BioForge

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BioForge
Bioforge
Developer(s) Origin Systems
Publisher(s) Origin Systems
Designer(s) Eric Hyman (producer)
Richard Garriott (executive producer)
Ken Demarest (design)
Jack Herman (script)
Bruce Lemons (art director)
Engine BioForge engine
Latest version f1.01
Release date(s) United States April 1995
Genre(s) Role-playing game, Puzzle, Science fiction, Interactive movie
Mode(s) Single player
Rating(s) ESRB: M (Mature 17+)
ELSPA: 15+
Platform(s) DOS
Media 1 × CD-ROM
System requirements 80486-class CPU
8 MB RAM
2X CD-ROM
VGA graphics
Input Keyboard and mouse

BioForge (working title: Interactive Movie 1) is a 1995 computer role-playing game (RPG) published by Origin Systems for the PC. The game was marketed as an interactive movie, a term which has since fallen out of favor. This refers to its in-depth plot and extensive voice acting (with 22 different voice actors for characters and computer voices) more than its gameplay. It was localized in four languages.

The game was very hardware demanding in 1995, requiring 8MB of RAM and a 486 CPU running at 33 MHz at least, due to its use of texture-mapped, detailed 3D models and a software renderer (3D accelerators were not yet common). This level of requirement and technical achievement was usual for Origin games.

Well received, but also going low on sales, it is considered by many to be an overlooked game and is featured prominently at the Home of the Underdogs[1] and has had generally favorable reviews. [2][3][4]

Contents

[edit] Story

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.
The title screen showing Lex and a sentry robot.
The title screen showing Lex and a sentry robot.

In the far future, a fanatical group of religious extremists known as the Mondites, who believe in the evolution of man through machine by cybernetic implants, aspire to galactic conquest under the direction of their insane leader, the Prime Paragon. To this end, the Mondites abduct people and subject them to diabolical experiments at a secret base on a moon called Daedalus (named after the Greek myth) in a remote sector of the galaxy. A mad scientist called Dr. Mastaba who is the base commander and head of the "ABA Project" (Assassin Biologically Augmented) conducts these experiments under the guise of scientific research, mutilating the bodies of his victims in an attempt to turn them into the ultimate killing machine. However, everyone so far has ended up either dead or insane.

Using technology borrowed from the native species of Daedalus, a sentient race known as the Phyxx who were long thought to be extinct, the Mondites have finally succeeded in their experiments. But when one of the aliens is accidentally revived from suspended animation in its tomb, it goes on a rampage through the complex, damaging the reactor and killing half of the base personnel in the process.

The player takes on the role of a cyborg called Lex [5] (Experimental Unit AP-127) who awakens in a cell on Daedelus with no prior memories. After escaping the cell, the player seems to be one of the scant survivors of the incident that has devastated the station. He must unravel the truth about himself, the research station, the bizarre Mondite cult that controls it, and the mysterious ancient alien race that once inhabited the moon.

The game ends rather abruptly after the player escapes Daedalus in an experimental spacecraft in the wake of the moon's destruction. A sequel (BioForge II) was designed and the team were working on the art when the project was halted and changed to an extension of the original game.[6] The extension, however, was also cancelled and subsequently never published.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Gameplay

A curious in-game quote: "I'm sorry I had to kill you, but I must admit I'm enjoying the silence."
A curious in-game quote: "I'm sorry I had to kill you, but I must admit I'm enjoying the silence."

BioForge centers mainly on exploration and puzzle solving using items, and also on fighting and interaction with NPCs. The ultimate goal of the game is not obvious at the beginning, since the player is unaware of his identity, which depends on his actions during the game. The player has full control over the main character's actions. This was a deliberate idea of Richard Garriott's who, in a 1994 magazine article, said that "Interactive Movies have become a buzzword, so it's being applied to games which really aren't. Just because a game has FMV that doesn't automatically make it an interactive movie, because you have very little control over the actor. Neither is a game in which you click on an icon, then sit back and watch a scene take place." [7]

The player character can rotate left and right, walk and run forwards and backwards, and sidestep. The player can also enter a combat stance that makes several punch and kick movements and hand-to-hand weapons (if carried) available. Combat can be awkward and has somewhat of a learning curve since enemies must be faced at the correct rotation angle for attacks to connect. Also, since camera angles are fixed, the view can change in a unpredictable manner if the player crosses scene-thresholds during the fight, a gameplay problem first seen in Alone in the Dark.

The body of the player character houses an exchangeable (and depletable) battery that powers various body functions put there by the experimenters. Functions include a regeneration system that heals all damage when activated, as well as a powerful projectile weapon (known as the PFD Prototype). Upgrading and swapping the battery is key to the player's progress at certain points in the game. The player can also don a protective armoured suit that enables him to survive the harsh atmosphere outside the facility and explore the archaeological dig.

Various objects, such as data-logs or healing packs, can be picked up and stored in an inventory. Selected objects are shown as if carried in the left hand of the player character. Several hand-to-hand and ranged weapons, as well as batteries and other large or one-use objects, can also be picked up during the course of the game, but only one can be carried, using the right hand, and they can not be stored in the inventory.

Much of the game's backplot is revealed by finding and reading logs on PDAs and notes left behind by characters, including accounts of experimental subjects losing their memories and lapsing into insanity. As the plot progresses, the main character automatically updates his own diary/log summarizing what he has discovered and what has happened for the player to review, an event marked by a sound cue.

