StarCraft II: Heart of the Swarm

StarCraft II: Heart of the Swarm

Heart of the Swarm cover artwork,
depicting protagonist Sarah Kerrigan
Developer(s) Blizzard Entertainment
Publisher(s) Blizzard Entertainment
Designer(s) Dustin Browder
Artist(s) Samwise Didier
Writer(s) Chris Metzen
Brian Kindregan
Composer(s) Glenn Stafford, Jason Hayes, Russell Brower, Neal Acree, Derek Duke
Series StarCraft
Platform(s) Microsoft Windows
OS X[1]
Release date(s) March 12, 2013[2]
Genre(s) Real-time strategy
Mode(s) Single-player, multiplayer

StarCraft II: Heart of the Swarm is an expansion pack to the military science fiction real-time strategy game StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty by Blizzard Entertainment. Heart of the Swarm is the second part of the StarCraft II trilogy, with the final part Legacy of the Void.[3]

The expansion, released on March 12, 2013, includes additional units and multiplayer changes from Wings of Liberty, as well as a continuing campaign focusing on the Zerg race, following Sarah Kerrigan in her effort to regain control of the swarm and exact her revenge on the Terran Dominion's emperor, Arcturus Mengsk. On July 15, 2015, Heart of the Swarm was made a standalone title, allowing play without having first purchased Wings of Liberty.

Gameplay

The game has 20 missions in the campaign (plus seven evolution missions which allows the player to upgrade its units), and continues the story from Wings of Liberty.[4] The player plays from the perspective of Sarah Kerrigan, recently returned to her human form by Jim Raynor.[5] Similar to Wings of Liberty, the briefing room is replaced with an interactive exploration of the Leviathan, an enormous zerg breed which functions as a Bioship. Kerrigan and her allies are located in the nerve center, she has a personal chamber for altering her abilities, and there is an evolution pit where she can upgrade her units and perform evolution missions with the evolution master Abathur.

At Blizzard's 2011 BlizzCon conference, it was revealed that Heart of the Swarm will feature 7 new multiplayer units, while removing 3 units[6] and changing the abilities of existing units and buildings. The exact modifications have since changed. In a blog post, game director Dustin Browder explained the current status of the units:[7][8]

Terrans

The Terrans were originally expected to feature two new units: Shredder and Warhound. The Shredder was a mobile, burrowing turret based on the design of the Zerg Spine Crawler, attacking via clouds of toxic gas that were devastating to biological units. Internal testing revealed Shredder was too flexible and powerful, and it was therefore replaced by Widow Mine, a mobile burrowing unit that fires missiles, causing splash damage. The Warhound was a bipedal combat walker with an arm-mounted high-calibre cannon; it also possessed a missile for use against mechanical units.[9] During the closed beta testing phase, pro gamers decried the Warhound for failing to function as intended; it was ultimately removed from multiplayer gameplay although it can be fought in single-player campaign.[10][9]

Several Terran units were modified in Heart of the Swarm. The Hellion, a 4-wheeled buggy with a swivel-mounted flamethrower, gains the ability to transform into the Hellbat, a smaller bipedal walker unit relative to the Viking, whose flamethrower strikes in a fan shape instead of a line. The Hellbat counts as both biological and mechanical, and can therefore be either repaired by SCVs or healed by Medivacs and Medics. The Medivac gains an "Ignite Afterburners" upgrade which acts as a cooldown-based speed boost. The Reaper has undergone extensive changes. It no longer does extra damage to light units, and its grenade, used only on buildings, has been removed entirely. It now has by a passive health-regeneration ability that kicks in several seconds after the Reaper last took damage. Additionally, it no longer needs a Tech Lab add-on to produce, allowing Heart of the Swarm players to train two of them at a time using the Reactor add-on.

Protoss

The Protoss were originally expected to feature the Replicant, a unit which could transform into a clone of any other unit in play, including those controlled by the enemy. It was cut because of its tendency to stifle unit diversity. Three new units made it into the game: Oracle, Tempest and Mothership Core.

The Oracle is a fast, spellcasting, flying unit; it has no abilities that do not require the consumption of Energy. Its original version focused on slowing down economy by blocking off mineral access for a short period of time. It was decided that the ability was too powerful and that it should cause mining to slow, instead of to stop, and thus was replaced with the powerful Pulsar Beam. A single Oracle can kill worker units very quickly with Pulsar Beam, but will just as swiftly drain its Energy reserves. The Oracle also has two other abilities: Revelation, which reveals enemy units and buildings within an area, and Envision, which grants Oracle the ability to detect invisible or burrowed units.

