Spycraft: The Great Game

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Spycraft: The Great Game
Image:Spycraft - The Great Game Coverart.png
Developer(s) Activision
Publisher(s) Activision
Designer(s) Ken Berris (director)
Juan Carlos Coto (designer)
Larry Galka (designer)
Bruce Ondor (designer)
Jeff Sullivan (designer)
Jeehun Hwang (composer)
Platform(s) Windows 95, Mac OS
Release date NA February 29, 1996 [1]
Genre(s) Adventure
Mode(s) Single player
Rating(s) ESRB: T
RSAC: V3: Rewards injuring non-threatening humans
L2: Expletives
Media CD-Rom
System requirements IBM PC-compatible computer, 486/DX2 - 66MHz processor, 8 MB RAM, Double-speed CD-ROM drive, 30MB of uncompressed hard disk space, VESA local bus or PCI video
Input methods Keyboard, mouse

Spycraft (also known by its full title, Spycraft: The Great Game) is an adventure CD-ROM game published by Activision in 1996. It details the attempted assassination of the President of the United States and the CIA and SVR attempts to save him. Although the game was not approved by either organization, it tends to favour realism due to its coordination with former CIA director William Colby and former KGB Major-General Oleg Kalugin.

Contents

[edit] Plot

The player (whose gender is unspecified) plays the role of Thorn, a rookie at the CIA. During training, Thorn receives word that the Russian Presidential candidate has been assassinated in Red Square and during a live-fire exercise, Thorn's instructor is shot in the head. Thorn also learns that a former CIA agent (codenamed "Harmonica") is behind both hits and it is up to Thorn and his team to solve the crime before it takes the life of President Brooks of the United States.

After travelling to Moscow, one of the team, Parker, winds up dead at the hands of Harmonica and the other, Lange, is missing. During Thorn's travels, Thorn meets up with an SVR agent by the name of Yuri Gromchevsky. With his help, Thorn learns that a mercenary agency called "Procat" has been hired to kill the Russian presidential candidate and President Brooks himself at the signing of the END nuclear treaty. After digging up the files on Procat, Thorn heads to London to speak to John Blake, a former MI6 agent who killed the former leader of Procat. It appears that Procat is still functioning under the leadership of a new man, codenamed "Mirage". Although he has no idea where Mirage is, Blake still manages to provide Thorn with a large folder of intelligence on Procat. Names listed in the file include a former FBI agent codenamed "Grendel" (played by Kirk Woller) and other living and deceased members of Procat.

Back in Moscow, Thorn heads to an informant's house only to find Lange. By now, it is obvious Lange sold Parker out to Procat, leaving Thorn with no choice but to kill his former colleague. However, something even more shocking comes up: there is a mole high up in the Agency. Thorn learns that a "nuclear pit" has been stolen by members of Procat and is being sold to a former CIA asset and current Punjabi gunrunner/terrorist named "Onyx". Thorn then travels to Heidelberg and meets with Onyx, who reveals the pit is being exchanged at a factory later that evening. Several options are given to the player: Thorn ties up Onyx and poses as him at the meeting, thus avoiding gunplay; Thorn lets Onyx go, but he warns Grendel, who kills Thorn at the deal; Thorn goes in, guns blazing, killing Grendel and recovering the pit; or Thorn poses as Onyx, taking the pit without gunplay, but Onyx escapes.

After intercepting several transmissions between Mirage and the mole, Thorn heads to Tunisia to intercept them. However, they have clearly been tipped off, as only Mirage is there. After killing Mirage's goons, Thorn finds out that Mirage is none other than John Blake. Blake gets the jump on Thorn, but his gun jams and Blake is held by Thorn at gunpoint. The player is given the option to kill Blake or let him go, but whether he lives or dies, his computer is left behind. The DCI offers Thorn congratulations either way, noting that they will "take care of Blake" (meaning either that they will take care of Blake's body or, if Thorn set Blake free, re-capture him).

In the helicopter, Thorn opens the computer, which turns out to be booby-trapped and is rigged to explode. Thorn downloads a portion of the files, then tosses the computer out of the door of the helicopter. Thorn uses these files to send a message to the mole to root him out, requesting a meeting at a dacha in Crimea. Thorn's first priority, however, is the President. After returning to Moscow, Thorn hunts down Harmonica and just as he is about to kill the President, Thorn comes to the rescue and finishes Harmonica. The DCI congratulates Thorn but notes the mole is still a threat. Thorn heads off with Yuri to Crimea.

When they get to Crimea, it turns out that it is the retreat for the replacement candidate for the Russian presidency. He is sitting there with his campaign manager, and after Yuri accuses him of hiring Procat, it is revealed that his campaign manager actually did the job. By killing his predecessor, it allowed the candidate to run for presidency, and by killing the President of the United States, this would allow the Russians to keep their nuclear arsenal which would have been signed away by the END treaty. As Yuri is about to arrest the manager, in walks the mole. It is none other than Thorn's boss, DDO Warhurst. Warhurst says that he betrayed his country because he could not stand the fact that his superior was appointed by the President. Just as it seems all is lost, Thorn's support officer, Jaimie Seaton, comes online and sends a burst of static through Warhurst's earpiece, briefly throwing his aim off and allowing Thorn to shoot Warhurst.

Yuri restrains the manager and the candidate congratulates Thorn on a job well done. Yuri, however, seems intent on throwing the candidate in jail. Because the candidate is ahead in the polls and now supports the END treaty, it is Thorn's job to protect him. There are two final options presented to the player:

  1. Shoot Yuri. Thorn gets a medal back at home and a vacation in Fiji. The Russian elections go smoothly and the new candidate seems intent on forging a good relationship with the U.S.
  2. Do not shoot Yuri. Although this is easier on the player's conscience, Thorn is fired when he returns home for refusing to follow orders. Meanwhile, in Russia, chaos ensues and the old President declares martial law and seals himself off from the U.S.

[edit] Sequel

Despite a sequel (Spycraft 2) being promised in the closing credits, this has never materialised.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Release dates. GameFAQs. Retrieved on February 7, 2008.

[edit] External links