Red Faction

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Red Faction
North American Windows cover
Developer(s) Volition, Inc.
Monkeystone Games (N-Gage)
Blue Beck (Mobile phone)
Publisher(s) THQ
Engine GeoMod Engine
Platform(s) PS2, Windows, N-Gage, Mac, Mobile phone
Release date May 22, 2001 (PS2)
September 18, 2001 (Windows)
November 28, 2001 (Mac)
December 16, 2003 (N-Gage)
October 20, 2005 (Mobile phone)
Genre(s) First-person shooter
Top-down shooter
Mode(s) Single player, multiplayer
Rating(s) ESRB: Mature (M)
BBFC: 15
Media CD (2), DVD
System requirements System: PII 400 or equivalent

RAM:64 MB RAM CD-ROM: 4X CD-ROM Video Memory: 8 MB VRAM Sound Board: Yes DirectX: DirectX v8.0

Input methods Keyboard, Mouse, Gamepad

Red Faction is a first-person shooter video game that was released in 2001 for the PlayStation 2, Microsoft Windows, and Macintosh by THQ and Volition. A version for the Nokia N-Gage was developed by Monkeystone Games. The game was also re-developed as a top-down shooter for the mobile phone version.[1]

Red Faction takes place on Mars in the 21st century. The player controls a miner named Parker who helps lead a rebellion against the Ultor Corporation. The premiere feature of the game is its "Geo-Mod" technology, short for "geometry modification", which provided destructible environments, allowing the player to destroy certain sections of the scenery in the game. For example, instead of opening a door, a player could blast through the rock surrounding the door.[2]

Contents

[edit] Plot

Parker confronts Capek, who uses a "nanotech" shield to protect himself.
Parker confronts Capek, who uses a "nanotech" shield to protect himself.

Red Faction takes place on Mars in the 21st century, more specifically around the year 2075. Earth’s minerals are being depleted and humans need more of them to survive. The vast Ultor Corporation runs the mining operation on Mars. The living conditions are deplorable, Human rights for the miners are few and a disease called "The Plague" is running rampant throughout the colony with no known antidote available - predominantly within the confines of the mine complex. Parker, a downtrodden miner, came to Mars to make a new start in his life - taken in by the promises and advantages Ultor has to offer in the mines of Mars. After a routine day in the mine with the typical aggression toward miners and cramped living conditions and poor nutrition, he witnesses the spark that starts a rebellion. When a security guard abuses a miner at the end of his shift he heartlessly kills him.[3] Parker takes up arms, with the help of Hendrix, a rebellious Ultor technician who guides Parker through the complex. Hendrix tries to get Parker to join up with a group of miners who are about to steal a supply ship and escape the complex. Parker arrives too late. The ship takes off but is destroyed by missiles.[4]

Parker traverses through the Ultor complex, eliminating any resistance Ultor throws at him, and even kidnapping a high-ranking Ultor administrator, Gryphon, for Eos, leader of the Red Faction.[5] Parker learns from Gryphon about Dr. Capek, who created "The Plague". Capek has been experimenting with nanotechnology, and the Plague is a side-effect. Hendrix directs Parker to Capek's secret underground laboratory, where he and Eos meet up and take down Capek. Before Capek dies, he tells Eos how to cure the Plague.[6] After sending a distress call to the Earth Defense Force, Parker stows away on a shuttle to an Ultor space station in Martian orbit to deactivate a laser defense system.[7]

After destroying the space station, Parker lands back on Mars via an escape pod, Ultor brings out its reserve of mercenaries to help them in their fight against the miners. Hendrix tells Parker that the mercenaries have orders to destroy the mining complex, covering up any proof of Ultor's wrongdoing.[8] After fighting his way through the mercenary base, Parker confronts Masako, the mercenary leader. After he kills Masako, Parker sees that Eos is tied up and sitting on the floor next to the bomb, which has been set to explode. After deactivating it, the Earth Defense Force arrives just in time to save Parker and Eos from a fighter aircraft. Eos tells Parker that an antidote for the Plague has been made and it is being given to any sick miners. She also tells him she is leaving Mars, and that Parker should enjoy his new status as a hero.[9]

[edit] Gameplay

With Geo-Mod, the player can destroy this bridge, causing the APC to fall into the chasm below.
With Geo-Mod, the player can destroy this bridge, causing the APC to fall into the chasm below.