The Tempest is a large, slow flying unit that was originally developed in the Wings of Liberty beta as a replacement for Carriers. (Blizzard have tried to remove Carriers from the game before both StarCraft II releases, only to put them back in due to overwhelming fan demand.) After Wings, in which it functioned basically like a Carrier, it was revised in Swarm to provide large amounts of aerial splash damage, and then again to do extra damage to Massive units. It is slow and does not fire often, but has very long range, requiring a spotter to make the most of its reach.

The Mothership Core is a slow moving, flying unit that has three abilities. Photon Overcharge (previously known as Purify) allows a targeted Nexus to gain a single-target, long-range energy attack, similar to the Photon Cannon. Mass Recall warps Protoss units around Mothership Core, and the Core itself, to any targeted Nexus. Finally, Time Warp slows down enemy ground units' movement and refire rate in an area. Once a Protoss building called Fleet Beacon is constructed, the Mothership Core can transform into the Mothership from Wings, trading in its Photon Overcharge for the mass cloaking field. However, the iconic Vortex ability has been removed entirely to make room for Time Warp, as Blizzard felt the ability was too powerful.

In addition to the new units, the Void Ray's Prismatic Beam has become an active ability that temporarily increases damage against armored units only, while the original effect of gradually increasing damage over time has been removed.

Zerg

The Zerg gained two new units, the Viper and the Swarm Host.

Like the Oracle, the Viper is a flying spellcaster with no integral weapons. It has several abilities: "Blinding Cloud" reduces the range of enemy units to 1. "Abduct" pulls a unit to Viper's location. "Consume" allows Viper to steal health from a friendly structure to increase its energy. The Viper is intended to support large Zerg armies, whereas the Oracle is designed for early-game harassment.

The Swarm Host also lacks any sort of basic attack. Its strength is revealed when it burrows underground: it then begins to periodically spawn Locusts, insectile creatures with low health, high damage output and slow movement. This ability allows Swarm Hosts to attack from long range (and underground), and it does not cost any resources or Energy. Swarm Hosts are not very effective in small numbers, but past a certain critical mass, their ongoing waves of Locusts can become overwhelming, winning wars of attrition with free throwaway units. The Locusts are unable to attack air units however, requiring other units or Spore Crawlers to defend the Swarm Hosts.

The Hydralisk has regained its speed boost upgrade from Brood War. Additionally, both "burrow" and the Overlord movement speed boost may be researched at the Hatchery, no longer requiring a Lair to be built.

In single-player campaign mode, each Zerg combat unit may be evolved into either of two possible alternative versions, each with a powerful, characteristic trait (for instance, the Torrasque strain of the Ultralisk has the ability to revive itself upon death). In addition, there are "primal" versions which are elements of the plot and sport a radically different look (the differences are akin to those between regular and mercenary units in Wings of Liberty). Primal zerg may not be produced. There are no mobile Zerg cloak detection units or troop transport units in campaign mode; as a result, any cloaked units, such as the Protoss Dark Templar and Terran Banshee, are either completely absent (in the case of the former) or do not make use of their cloaking abilities (as in the case of the latter and the Ghost).

Plot

Following the events of Wings of Liberty, Terran Dominion forces attack Sarah Kerrigan and her allies in a research facility in the territory of the Umojan Protectorate. Kerrigan and other residents escape to the flagship of Raynor's Raiders, the Hyperion, but Commander Jim Raynor is cut off by the Dominion. The Hyperion escapes, but Kerrigan remains behind to locate Raynor, only to hear a Dominion newscast announcing that he has been captured and executed. Enraged, Kerrigan returns to Zerg territory to retake control of the swarm and overthrow the tyrannical Dominion.

On the volcanic planet Char, Kerrigan subdues a renegade brood before attacking the occupying Dominion forces. Kerrigan, in a rage, destroys a Dominion command fortress and kills its commander, General Horace Warfield. After a change of heart, she allows the wounded and the unarmed to evacuate. On the frozen planet Kaldir, she annihilates the local Protoss forces, reclaiming the local brood and evolving the swarm to survive in harsh climate.

