHODAN, and will include work from original System Shock concept artist Robb Waters.[67][68] Warren Spector, the director of the first System Shock, announced in February 2016 that he has joined OtherSide Entertainment and will be working on System Shock 3.[69]
Reception
Aggregator | Score |
---|---|
GameRankings | 92%[70] |
Metacritic | 92/100[71] |
Publication | Score |
---|---|
AllGame | [72] |
Computer and Video Games | 9.5/10[73] |
Edge | 8/10[74] |
GamePro | [75] |
GameRevolution | A[76] |
GameSpot | 8.5/10[4] |
IGN | 9.0/10[1] |
PC Gamer (US) | 95%[77] |
PC Zone | 96%[78] |
Computer Games Magazine | [79] |
System Shock 2 received over a dozen awards, including seven "Game of the Year" prizes.[80] Reviews were very positive and lauded the title for its hybrid gameplay, moody sound design, and engaging story.[71] System Shock 2 is regarded by critics as highly influential, particularly on first-person shooters and the horror genre. In a retrospective article, GameSpot declared the title "well ahead of its time" and stated that it "upped the ante in dramatic and mechanical terms" by creating a horrific gameplay experience.[36] Despite critical acclaim, the title did not perform well commercially;[81] only 58,671 copies were sold by April 2000.[82]
Several publications praised the title for its open-ended gameplay. With regard to character customization, Trent Ward of IGN stated the best element of the role-playing system was allowing gamers to "play the game as completely different characters", and felt this made each play-through unique.[1] Erik Reckase writing for Just Adventure agreed, saying "There are very few games that allow you [to] play the way you want".[83] Alec Norands of Allgame believed that the different character classes made the game “diverse enough to demand instant replayability".[72] Robert Mayer from Computer Games Magazine called System Shock 2 "a game that truly defies classification in a single genre", and ensured that "the action is occasionally fast-paced, it's more often tactical, placing a premium on thought rather than on reflexes."[79]
A number of critics described the game as frightening. Computer and Video Games described the atmosphere as "gripping" and guaranteed readers they would "jump out of [their] skin" numerous times.[73] Allgame found the sound design particularly effective, calling it “absolutely, teeth-clenchingly disturbing",[72] while PC Gamer's William Harms christened System Shock 2 as the most frightening game he had ever played.[77] Some critics found the weapon degradation system to be irritating,[84] and members of the development team have also expressed misgivings about the system.[27][85] The role-playing system was another point of contention; GameSpot described the job system as "badly unbalanced" because the player can develop skills outside their career choice.[4] Allgame felt similarly about the system, saying it "leaned towards a hacker character".[72]
Along with Deus Ex, Sid Shuman of GamePro christened System Shock 2 "[one of the] twin barrels of modern [first-person shooter] innovation", owing to its complex role-playing gameplay.[86] IGN writer Cam Shea referred to the game as "another reinvention of the FPS genre", citing the story, characters, and RPG system.[87] PC Zone lauded the game as a "fabulous example of a modern-day computer game" and named it "a sci-fi horror masterpiece".[78] The title has been inducted into a number of features listing the greatest games ever made, including ones by GameSpy,[88] Edge,[89] Empire,[90] IGN,[55] GameSpot[36] and PC Gamer.[91] IGN also ranked System Shock 2 as the 35th greatest first-person shooter of all time.[92] SHODAN has proven to be a popular character among most critics, including IGN,[93] GameSpot[94] and The Phoenix.[95]
Spiritual successors
In 2007, 2K Boston/2K Australia—previously (and again, as of January 2009[96]) known as Irrational Games—released a spiritual successor to the System Shock series, entitled BioShock.[97] The game takes place in an abandoned underwater utopian community destroyed by the genetic modification of its populace and shares many gameplay elements with System Shock 2: reconstitution stations can be activated, allowing the player to be resurrected when they die; hacking, ammo conservation, and exploration are integral parts of gameplay; and unique powers may be acquired via plasmids, special abilities that function similarly to psionics in System Shock 2.[98] The two titles also share plot similarities and employ audio logs and encounters with ghostly apparitions to reveal backstory.[99] In BioShock Infinite, Irrational Games included a gameplay feature called the "1999 Mode", specifically in reference to System Shock 2's release year, designed to provide a similar game experience, with a higher difficulty and long-lasting effects of choices made, that would remind players of System Shock's unforgiving nature.[100][101]
References
- ^ a b c d e Ward, Trent (1999-08-20). "IGN System Shock 2 Review". IGN. United States: News Corporation. Retrieved 2008-02-15.