One of the main "selling points" of Red Faction was the game engine's GeoMod technology, which allowed players to significantly alter and otherwise affect the surrounding terrain and buildings, either with explosives or otherwise. Past games had allowed limited alteration of the environment through scripted means, or special triggered areas which would add or remove certain predefined level elements. Red Faction was one of the first games to allow players relatively limitless level-altering possibilities. In fact, many of the areas in the first few levels, such as a hidden underground lake, serve little purpose other than showcasing the capabilities of the GeoMod technology.

GeoMod allows the player to alter (and destroy) the environment so significantly because of the way it designates altered (or "GeoModded") areas. Whereas other game engines would have to modify the shape of the altered object to create a similar effect, GeoMod creates special objects which represent empty space. When, for example, an explosion blows a hole in a rock wall, the GeoMod technology creates an "empty space" object which is the approximate size and shape of the explosion. The training level uses a much larger "empty space" object than the rocket launcher is able to produce in other circumstances, simply because tunnelling is required to complete part of the level.

The use of these "empty space" objects is not limited to in-game environment alteration. Some of the objects in the game, such as the wastebaskets found in certain office areas, are stored as one solid shape with another "empty space" shape defined within it.

Geomod has become popular in multiplayer as players tend to build "tunnels" with explosive weapons. For example, in the warlords level, players could create caves using rocket launchers by repeatedly shooting a wall with the rocket launcher or using the remote detonators (or occasionally the fusion rocket launcher and grenades). Some players build tunnels for an advantage because they could hide in them and use a sniper rifle to pick off enemies. In CTF games, players build tunnels as a shortcut into an enemy base to gain an advantage in capturing their flags.

One of the main criticisms of the game was inconsistency in the use of GeoMod, mostly owing to the design limitations of linear first-person shooters. Where the game needed to halt the player's progress, locked doors and appropriate nearby walls were invulnerable to attack; players were not allowed to circumvent the obstruction using their own initiative, except in a few cases presumed to be glitches. Another debilitating issue was lack of ammunition for the explosive weapons needed. It was sparse throughout the single-player experience, meaning opportunity for GeoMod experimentation was severely limited. Other, less justifiable inconsistencies in the use of GeoMod could be found in the game; some players noted how it was possible to blow holes in the rocky caverns of the mines, yet at the same time the partitions in office cubicles were completely indestructible. Despite these and other GeoMod issues in the single-player game, critics were essentially unanimous in their praise of the system in multiplayer matches.[citation needed]

[edit] Red Faction and Descent 4

Descent 4 was a game being developed by Volition as part of the Descent game franchise (as a prequel to Descent 1). However, it was canceled for unknown reasons and its technologies (As well as some of the plot) was incorporated into Red Faction. Examples include the main character Parker as well as the GeoMod engine.4[10]

[edit] Online Multiplayer

Red Faction's included online multiplayer game component is popular among fans of the game, but suffers from numerous technical issues. At the forefront of the issues is the lack of server-side dominance; a running multiplayer server will accept most data given to it by any connected players (information like player name, position, and chat text) without checking to see if that data is permissible, possible, or desired under the rules the server is using. Initially this allowed for numerous cheats and exploits (e.g. players who can fly, walk through walls, automatic fire for all weapons, and so on) to be used on multiplayer servers, in some cases unintentionally. The version 1.2 patch was produced shortly after the game's initial release to fix some of these issues, but numerous exploits and cheats are still possible even with the patch applied. No further official patches have been released for the game, though a subsequent, third-party, "version 1.3" patch was released which addresses most of the remaining exploits left in version 1.2. A recent unofficial online multiplayer anti-cheat known as "Pure Faction" is currently in the public beta stage. Pure Faction is designed to address the numerous cheating holes that "1.3" left behind, along with an advanced launcher offering quite a few more options than the original. Nonetheless the Red Faction online multiplayer community remains at a relatively low number of players and servers but is still hoping to grow. However, efforts have been made by enthusiastic programmers and development teams, in an attempt to attract more players and even bring back the players who had previously moved on to more recent games, by enhancing the multiplayer experience.

