Urban Assault
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Urban Assault | |
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Developer(s) | TerraTools / Radon Labs |
Publisher(s) | Microsoft |
Platform(s) | Microsoft Windows |
Release date | July 31, 1998 |
Genre(s) | Shooter/strategy |
Mode(s) | Single player, Multiplayer over TCP/IP, Modem, Serial, Microsoft Zone |
Rating(s) | ELSPA: 11+ ESRB: Everyone (E) |
Media | CD-ROM |
System requirements | Windows 95, Pentium 133MHz or compatible, 16MB RAM, 1MB SVGA video card, 4X CD-ROM, 100MB hard drive space |
Input methods | Keyboard, Mouse, Joystick with Force feedback |
Urban Assault is a combined first-person shooter and real-time strategy computer game developed by the German company TerraTools and published by Microsoft. It was released on January 31, 1998.
The player creates and commands groups of tanks and aircraft, and can also take direct control of one vehicle at a time. Over the course of the game one can acquire upgrades and new vehicles.
Contents |
[edit] Gameplay
The player is in command of a futuristic host station with plasma energy technology, allowing the player to create units and buildings, as long as the blueprints and sufficient energy are available. In the single-player campaign, the objective of each mission is to capture each key sector on the map, allowing use of the beam gate to transport the host station to the next field of battle. However, destroying enemy host stations imparts a bonus to the player's maximum energy reserves. Combined with the fact that many key sectors are located deep in enemy territory or even right below an enemy faction's host station, the unstated goal of each game is to eliminate all enemy host stations. In multiplayer, beam gates are not present on the map and the only objective is to destroy opponents.
[edit] Resources
Like most strategy games, the game is centered around resources. The sole resource in Urban Assault is energy, which is required to build units and buildings used to conquer other factions. Energy is gained through controlling power stations. Each power station emits energy relative to the number of white boxes attached to it on the map screen; each box represents more power output. Power stations are also limited in power output by the number of adjacent sectors controlled by the player, referred to in-game as efficiency, forcing the player to increase control of the map in order to create more powerful armies. Powerful units and buildings require significant amounts of energy to build.
[edit] Plot
The plot of Urban Assault is set in the future, where ozone depletion, termed The Big Mistake, results in destruction of the ocean's phytoplankton, causing the Earth's food chain to collapse. Scarce food supplies results in a resource war, and plasma formation technology — the ability to form solid constructions using only energy — allows military commanders to create entire armies to subjugate their foes. The technology was leaked to enemy factions, destroying fragile political alliances and launching the planet into a third world war. Citizens are forced into domed communities, which shield them from dangerous levels of UV radiation (to an extent) and filters the toxic air. However, most of the adult population had already consumed contaminated food, and most died within five years - regardless of location, domed or not.
A group of alien invaders, the Mykonians, view humans as being unworthy of such a resource-rich planet, and implant their Parasite Machine into the crust of the planet to draw energy directly from the Earth's core. The Parasite Machine is causing the Earth's core to cool, weakening its magnetic field, eventually causing solar radiation levels to rise and obliterating all of the planet's biomass, making it suitable for Mykonian colonization. In the campaign, Mykonian forces are usually present in northern Europe, where the cool temperatures allow for more efficient data transfer.
A second group of alien invaders, the plant-like Sulgogars, have invaded northern Africa, where the warm climate creates a suitable spawning ground. Only seen in mid- to late-game missions in northern Africa, the Slugogars are the most challenging faction to defeat.
Three human factions exist as well; these include the Ghorkovs, Taerkastens, and the Black Sect.
[edit] Factions
[edit] The Resistance
The Resistance represents the last traces of democracy and freedom to survive global chaos. The Resistance was months away from destruction when a coalition of engineers and hackers wired together the free world's computers to create seven host stations. The host stations, however, had a caveat: no one would entrust the task of defending democracy and freedom to machines, so each host station was piloted by a Synaptic Donor Unit, abbreviated SDU. These SDUs were regarded as heroes, who, according to the game's help files, "sacrificed their humanity for the continual humanity of others."
In the single-player campaign, the player role is that of the last SDU champion to be deployed into battle, SDU 7.
The Resistance has a variety of war machines, notably the rapid-fire Dragonfly helicopter, the sub-nuclear missile launching Rhino, and the effective anti-air tank Fox.