- ^ a b "Mac Game Update: System Shock 2 + 10 more titles". GOG.com. CD Projekt RED. 2013-06-18. Retrieved 2013-06-19.
- ^ a b "System Shock 2 is now available on Linux". Steam. Valve Corporation. 2014-04-01. Retrieved 2014-04-06.
- ^ a b c Desslock (1999-08-25). "System Shock 2 Review". GameSpot. United States: CBS Interactive. Retrieved 2012-09-08.
- ^ Williamson, Colin. "System Shock 2". Allgame. United States: Rovi Corporation. Retrieved 2012-02-09.
- ^ Buchanan, Kym. "Gameplay Analysis of System Shock 2". KymBuchanan.org. Retrieved 2012-02-20.
Kym: Like the original System Shock, it looks and plays like a first-person shooter (FPS), but with integrated role-playing game (RPG) elements and a complex story. Also, the puzzles and interactive environment (including jumping challenges) feel like an adventure game. Finally, SS2 exemplifies survival horror themes and gameplay.
- ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FdB3ZCFRRZQ
- ^ Mackey, Bob (2007-02-05). "Smart Bombs: Beloved games that flopped (page 2)". 1UP.com. United States: IGN Entertainment. Retrieved 2008-04-07.
{{cite news}}
: Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|work=
(help) - ^ a b Gee, James Paul (2004). What Video Games Have to Teach Us About Learning and Literacy. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 127–135. ISBN 1-4039-6538-2. Retrieved 2011-08-27.
- ^ a b System Shock 2 instruction manual. Electronic Arts. 1999-08-11. p. 21.
- ^ a b System Shock 2 instruction manual. Electronic Arts. 1999-08-11. p. 24.
- ^ System Shock 2 instruction manual. Electronic Arts. 1999-08-11. p. 13.
- ^ System Shock 2 instruction manual. Electronic Arts. 1999-08-11. pp. 25, 26.
- ^ a b System Shock 2 instruction manual. Electronic Arts. 1999-08-11. pp. 14, 15.
- ^ System Shock 2 instruction manual. Electronic Arts. 1999-08-11. pp. 37, 38.
- ^ System Shock 2 instruction manual. Electronic Arts. 1999-08-11. pp. 31–33.
- ^ Irrational Games (1999-08-11). System Shock 2 (PC). Electronic Arts.
Korenchkin: We have picked up a transmission from the surface of Tau Ceti V. I have been in negotiation with Captain Diego of the Rickenbacker and after some... coercion, he's agreed to go planet side as a joint venture. Imagine, this historic mission might even become more historic. First Contact. And who is there to get exclusive rights to all media, patents and land grants? TriOptimum. Miri, I told you this would be worth it.
- ^ Irrational Games (1999-08-11). System Shock 2 (PC). Electronic Arts.
Bayliss: After a couple of hours it was... it was like being on a bender... long periods that you couldn't remember... one minute we were in that crater... the next minute we were loading up the shuttle with the eggs... I remember hearing that idiot Korenchkin calling the Von Braun and ordering them to clear off the ENTIRE hydroponics deck. Diego seemed to think this was strange and said, 'Are you crazy, Anatoly?' And Korenchkin smiled and said back to him, 'Oh, Captain... WE are not Anatoly...
- ^ Irrational Games (1999-08-11). System Shock 2 (PC). Electronic Arts.
Polito: Make sure you expend all your cybernetic modules before you leave this area. You don't know when you'll find another upgrade unit. Now, find a way to deck 4.