[edit] nVidia 8xxx series bug

The aforementioned "Pure Faction" offers a fix for users of Red Faction who experience strange texture glitches while in-game with an nVidia 8-series graphics card.

[edit] Sequels

The sequel, Red Faction II, was released for PlayStation 2 in October 2002, and then PC, Xbox, and Nintendo GameCube. It takes place on Earth and tells the story of a group of super soldiers, including the main character, who are physically enhanced by the nanotechnology originally developed by Capek on Mars. Aside from that tenuous link, the only relation to the original Red Faction is the presence of nanotechnology, the name "Red Faction", and the organizations Ultor and the Red Faction themselves. Red Faction II does not support network gaming, but provides some multiplayer-style games with 'bots'. Also, while the original Red Faction experience included many instances of exploration similar to the original Half-Life, the sequel did away with this aspect in favor of a fast-paced "on rails" sort of shooter.

On February 2, 2007, THQ CEO Brian Farrell confirmed that Red Faction 3 was in the works via a conference call with investors. Little is known about the project, other than that it is scheduled for the 2008 fiscal year.[11] On August 1, 2007, the sequel was pushed back till the 2009 fiscal year.[12]

On Feb. 5th, 2008 THQ CEO Brian Farrell said Red Faction III, officially titled Red Faction: Guerrilla, is being made by Volition Studios for the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, and PC.

[edit] Reception

Upon its release Red Faction was well received by critics. The Playstation 2 version currently has an 88% rating at Gamerankings while the PC version has a rating of 79%.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Levi Buchanan (October 27, 2005). IGN: Red Faction Review. IGN. Retrieved on 2006-12-23.
  2. ^ Red Faction Reviews. Game Rankings. Retrieved on 2006-12-23.
  3. ^ Eos: Workers in Mine M-4 have started the rebellion. They're fighting and dying for you as I speak! (Red Faction)
  4. ^ Hendrix: Hurry, Parker. The miners are at the shuttle. / There they go. If only you'd been faster... / Maybe being slow isn't such a bad thing. (Red Faction)
  5. ^ Gryphon: I'll tell you what I can on the way, but more guards are going to show up soon. Parker: I'm right behind you. Betray me or try to run, and you'll be the first to die. (Red Faction)
  6. ^ Eos: Capek, the Plague. There's got to be a cure! Capek: It's simple, really. Stop the replicators. Eos: But how? How do you stop the replicators? Capek: Antidote, of course. (Red Faction)
  7. ^ Hendrix: Ultor has a system of laser satellites orbiting Mars. They'll tear the fleet apart unless we disable them somehow. (Red Faction)
  8. ^ Hendrix: (Red Faction)
  9. ^ Parker: So. What now? Eos: Relax, Parker, you're a hero. Enjoy yourself. Start dating. Maybe look for a new job. Parker: What about you? Eos: I won't be staying on Mars, that's for sure. (Red Faction)
  10. ^ Planet Descent (2000). Planet Descent Volition Interview. Planet Descent. Retrieved on 2007-05-09.
  11. ^ Hilary Goldstein (2007). Red Faction, MX to Return. IGN. Retrieved on 2007-02-21.
  12. ^ THQ Q1 financial results, new Red Faction game. GamerNode. Retrieved on August 1, 2007.

[edit] External links