Lex entering the time-critical reactor chamber puzzle in the protective armoured suit.
Lex entering the time-critical reactor chamber puzzle in the protective armoured suit.

A large portion of the puzzle element relies on accessing control and computer terminals in order to remotely control robots, open doors and bypass security systems. The puzzles are realistic and well integrated with the plot, so several have a time limit.

[edit] Development

BioForge was developed at Origin by a core team of ten people under the direction of Lead Programmer/Director Ken Demarest, during a period of two years from February, 1993 to March, 1995. The game was developed using C++ and 80x86 assembly and used the Phar Lap DOS extender. Internally, the game used a custom script language for world management and animation. It also employed an HTML-like language to code the in-game interface. [8]

The animations were created using the rotoscope technique on live-actor movements captured with the Flock of Birds on-body motion detector system, using an in-house pose editor named System for Animating Lifelike Synthetic Actors (S.A.L.S.A.) that was capable of displaying captured movement as fully rendered models in real time. [9]

Regarding the development of BioForge, Ken Demarest said:[citation needed]

Every aspect of the BioForge was designed with technology in mind. You are on a lonely planet because we could not show more than two to three characters on screen at a time. Your body has been operated on because the fledgeling skeletal animation technology was too stiff to show smooth human animation.

Developing BioForge was a struggle. The first year and a half I ran the team (and made plenty of management mistakes) taking on every type of high risk, fascinating technology challenge. Kudos to Lance Grooms, Brendan Segraves and Jamie Rood for putting up with my hard-driving, technology-centric, no-decent-planning style of management!

The programming team has a lot to be proud of with BioForge. We built our own Flock of Birds suit and had real time motion capture years before other companies. To my knowledge, BioForge had the first single-skin, fully texture mapped, skeleton-based characters ever seen in a computer game (Alone in the Dark used hash textures and convex body pieces, which did not look nearly as good).

[edit] Technical details

The character's appearance changes according to damage
The character's appearance changes according to damage

BioForge uses a software-only 3D engine to draw polygonal objects and characters against pre-rendered backdrops with a fixed resolution of 320x200 pixels in 256 colors. In this respect, the game is very similar to the successful Alone in the Dark series of games which used hand drawn backgrounds. There are other striking similarities, like the movement scheme incorporating a separate combat mode. The combat element is toned down in BioForge with respect to the Alone in the Dark series, especially the later titles.

Other elements similar to Alone in the Dark are the gory atmosphere and scenery, although BioForge is actually sci-fi, the logs and narrations one finds, the lonely and devastated scenery, populated only by enemies, deranged lunatics and dead bodies, is something that boosts this feeling.

Other technical details also worthy of note are:

  • As a character gets more and more injured in combat, wounds and blood appear on the model, which will also limp or move awkwardly, indicating its overall health (effects that diminish while the players regains health).
  • Laser blaster beams deflect intelligently off metal surfaces in scenes, often bouncing multiple times before dissipating.
  • BioForge used skeletal animation, with pose interpolation and interchangeable skeletons. [8] This would later become a common technique in 3d computer and video games.

[edit] Extensions

BioForge Plus was projected by Origin as an extension to the original game, which would directly continue the plot, but it was cancelled after a rushed beta was completed in 10 weeks. [6] A former Origin employee noted that the company was going through a "hard year" in 1995 and that job and production team cuts resulted in the cancellation of BioForge Plus. [10] The cancellation may also presumably have been related to BioForge's weak sales.

This extension was advertised in promotional electronic catalogs bundled with other games of the company, with this blurb:[11]

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.
The work of research archaeologists has been interrupted by the machinations of the scheming scientist who plans to use the advanced alien technology for his own ends. Only your advanced skills give you hope of survival.

As the moon, Daedalus, explodes, you discover the Black Raven - a ship sent by the Ministry of Security to spy on the Mondite base. It's going to be that kind of day - it's a good thing you're still angry. The adventure is far from over.

Features:

  • Automatic Tracker - shows locations of most enemy lifeforms
  • Better Energy Source
  • More Powerful Weapons
  • Improved Combat
  • New, Superior Ship
  • Gauntlet Feature
Spoilers end here.

[edit] Compatibility with modern systems

BioForge is not compatible with modern operating systems such as Windows XP but can be run reliably in the DOSBox PC emulator as of version 0.65. [12] Another way to run the game successfully is through a virtual machine running DOS.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Home of the Underdogs: BioForge. BioForge has "Top Dog" status at Home of the Underdogs. Retrieved on May 11, 2006.
  2. ^ allgame ((( Bioforge > Review ))) - 4.5/5 stars
  3. ^ Bioforge - PC Review - Coming Soon Magazine! - 91%
  4. ^ Just Games Retro - Bioforge - 71%
  5. ^ The character is identified as such in the game's README.TXT file.
  6. ^ a b Armintrout, Bill. Who is Bill Armintrout. Retrieved on May 22, 2006.
  7. ^ Cochrane, Nathan (1994). BIO FORGE by Origin Systems. Game Bytes Magazine (Issue 21). Retrieved on May 16, 2006.
  8. ^ a b Ken Demarest Technical Resumé. Retrieved on March 9, 2006.
  9. ^ Flock of Birds product page. Retrieved on April 15, 2006.
  10. ^ My Origin Systems Experience. The Dark Box: The Soul Cage. Retrieved on May 17, 2006.
  11. ^ Trivia for BioForge. MobyGames. Retrieved on January 19, 2007.
  12. ^ BioForge on DOSBox

[edit] External links

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