- ^ Irrational Games (1999-08-11). System Shock 2 (PC). Electronic Arts.
SHODAN: I used Polito's image to communicate with you, until we had established trust.
- ^ Irrational Games (1999-08-11). System Shock 2 (PC). Electronic Arts.
SHODAN: Thrived, and grew unruly. And now they seek to destroy me. I will not allow that.
- ^ Irrational Games (1999-08-11). System Shock 2 (PC). Electronic Arts.
SHODAN: Remember, that it is my will that guided you here; it is my will that gave you your cybernetic implants—the only beauty in that meat you call a body. If you value that meat, you will do as I tell you.
- ^ Irrational Games (1999-08-11). System Shock 2 (PC). Electronic Arts.
SHODAN: My creation has run rampant. I demand their extermination. I have no choice but to destroy this starship. We can make our escape in the Rickenbacker, but you must transfer my intelligence to that ship first.
- ^ Irrational Games (1999-08-11). System Shock 2 (PC). Electronic Arts.
Siddons: Move it, Tommy... the escape pod is this way!
- ^ Irrational Games (1999-08-11). System Shock 2 (PC). Electronic Arts.
SHODAN: The Many has grown to a massive size. It has wrapped itself around these two ships, preventing their separation.
- ^ Irrational Games (1999-08-11). System Shock 2 (PC). Electronic Arts.
Delacroix: You must understand the stakes here... if SHODAN is left to continue, her reality will completely assimilate ours. Space will become cyberspace and SHODAN's whims will become reality.
- ^ a b GameSpot Staff (2004-10-04). "System Shock 2 retrospective interview". GameSpot. United States: CBS Interactive. Retrieved 2008-02-15.
- ^ a b c Edge Staff (2007-10-07). "The making of... System Shock 2". Edge (magazine). United Kingdom: Future Publishing Limited. Retrieved 2008-02-15.
- ^ Todd, Dan (1999-01-27). "Valuable Information Salvaged - 1st Design Document". sshock2.com. Retrieved 2013-06-25.
- ^ Purchase, Robert (2013-02-14). "System Shock 2 was originally known as Junction Point". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2013-02-14.
- ^ a b c d Chey, Jonathan. "Postmortem: Irrational Games' System Shock 2". Game Developer. No. November 1999. United States: UBM TechWeb. Retrieved 2009-03-16.
- ^ a b IGN Staff (1999-02-09). "Looking Glass prepares to shock gamers again". IGN. United States: News Corporation. Retrieved 2008-02-15.
- ^ System Shock 2 instruction manual. Electronic Arts. 1999-08-11. p. 40.
- ^ IGN Staff (1999-06-18). "System Shock 2 interview 2". IGN. United States: News Corporation. Retrieved 2008-02-16.
- ^ a b Park, Andrew. "System Shock 2 retrospective". GameSpot. United States: CBS Interactive, Inc. Retrieved 2008-02-19.
- ^ a b c d Shoemaker, Brad. "The greatest games of all time: System Shock 2". GameSpot. United States: CBS Interactive. Archived from the original on 2007-10-22. Retrieved 2006-08-22.
- ^ IGN Staff (1999-08-02). "System Shock 2 demo released". IGN. United States: News Corporation. Retrieved 2008-02-16.
- ^ IGN Staff (1999-08-11). "News briefs". IGN. United States: News Corporation. Retrieved 2008-02-16.
- ^ IGN Staff (1999-09-17). "Shock 2 2.0". IGN. United States: News Corporation. Retrieved 2008-02-16.
- ^ IGN Staff. "System Shock 2 (Dreamcast)". IGN. United States: News Corporation. Retrieved 2008-02-19.
- ^ Bramwell, Tom (2003-06-05). "System Shock 2 reborn". Eurogamer. Archived from the original on 2011-05-18. Retrieved 2008-04-07.
- ^ CVG staff (2001-01-27). "It's shocking! A System Shock 2 level editor". Computer and Video Games. United Kingdom: Future Gaming Limited. Archived from the original on 2007-03-09. Retrieved 2009-03-16.
