X-COM: UFO Defense

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X-COM: UFO Defense
X-COM
Developer(s) Microprose
Publisher(s) Microprose
Designer(s) Julian Gollop
Release date(s) December 31, 1993 (MS-DOS), October 25, 1995 (PlayStation)
Genre(s) Strategy
Mode(s) Single player
Rating(s) ESRB: K-A ("Kids to Adults"), ELSPA: 15+
Platform(s) Amiga, DOS, PlayStation, Windows
Media 3.5-inch floppy disk or CD
System requirements DOS: 80386 20+ MHz, 2 MB RAM, HDD, VGA display, MS-DOS 5.0+.
Input Keyboard, mouse

X-COM: UFO Defense (released under the title UFO: Enemy Unknown in Europe) is a video game created by Julian Gollop[1] and published by Microprose Software.[2] It is the first game in the X-COM series.

Contents

[edit] Story

In 1998, reports of UFO sightings began to increase dramatically. Tales of abduction and terrorism by the unknown aliens became widespread. The nations of the world came to perceive this as a threat and attempted to form their own forces to deal with this, such as Japan's Kiryu-Kai; these forces failed miserably, the Kiryu-Kai not intercepting a single UFO in its five months of operation. On December 11, 1998, representatives from some of the most powerful nations in the world met in Geneva, Switzerland, to discuss the issue. From this meeting was born the Extraterrestrial Combat Unit—X-COM.

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

On January 1, 1999, X-COM's first base became operational, beginning what would later become known as the First Alien War - a period of time lasting three years. Hundreds of UFOs were intercepted, but forces sent to clean up the crash sites took heavy casualties. Major cities came under attack by the alien forces, and at one point the alien forces even began establishing bases on Earth itself. From the crash sites, however, valuable knowledge and technology were discovered. Aliens from several distinct species were captured and interrogated; technology was reverse-engineered and put to use by X-COM forces.

In later years, the major breakthrough came—an interrogation revealed the alien's forces were based in Cydonia, on Mars. A heavily armed and armored strike force was sent to Mars in X-COM's Avenger craft (based on alien technology) and managed to destroy the alien brain creature that was apparently responsible for masterminding the entire operation. Shortly before the Cydonia base was destroyed, however, a mysterious transmission was beamed back to Earth from the wreckage of the base...

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Single-player gameplay

Gameplay starts on January 1, 1999, with the player choosing a location for their first base on the Geoscape screen. The Geoscape screen is a representation of the world, which displays X-COM bases and craft, UFOs, alien bases, and sites of alien activity (alien terror sites). The player can choose from here to deploy X-COM craft to either patrol designated locations, intercept UFOs, or land at a UFO crash site, landed UFO, alien terror site, alien base, or (when research allows) the alien's main base.

Clicking on a base on the Geoscape screen takes the player to the base screen. From here, the player can purchase weapons and other equipment, recruit soldiers, scientists, or engineers, build expansions to the base, build new bases (up to eight in total may be complete), and organise research and production.

Funding for the above is provided by the ten founding nations of X-COM. At the end of each month, a funding report is provided, where nations can choose to increase or decrease their level of funding based on their perceived progress of the X-COM project. Alternatively a nation can sign a pact with the aliens which results in withdrawal of all funding by that nation to the X-COM project.

When a craft is sent to land at a UFO crash site, landed UFO, or alien terror site, the game shifts to a tactical phase known as the Battlescape. Here the player commands their soldiers against the alien forces in an isometric turn-based battle sequence. One of three outcomes is possible in this phase: either the X-COM forces are eliminated, the alien forces are eliminated, or the player chooses to withdraw. These battles lead to recovery of alien artifacts which can then be researched and possibly reproduced at the X-COM bases, and can also lead to the recovery of live aliens which may then be assigned as a research project to produce information, possibly leading to new technology.

The game may end in several ways. If the player's performance (as judged by the founding nations) is poor for two consecutive months, the player runs a deficit for two consecutive months, or all the player's bases are captured the game ends in defeat. If the player mounts an assault on the alien's primary base and loses, the game ends in defeat. If, however, the player is victorious in the final assault, the game ends in victory.

[edit] Game internals

A heavy weapons platform (HWP) is the general name for several military vehicles used in the game. HWPs are considered very useful: they usually have superior firepower to that of regular soldiers, and are less prone to damage from enemy fire. However, they cannot improve as the game progresses. They can only be replaced by superior craft. Later in the game the player can research Hovertanks, which can fly above the terrain.

