Iron Helix
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Iron Helix | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Drew Pictures |
Publisher(s) | Spectrum Holobyte |
Release date(s) | 1993 |
Genre(s) | Adventure / Survival horror |
Mode(s) | Single player |
Platform(s) | Windows 3.1, Macintosh, Sega CD |
Media | CD-ROM |
System requirements | Intel 80386, 4 MiB RAM, 1X CD-ROM drive, hard disk, VGA, Mouse, and sound card |
Input | Keyboard, Mouse |
Iron Helix is the name of an adventure computer and video game made for the Windows, Mac, and the Sega CD, designed by Drew Pictures, with Xorcist contributing to the soundtrack.
[edit] Story
The human race is in the middle of a cold war with an alien race called the Thanatosians. A fleet of space warships is about to perform target practice by destroying an uninhabited planet. One of these ships, the Jeremiah O'Brien, inexplicably breaks off and heads straight for Calliope, a peaceful Thanatosian planet. Apparently, a technical malfuction has caused the O'Brien's computer to believe that it was in a real life war situation, and it selected Calliope as a target for destruction. Like all of the human fleet's Cerberus-class destroyers, the O'Brien carries a weapon known as "the Iron Helix", which is capable of destroying all life on a planet with one warhead. If Calliope is destroyed, the currently cold war with the Thanatosians could explode into a full-fledged conflagration, resulting in untold deaths on both sides. The O'Brien's crew is incapable of stopping the ship's computer because they were all killed by the ship's security robot, which took them for enemy combatants.
The player's objective is to board the O'Brien in order to somehow stop or destroy the ship before the Iron Helix is launched. The twist of the game lies in the fact that the player controls a robot drone which is incapable of offensive action. As such, stealth, problem-solving, and quick thinking are needed to thwart the O'Brien's computer, and its armed security robot. In the process, the player may also uncover clues as to who might be responsible for the O'Brien going rogue in the first place.
[edit] External links
- Iron Helix at MobyGames
- High-Tech Pac Man? - A review of Iron Helix