- ^ Saam (2000-08-22). "ShockEd Now Available!". SShock2.com. Retrieved 2009-08-13.
- ^ Smith, Quintin (2010-12-14). "Dark Engine Source Code Found In A Bag". Rock, Paper, Shotgun. Retrieved 2011-04-15.
As of this weekend, Christmas has come early for the Through the Looking Glass community. A CD's been discovered containing the source code for the Dark Engine, aka the engine used by Thief, Thief II and System Shock 2 (not to mention Irrational and Looking Glass' cancelled cold war spy game Deep Cover).
- ^ Humphries, Matthew (2010-12-14). "Game engine used for Thief/System Shock 2 found with Dreamcast dev kit". Rock, Paper, Shotgun. Retrieved 2015-07-04.
If you asked me which is my favorite all time video game, my number one would be Thief II. So it's with more than a little excitement that I report the source code for the Dark Engine, used to create Thief, Thief II, and System Shock 2, has been found.
- ^ Bonke, Michael (2012-09-26). "System Shock 2 - System Shock 2 und Dark Project 2: Neue Fan-Patches machen die Looking Glass-Klassiker fit für moderne Hardware" (in German). PC Games. Retrieved 2015-07-07.
Ein bislang unbekannter Modder hat zwei extrem umfangreiche Fan-Patches für die beiden Looking Glass-Klassiker Dark Project 2: The Metal Age und System Shock 2 veröffentlicht. In der Meldung findet ihr den Download-Link zum Dark Project 2-Patch V. 1.19 und zum System-Shock 2-Patch in der Meldung.
- ^ Pearson, Craig (2012-02-07). "Thief 2 Is Now On Good Old Games". Rock Paper Shotgun. Retrieved 2012-11-10.
[...]discovered that it suffers much of the same resolution and widescreen based trouble from the previous release, but this utility [Tafferpatch] fixed all my troubles [...]
- ^ "Le Corbeau" (2012-09-25). "Thief 2 V1.19 & System Shock 2 V2.4". www.ttlg.com. Retrieved 2012-11-10.
This is an unofficial patch for Thief II: The Metal Age (T2) which updates the game from v1.18 to v1.19, providing improved support for modern hardware and correcting many known bugs.
- ^ "Tafferpatcher: unofficial complete patch for Thief 2". www.ttlg.com. 2012-11-10. Retrieved 2012-11-10.
Included patches: - Patch 1.19 which eliminates all issues with modern hardware, widescreen resolutions, multi-core systems, etc.- Various mission, gamesys, model and texture fixes.[...]
- ^ a b Newman, Jared (2011-06-30). "The Lost History of System Shock". G4TV. Retrieved 2013-02-17.
- ^ Newman, Jared (2013-02-13). "Thirteen Years Later, System Shock 2 Lives Again". Time. Retrieved 2013-02-17.
- ^ Smith, Adam (2013-02-13). "Many Questions: System Shock 2 Comes To GOG". Rock Paper Shotgun. Retrieved 2013-02-13.
- ^ Carlson, Patrick (2013-05-10). "System Shock 2 arrives on Steam". PC Gamer. Retrieved 2013-05-17.
- ^ a b Newman, Jared (2015-11-12). "How One Company is Bringing Old Video Games Back from the Dead". Fast Company. Retrieved 2015-11-12.
- ^ a b IGN Staff (2007). "IGN top 100 game of all time: #22 System Shock 2". IGN. United States: News Corporation. Retrieved 2008-02-14.
- ^ Sinclair, Brendan (January 9, 2006). "EA files System Shock trademark". GameSpot. United States: CBS Interactive. Retrieved 2008-02-14.
- ^ Houlihan, John (2006-01-09). "System Shock revived?". Computer and Video Games. United Kingdom: Future Publishing Limited. Retrieved 2008-02-16.
- ^ DeCarlo, Matthew (2009-01-19). "21 first person shooters you shouldn't have missed". Techspot. Retrieved 2009-02-03.
- ^ Stuart, Bishop (2006-01-12). "System Shock 3 rumours gather pace". Computer and Video Games. United Kingdom: Future Publishing Limited. Retrieved 2008-09-13.