Zeratul visits Kerrigan and advises her to regain her powers by traveling to Zerus, the original homeworld of the Zerg. On Zerus, Kerrigan learns that a fallen Xel'Naga named Amon was responsible for making the Zerg what they are: A warring swarm, bound to a single overriding will. Some primal Zerg, however, eluded and remained independent constantly evolving creatures. One such zerg named Zurvan, known as the "Ancient One", lies dormant in hibernation and must be awoken by Kerrigan for its knowledge on the origins of the Zerg. Upon awakening, Zurvan advises Kerrigan to seek out a primordial spawning pool to regain her former powers. Kerrigan enters the ancient spawning pool and transforms into a primal Queen of Blades. She kills and absorbs the genetic essences of four powerful hostile primal leaders and Zurvan after it attempts to collect her essence for itself. A primal leader called Dehaka and his pack join her, provided that she gives them essence to collect.

Kerrigan is contacted by a Zerg-infested Alexei Stukov, a former Vice Admiral of the United Earth Directorate who was apparently killed by Duran at Braxis. With Stukov's aid, Kerrigan assaults a research station where Emil Narud, a servant of Amon, is breeding Protoss-Zerg hybrids. After eliminating Dominion facility security forces and Tal'Darim loyal to Narud, Kerrigan confronts Narud in a showdown of power. Morphing first into Raynor and then into Kerrigan's human form, Narud impales Kerrigan before being fatally wounded. Revealing that Amon is revived, he perishes.

Meanwhile, Emperor Arcturus Mengsk contacts Kerrigan and claims Raynor is kept alive and imprisoned, as a bargaining chip against Kerrigan attacking the Dominion throne world of Korhal IV. Kerrigan relays the news to the Hyperion. They plan to hack the Dominion network to locate Raynor, but the only one with such expertise is Colonel Orlan, held captive by Mira Han, a mercenary who refuses to release him. Thus, the Hyperion attacks Mira's mining operations, forcing her to comply. Orlan locates Raynor on a prison ship that constantly changes location. Kerrigan assaults the ship and rescues Raynor, who is revolted by Kerrigan's reversion of form. Although he cannot bring himself to shoot Kerrigan, he tells her that they are done despite her confession that she loves him.

Having united all Zerg under the swarm, Kerrigan launches an invasion of Korhal, concentrating on the capital city of Augustgrad. With the aid of Dehaka and his pack, she destroys Mengsk's Psi Destroyer, a device that hurts the swarm from afar but is ineffective on the primal Zerg. As Kerrigan sends the swarm to assault Mengsk's palace, Crown Prince Valerian urges her to slow down her invasion to minimize civilian losses; she accepts, understanding that Valerian is not like his father. Midway through the final battle, Raynor arrives to assist Kerrigan, much to her surprise. Together, they succeed in breaching the imperial palace. In the confrontation that follows, Mengsk reveals that he has the Xel'Naga artifact in his possession, intending to use it to kill Kerrigan. Before Mengsk could do so, Raynor interferes allowing Kerrigan to impale Mengsk. Kerrigan kills Mengsk by injecting psionic energy causing him to explode.

As the dust settles, Kerrigan thanks Raynor before joining her swarm. With her quest for vengeance completed she renounces everything she once was or had and prepares to face Amon, the enemy of all living things, in a conflict that will not only decide the fate of the Koprulu Sector, but the entire Galaxy.

Development

The development of StarCraft II was announced on May 19, 2007, at the Blizzard Worldwide Invitational in Seoul, South Korea.[11][12] At the June 2008 Blizzard Worldwide Invitational, Blizzard Executive Vice President Rob Pardo said that StarCraft II was to be released as a trilogy of games, starting with Wings of Liberty, focused on the Terrans, followed by Heart of the Swarm, revolving around the Zerg, and finally Legacy of the Void, devoted to the Protoss.[3] Blizzard's storyboard team was already working on Heart of the Swarm in early 2010 while Wings of Liberty's gameplay was refined.[13] Wings of Liberty was released July 27, 2010 to much critical acclaim.[14][15]

A few updates will be made to the game's graphics engine, including upgrades to the look and behavior of Zerg creep, as well as some improvements to the rendering of game environments. However, the expansion will have the same hardware requirements as Wings of Liberty.[16]

On April 30, 2012, Blizzard announced that the latest multiplayer build of Heart of the Swarm would be playable at the MLG Spring Championship (June 8–10) ahead of a planned beta release. No actual release dates were specified.[17]

As of June 15, 2012, the game was primarily complete. The only unfinished thing is "tuning and polishing".[18]

On August 15, 2012, Blizzard announced that the multiplayer beta would be beginning soon.[19] As of September 4, 2012, Blizzard began closed beta testing of the multiplayer beta, releasing it to select Pro-gamers, members of the press, Arcade contest winners, and shoutcasters. The beta testers were not under a non-disclosure agreement, so they were free to stream their games, release pictures, etc.[20] The Heart of the Swarm beta closed on March 1, 2013.[21]

Blizzard officially released Heart of the Swarm for PC and Mac systems in multiple countries on March 12, 2013.

