Armored Core 3

Armored Core 3

North American PlayStation 2 cover art
Developer(s) From Software
Publisher(s)
Composer(s) Tsukasa Saitoh, Kota Hoshino
Series Armored Core
Platform(s) PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable
Release date(s) PlayStation 2
  • JP April 1, 2002
  • NA September 10, 2002
  • EU May 30, 2003
PSP
  • JP July 30, 2009
  • NA October 22, 2009
Genre(s) Action, third-person shooter
Mode(s) Single player, multiplayer
Distribution DVD-ROM

Armored Core 3 is a mecha video game in the Armored Core series.

Description

Storyline

Set in a post-apocalyptic future, Armored Core 3 depicts a world where mankind has begun to live underneath the Earth's surface after a catastrophic global nuclear war broke out on the surface. The human beings who survived formed a subterranean society called "Layered". Layered is ruled by an artificial intelligence known as "The Controller", which dictates almost everything that happens in the world. The two major corporations, Mirage and Crest Industries, and a relatively more minor one, Kisaragi, all vie for dominance and control over the land and assets in Layered. However, not all is right with The Controller, and odd events are becoming more and more common. With the number and scope of these errors, some might even go so far as to suggest that the logic system is failing...

Background

Technology

Corporations

Rebel Groups

Mercenaries

Characters

Setting

Many players were confused with the nature of Armored Core 3's storyline in relation to previous AC games. At the end of Another Age, the AC world appeared to be getting back on its feet after the conflicts of the subterranean era (Armored Core, Project Phantasma, Master of Arena) and the Mars crisis (Armored Core 2). However, when Armored Core 3 begins mankind is back in a subterranean city hiding from the effects of a catastrophic global nuclear war.

Two prominent theories have arisen to explain away this discrepancy. Either the game is set in the same world as the previous games and the world experienced a second "Great Destruction", or Armored Core 3 reboots the series' storyline and starts all over again from a similar starting point as the original Armored Core. The latter appears to be true.

Two different timelines were mentioned in the Armored Core 10 works complete file,[1] one of which refers to original Armored Core and continues up to the end of Armored Core 2: Another Age. The other timeline starts with Armored Core 3, ending in Armored Core: Last Raven. The roots of Armored Core 3 began with the humanity taking refuge in underground cities after a large scale disaster occurred on the planet's surface. Centuries after that great destruction, corporations such as Mirage and Crest were established. They paved the way for the development of the first MT prototype, the XMT-01, which soon led to the development of ACs and other MTs.

Gameplay

Like Armored Core and Armored Core 2, you are given a trial mission to see if you are talented enough to join the mercenary group dubbed Global Cortex. New features within Armored Core 3 include consorts (additional allies that can be obtained to assist you in a mission), detachable weapons (thereby lessening your total weight and increasing speed), and a new Core classification; Exceed Orbit (EO) which sacrifices the power of Overboost and allows you to deploy a built-in, autonomous weapon on your Core. This game has support for a USB Mouse.

Armored Core 3 Portable

The game has been released on the PlayStation Portable in Japan on July 30, 2009 as Armored Core 3 Portable with new content.[2] The game was released in North America on October 22, 2009.

Reception

On release, Famitsu magazine scored the PlayStation 2 version of the game a 34 out of 40.[3]

The PlayStation 2 version of Armored Core 3 received mostly positive reception from American critics. IGN's review praised the game's somewhat easier difficulty compared to Armored Core 2, the relaxed restrictions on AC design, and the new weapons added to the game. They criticized the control scheme however, and rated the game 7.3 out of 10.

GameSpot praised the improved plot and varied environments featured in the story missions, but also criticized the lack of Dual Analog controls and the lack of improved graphics. They rated the game with a 7.5 out of 10.[4]

Notes and references

  1. Armored Core 10 Works Complete File .
  2. PSP version announced .
  3. プレイステーション2 - アーマード・コア 3. Weekly Famitsu. No.915 Pt.2. Pg.75. 30 June 2006.
  4. "Armored Core 3". GameSpot.

External links