Types of HWPs include :

  • Tank/Cannon
  • Tank/Rocket Launcher
  • Tank/Laser
  • Hovertank/Plasma
  • Hovertank/Blaster Launcher

There are eleven different alien races in the game:

Some aliens may have a rank/title, the possibilities are Soldiers, Medics, Navigators, Engineers, Leaders or Commanders. Researching each of these leads to different information. Other races have generic designations, e.g. all Chryssalids are "Terrorists".

Researching a live Ethereal when you first encounter them, regardless of their rank, will allow you to learn the skill of Psionics if you did not already possess it before.

Soldiers give you information on the alien craft's mission. Medics give you autopsies or profiles of alien species. Navigators give you information on the Hyper Wave Decoder (if you don't already have it) and Alien infiltration/subversion tactics. Engineers give you information and schematics of the alien Crafts. Leaders give you the martian solution (assuming you have researched all the prerequisites). Commanders give you the Cydonia base location (assuming all prerequisites have been researched).

[edit] Technical details

With the DOS version, as was common with other games in the time period, UFO Defense makes use of VGA graphics, synthesized music, and digital sound effects. It supports Sound Blaster, Adlib, and Roland LAPC-I audio cards. The 1.4 patch adds support for addition sound effect cards, including Sound Blaster Pro, Sound Blaster 16, Gravis Ultrasound, and Media Vision Pro Audio Spectrum. The patch also adds General MIDI and Ultrasound music support. X-Com was one of the first games to be re-released on CD-ROM. An 80486 with 4MB of RAM and a sound card were recommended for play.

The Amiga AGA version of the game featured higher resolution graphics and (arguably) better music than previous versions.

The Playstation version was compatible with the Playstation Mouse and requires a whole memory card for the Battlescape save games. The same applies to XCOM: Terror from the Deep

[edit] History and Sequels

Conceived by Julian Gollop[1] as a sequel to his game Laser Squad[citation needed], the game was picked up by Microprose Software and published in Europe as UFO: Enemy Unknown and in North America as X-COM: UFO Defense.[3]

No expansion packs were created for UFO Defense, but several sequels were created. X-COM: Terror from the Deep was the first sequel to X-COM.[4] X-COM: Apocalypse was a new game developed by the Gollop brothers with pseudo real-time combat and based in a city rather than a planet but otherwise very similar, maintaining the same style of gameplay. X-COM: Interceptor was a flight simulator set in deep space with some strategy & research elements like X-COM. X-COM: Enforcer is a first-person shooter[citation needed] which is loosely related to the rest of the series.[attribution needed] X-COM: Genesis, planned to be the rebirth of the strategic roots of the series, was started in 1999, but cancelled[5] by Hasbro Interactive later that year.

The games from the X-COM series have been sold in different packagings as they were remarketed in later years, the most notable of which is a combination of all the first 5 games and featured:
X-COM: UFO Defense
X-COM: Terror from the Deep
X-COM: Apocalypse
X-COM: Interceptor
X-COM: Email games

The IP rights to the series were retained by the publisher,[6] and Gollop played no role in the series post-Apocalypse.

[edit] Impressions

Though the premise of this game was simple, it was executed exceptionally well and the game became popular among strategy and war game fans, for reasons such as the excellent squad-based tactical interface, the combination of tactical and strategic elements and the ability to discover and create new weapons and other items. By researching the alien items recovered following combat missions, much better equipment can be built to combat the alien threat.

A final reason for the game's success is the creepy atmosphere the game evoked.[7] Soldiers are fragile with or without armour, and the use of line of sight allows alien snipers and ambushes. Aliens strike both in day and at night, forcing nighttime battles with scurrying figures unknown in the darkness. UFO mythology was used in small touches like adding mutilated cattle on the operating tables of landed UFOs and naming a new, mystical element "Elerium-115." Elerium was based on "Element 115," which Bob Lazar claimed was used as fuel by UFOs stored at Area 51. The enemy comes in numerous shapes and forms, and players run into new, deadly aliens repeatedly without knowledge of their capabilities beforehand.

Unofficial game editing software is available allowing players to change the qualities of weapons and equipment, and to change the standard maps and layouts of UFO's that were provided with the game. Such editors and patches greatly extend the replayability of the game.

The game was voted as the #1 PC game of all time by IGN in 2007[8]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Moby games profile on Julian Gollop[1]
  2. ^ Rotten Tomatoes summary of X-COM [2]
  3. ^ Moby Games review of X-COM [3]
  4. ^ Moby Games review of Terror from the Deep.[4]
  5. ^ Interview with a developer on freelancer.ag.ru [5]
  6. ^ Description of Laser Squad Nemesis[6]
  7. ^ UFO: Enemy Unknown review (94%), Pelit 4/1994, page 22
  8. ^ IGN's top 25 PC Games of all Time, page 3 [7]

[edit] External links

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