[edit] Ghorkovs
The Ghorkovs are the faction most similar to The Resistance in terms of the vehicles they use. The Ghorkovs begin as the first enemy the player encounters in the game, and Ghorkovs frequently reappear in later missions. According to one of the game's pre-mission briefings, the Ghorkovs were originally allies of the Resistance, but later turned against them when the Resistance attempted to sell the Ghorkovs out to the Mykonians.
The Ghorkov host station icon is a red star, representing communism and totalitarianism.
In the single-player campaign, the Ghorkovs are the easiest faction to defeat, and are usually saved for last in multi-faction missions.
Notable vehicles in the Ghorkovian arsenal include the Tekh-Trak, an anti-air tank; and the Gigant, a saucer-style aircraft that specializes in destroying host stations. Their Ghargoil series of aircraft are also a staple of Ghorkov commanders.
[edit] Taerkastens
The Taerkasts represent a fundamentalist, neo-Luddite society, abhorrent of technology. Hypocritically, they embrace plasma formation technology, regarding it as a necessary evil. The Taerkastens blame technological factions like The Resistance and Ghorkovs for destroying the Earth's ozone layer.
Taerkast units are typically heavily armored and have strong attacks, but are much slower and vulnerable to hit and run tactics. Much of their technology is based around the First/Second World War. The backbone of any Taerkast assault usually involves massed Leonid tank units, with Hetzel fighter plane support.
[edit] Mykonians
The invader Mykonians disdain humanity for wasting a precious birthright like the Earth, and accordingly, seek to exterminate all human life through use of its Parasite Machine. Destruction of the Parasite Machine is the focus of the single-player campaign, and, in the final mission, the player must destroy it before a long in-game timer runs out.
Mykonian units are geometric shapes, with evocative names like "Air Prism" and "Ground Cube." The Mykonians are typically located in biovein-infested environments, where their vehicles blend in with the surroundings better. Mykonian units have weak shielding, but have some of the strongest attacks in the game. Mykonian assaults can destroy a Resistance host station in mere seconds.
[edit] Sulgogars
The off-world Sulgogars view humanity as fertilizer for their spawning grounds. Rarely encountered, the Sulgogars are one of two most formidable factions that players often seek to eliminate first, due to their exceptionally strong attacks and units. All Sulgogar units are airborne, and are supposedly sentient.
Sulgogar host stations are unique in that they are unable to terraform buildings, and must rely on conquest to power their broods. One cannot play as the Sulgogars in Multiplayer.
[edit] The Black Sect
The Black Sect is a splinter faction composed of criminals, terrorists, and thieves who have decided to enter the war for personal profit and gain. Having no original units of their own, the Black Sect relies on stealing technology from other factions, including the Resistance Anvil-class host station and the Taerkast Bronstejin flying ion cannon. Black Sect units have a special stealth projection, rendering them invisible to enemy radar. They are usually one of the player's top priorities, the other being the Sulgogars. One cannot play as the Black Sect in Multiplayer.
The Black Sect also have the ability to create some Mykonian units, which hints that even the Mykonians have a history with the Sect.
[edit] Reception
The game received mixed reviews from critics and suffered from poor sales. Common criticisms included poor interface, poor controls, lack of variety, and steep difficulty and learning curves. Praise included innovative gameplay, excellent joystick support, and the introductory video with music by Mark Snow. [4]
[edit] Trivia
- The Sulgogars and the Black Sect were considered so difficult to defeat that a second, easier, set of scenarios for the game's single-player mode was included on the game's CD. The extra scenarios removed the Slugogar and Black Sect factions from single-player missions, but also prevented completion of the game.
- The Black Sect is not mentioned in the game's help files or manual.
[edit] References
- ^ Harris, Craig (1998-08-13). Urban Assault Review. IGN. Retrieved on 2008-01-31.
- ^ Chin, Elliot (1998-09-03). Urban Assault for PC Review. GameSpot. Retrieved on 2008-01-31.
- ^ Urban Assault Reviews. GameRankings. Retrieved on 2008-01-31.
- ^ Radon Labs Game Development. Radon Labs (2007). Retrieved on 2008-01-31.
[edit] External links
- Microsoft's Urban Assault site
- Radon Labs' (formerly TerraTools) Urban Assault site
- Urban Assault at GameFAQs
- Stoudson Corporation Forums, a UA fan forum