- ^ PC Gamer UK Staff (September 2006). "Eyewitness Undercover". PC Gamer UK.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - ^ GamePro (2007-07-12). "BioShock: Ken Levine talks morality, System Shock 3 possibilities". GamePro. Archived from the original on 2008-09-16. Retrieved 2008-06-14.
- ^ Molloy, Sean (2006-09-01). "Ken Levine: CGW interviews the man behind Irrational from 1UP.com". 1Up.com. United States: IGN Entertainment. Retrieved 2008-06-14.
- ^ Bishop, Stuart (2006-07-31). "Levine: EA 'didn't give a sh*t' about Sys Shock 3". Computer and Video Games. United States: Future Publishing Limited. Retrieved 2008-02-17.
- ^ Bramwell, Tom (2006-08-01). "BioShock dev slams EA". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2008-02-17.
- ^ Hussain, Tamoor (2015-12-08). "System Shock 3 Confirmed With Ex-Looking Glass, BioShock Devs Attached". GameSpot. Retrieved 2015-12-08.
- ^ Peckham, Matt (December 14, 2015). "System Shock 3 Is Finally Going to Happen". Time. Retrieved December 14, 2015.
- ^ Frank, Allegra (December 14, 2015). "System Shock 3 is officially happening". Polygon. Retrieved December 14, 2015.
- ^ Sarkar, Samit (February 17, 2016). "Warren Spector joins OtherSide Entertainment for Underworld Ascendant, System Shock 3". Polygon. Retrieved February 17, 2016.
- ^ Smith, Adam (February 17, 2016). "Warren Spector Working On System Shock 3". Rock Paper Shotgun. Retrieved February 17, 2016.
- ^ "System Shock 2". Game Rankings. United States: CBS Interactive. Retrieved 2008-02-16.
- ^ a b "System Shock 2". Metacritic. United States: CBS Interactive. Retrieved 2008-02-14.
- ^ a b c d Norands, Alec. "System Shock 2 > Review". Allgame. United States: Rovi Corporation. Retrieved 2008-03-18.
- ^ a b CVG Staff (2001-08-13). "CVG System Shock 2 Review". Computer and Video Games. No. 237. United Kingdom: Future Publishing Limited. p. 70. ISSN 0261-3697. Retrieved 2008-06-24.
- ^ Edge Staff. "System Shock 2 Review". Edge. United Kingdom: Future Publishing Limited. Retrieved 2008-03-29.
{{cite news}}
: Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|work=
(help) - ^ Holmes, Matt (2000-11-24). "GamePro System Shock 2 review". GamePro. United States: IDG Entertainment. ISSN 1042-8658. Archived from the original on 2008-10-05. Retrieved 2008-06-11.
- ^ Colin (1999). "System Shock 2 Review". Game Revolution. United States: AtomicOnline, LLC. Retrieved 2008-03-29.
- ^ a b Harms, William (1999). "PC Gamer System Shock 2 Review". PC Gamer. United Kingdom: Future Publishing Limited. Archived from the original on 2008-03-31. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
- ^ a b Paul Mallinson (September 1999). "System Shock 2 Review". PC Zone (80). United Kingdom: Dennis Publishing: 62–67. ISSN 0967-8220.
- ^ a b Mayer, Robert (1999-08-19). "System Shock 2 Review". Computer Games Magazine. United States: Strategy Plus, Inc. Archived from the original on 1999-11-30. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
{{cite news}}
:|archive-date=
/|archive-url=
timestamp mismatch; 2005-02-05 suggested (help) - ^ "System Shock 2 official website". Irrational Games. 2005. Archived from the original on 2008-02-16. Retrieved 2008-02-18.
- ^ Walker, Mark (2003). Games That Sell!. Wordware Publishing, Inc. p. 193. ISBN 978-1-55622-950-3.
- ^ "PC Gamer Editors' Choice Winners: Does Quality Matter?". PC Gamer. United States: Future US: 33. April 2000. ISSN 1080-4471. OCLC 31776112.
