Ecco: The Tides of Time

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Box art from Ecco: The Tides of Time; art by Boris Vallejo.
Box art from Ecco: The Tides of Time; art by Boris Vallejo.
Ecco: Tides of Time's title screen.
Ecco: Tides of Time's title screen.

Ecco; The Tides of Time was a sequel to Ecco the Dolphin for the Sega Genesis, Game Gear, and Sega CD. It continued the story of the first game and featured similar gameplay with a few new additions.

[edit] Gameplay

Tides of Time was the direct sequel to the original Ecco, released in 1994, again developed by Novotrade International. As with Ecco the Dolphin, the Mega-CD version of Tides of Time featured an alternate soundtrack composed by Spencer Nilsen. The controls for the first game were kept, and Tides of Time maintained the same high level of difficulty as its predecessor. New puzzles were added, such as following another dolphin around and a 'scavenger hunt' of sorts later in the game. One of the additions was the Metaspheres, which could transform Ecco into different animals. The transformations were level-specific, and included a seagull, a jellyfish, a shark, a school of fish, and at one point a Vortex drone. A few pseudo-3D levels were also added to the game. The health meter, the air meter, and the Glyphs returned in Tides of Time. Both the "charge song" and the "confusion song" upgrades returned from Ecco the Dolphin and were usable from the start of the game.

[edit] Storyline

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Tides of Time picked up right where the original Ecco the Dolphin left off. It turned out that the Vortex Queen was far from vanquished, and had in fact followed Ecco to Earth to build a new hive for herself. Ecco lost his powers from the Asterite early on, and soon after met a dolphin with unusually long fins. She was his descendant, Trellia, and had come to take him to her present in Ecco's distant future.

Trellia's future was a dolphin paradise. The dolphins had evolved helium sacs, and could thus fly; they also displayed limited telekinetic powers. The ocean had developed its own mind, and waterways that floated through the skies (called the Skyway in Tides of Time and reproduced as the Hanging Waters in Defender of the Future) apparently connected all the more normal waters of Earth. There were also a few floating basins of water. Ecco travelled through this future for a while, and found the Asterite.

The Asterite told Ecco that something was amiss. When Ecco used the time machine to save his pod, he split the stream of time in two. One possible future for Earth was this bright, happy future of flying dolphins; the other was a dead, mechanical world, sucked dry by the Vortex. The Asterite itself had been 'killed' in the past by the Vortex Queen; how it was talking to Ecco then wasn't explained until later. The Asterite sent Ecco back to his own time after their conversation.

Back in his own time, Ecco ended up having to piece the Asterite together by bringing the globes that made up the creature back together. The final pair of globes had been taken by the Vortex to their future; thus, Ecco had to get there and retrieve them before the Asterite could help him defeat the Vortex once and for all. The Atlantean time machine was not an option; it could only go into the past. The problem was solved when two Vortex drones captured Ecco and took him to their own future.

The Vortex future was full of strange machines reminiscent of the final levels of Ecco the Dolphin. None of these levels auto-scrolled, however. One of the levels was Gravitor Box, in which gravity was manipulated in unusual ways. Ecco did eventually find the Asterite's last two globes, and once the player beat the boss guarding them, another time portal opened to Ecco's present.

With the Asterite complete again, it was able to bestow Ecco with the same powers as it had last time — breathing underwater and a song that could destroy the Vortex. It also called all of Ecco's fellow Singers to help with the fight against the Vortex. Ecco himself fought the Vortex Queen; however, she again escaped, reverting to a larval state and bolting for the Atlantean time machine. The Asterite told Ecco to destroy the time machine, so that everyone could live in peace. The Vortex Queen, who arrived in ancient Earth after using the time machine, found creatures she could not rule over, and through the eons, the Vortex were forced to simply integrate into the ecosystems of Earth. Ecco, instead of destroying the time machine, uses it and disappears into the Tides of Time.

There was a third game in the series planned that would have continued this storyline, but it was never released. An interview with Annunziata indicates that this third game would have involved Ecco joining the Atlanteans.[1]

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Protoype

Ecco faces a mechanical dolphin in the prototype of Ecco II.
Ecco faces a mechanical dolphin in the prototype of Ecco II.

A prototype version of Ecco II: The Tides of Time was leaked on to the internet some time ago. It is believed it was dumped in the 1990s by the Paradox Console ROM release group, distributed via BBS/USENET and made its way to the internet to be unearthed later. It appears to have been burned to EPROM for testing/promotion of Ecco II in February 1994, very early in the game's development. In an interview, Ed Annunziata, Ecco's creator, called it a "pre-alpha" build.[2] It was only partially completed, with various place-holders and test levels, but also a large quantity of never-before-seen areas, enemies and debug features that can be quite interesting to see.[3]