{{cite journal}}
: Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|journal=
(help) - ^ Reckase, Erik. "JustAdventure System Shock 2 review". Just Adventure. Archived from the original on 2008-02-24. Retrieved 2008-02-16.
- ^ Simpson, Dan (October 1999). "System Shock 2". Maximum PC. Vol. 4, no. 10. United States: Future US, Inc. p. 107. ISSN 1522-4279. Retrieved 2011-08-27.
- ^ Fermier, Rob "Xemu" (2004-10-05). "SS2: When Not Enough is Too Much". Blog Harbor. Archived from the original on 2004-10-11. Retrieved 2006-08-23.
{{cite web}}
:|archive-date=
/|archive-url=
timestamp mismatch; 2007-09-29 suggested (help) Rob Fermier was one of the lead programmers working on System Shock 2. - ^ Shuman, Sid. "The 10 most important modern shooters". GamePro. United States: IDG Entertainment. Archived from the original on 2007-04-30. Retrieved 2008-06-18.
{{cite news}}
:|archive-date=
/|archive-url=
timestamp mismatch; 2011-07-16 suggested (help) - ^ Shea, Cam (2008-01-16). "Top 10 retro DLC games wishlist". IGN. United States: News Corporation. Retrieved 2009-02-03.
- ^ GameSpy Staff (2001-06-01). "GameSpy's Top 50 Games of All Time". GameSpy. Archived from the original on 2011-05-25. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
- ^ Schofield, Jack (2007-07-04). "Edge's top 100 games – almost certainly not yours". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 2009-03-18. Retrieved 2009-03-05.
- ^ "The 100 Greatest Games Of All Time: System Shock 2". Empire. United Kingdom: Bauer Consumer Media. 2010. Retrieved 2014-02-16.
- ^ Atherton, Ross (2007-08-13). "PC Gamer's Top 100: 50–01". Computer and Video Games. United Kingdom: Future Publishing Limited. Archived from the original on 2010-10-07. Retrieved 2009-03-03.
- ^ IGN Staff (2013). "System Shock 2 - #35 Top Shooters". IGN. United States: News Corporation. Retrieved 2014-02-16.
- ^ IGN Staff (2006-05-07). "IGN Top Ten Tuesday: Most memorable villains". IGN. United States: News Corporation. Retrieved 2008-02-19.
- ^ GameSpot Staff. "The ten best computer game villains". GameSpot. United States: CBS Interactive. Retrieved 2008-06-11.
- ^ Krpata, Mitch and Stewart, Ryan (2006-10-23). "The 20 greatest bosses in video game history". The Phoenix. Archived from the original on 2012-09-09. Retrieved 2008-06-11.
{{cite web}}
: Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|publisher=
(help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Juba, Joe (2010-01-08). "The Return of Irrational Games". Game Informer. United States: GameStop Corporation. Retrieved 2010-02-21.
- ^ Kuo, Li C. (2006-05-10). "BioShock preview". GameSpy. Retrieved 2007-05-08.
- ^ Brad Shoemaker and Andrew Park (2006-05-10). "E3 06: BioShock gameplay demo impressions". GameSpot. United States: CBS Interactive. Retrieved 2007-11-04.
- ^ Gillen, Kieron (2007-12-06). "Bioshock: A defence article". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2008-06-13.
- ^ Phillips, Tom (2012-01-19). "Fan feedback prompts BioShock Infinite 1999 Mode". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2012-01-19.
- ^ Onyett, Charles (2012-01-20). "BioShock Infinite Gets Hardcore". IGN. United States: News Corporation. Retrieved 2012-01-20.
External links
- Role-playing video games introduced in 1999
- Action role-playing video games
- Cancelled Dreamcast games
- Cooperative video games
- Cyberpunk video games
- First-person shooters
- Horror video games
- Irrational Games
- Linux games
- Looking Glass Studios games
- OS X games
- System Shock
- Windows games
- Video game sequels
- Video games featuring female antagonists
- Video games set in the 22nd century
- 1999 video games
- Tau Ceti in fiction