Soundtracks

StarCraft II: Heart of the Swarm Soundtrack
Soundtrack album by Glenn Stafford, Derek Duke, Neal Acree, Russell Brower, Jason Hayes, Cris Velasco
Released March 12, 2013 (2013-03-12) (CE/Digital)
November 8, 2013 (2013-11-08) (Volume II)
Genre Video game soundtrack
Length 74:33 (Volume I)
49:45 (Volume II)
Label Azeroth Music

The soundtrack for Heart of the Swarm was released in two volumes. The first soundtrack was released as part of the Collector's Edition and as a separate iTunes release; the second soundtrack was released initially at BlizzCon 2013 as an exclusive promotional CD, and is currently available at Blizzard's official store.[22]

Marketing

StarCraft II: Heart of the Swarm
Aggregate scores
AggregatorScore
GameRankings86.39%[23]
Metacritic86/100[24]
Review scores
PublicationScore
Edge90/100[25]
Eurogamer9/10[26]
Game Informer8.75/10[27]
GamesRadar4.5/5[28]
IGN8.6/10[29]
Joystiq4/5[30]
PC Gamer (UK)91%[31]
VideoGamer.com9/10[32]

In addition to the standard game, Heart of the Swarm is offered in two special variants for purchase: Digital Deluxe and Collector's Edition. These versions provide items in addition to the game itself. DVD versions of Heart of the Swarm require an additional content download of approximately 8 gigabytes of data before the game can be played for the first time.

Digital Deluxe

The Digital Deluxe provides the following:[33]

  1. A special in-game skin for the Ultralisk unit
  2. Three portraits and three decals for use in Heart of the Swarm
  3. A Baneling pet for use in World of Warcraft
  4. A Heart of the Swarm-themed apparel item and banner for use in Diablo III

Collector's Edition

The Collector's Edition provides all of the items of the Digital Deluxe, as well as the following:[34]

  1. A 144-page artwork book
  2. A mousepad bearing a picture of a battle between Zerg and Terrans
  3. Behind the scenes Blu-ray/DVD set
  4. a CD with 11 audio tracks from the game

Reception

The game sold approximately 1.1 million copies worldwide in its first two days on sale,[35] and was the top-selling PC game for the first quarter of 2013.[36]

PC Gamer gave the game 91%, calling it "A traditional RTS essential for anyone interested in competitive strategy games, and highly recommended for anyone who isn't."[37] GameSpot rated the game 8/10, lauding the game's "fantastically diverse campaign and entertaining online play" while criticizing the writing as "lackluster" and the revenge-obsessed, unnecessarily cruel characterization of the protagonist Kerrigan as "unsympathetic."[38]

Awards

The cinematics from Heart of the Swarm received the 2013 Golden Reel Award for Best Sound & Music Editing: Computer Interactive Entertainment from the Motion Picture Sound Editors society.[39]

References

  1. "StarCraft II unveiled". IGN Games. 2007-05-19. Retrieved 2009-01-06.
  2. "Heart of the Swarm Arrives March 12, 2013 — Presales NOW LIVE". battle.net. 2012-11-13.
  3. 1 2 "StarCraft II split into trilogy". GameSpot. 2008-10-10. Retrieved 2008-10-10.
  4. Frushtick, Russ (2010-08-23). "Blizzard Gives An Update On 'StarCraft 2: Heart of the Swarm'". MTV Multiplayer. Retrieved 2011-12-05.
  5. Pardo, Rob (2008-10-10). "Starcraft 2 Trilogy Announcement". Wegame.com. Retrieved 2008-10-12.
  6. "BlizzCon 2011: StarCraft II: Heart of the Swarm - Units And Abilities". Blizzplanet. 2011-10-27. Retrieved 2012-01-23.
  7. "Developer Update Heart of the Swarm Multiplayer". Blizzard. 2012-04-12. Retrieved 2012-04-12.
  8. "Heart of the Swarm Spotlight: New Units". Blizzard Entertainment. December 20, 2012. Retrieved March 13, 2013.
  9. 1 2 Blizzard Entertainment (March 12, 2013). StarCraft II: Heart of the Swarm. Wintel. Activision Blizzard. Scene: Terran Story units info panel. Level/area: The Reckoning.
  10. "Thoughts on Balance Update 2". Archived from the original on September 18, 2012.
  11. Onyett, Charles (2007-05-18). "Blizzard's Worldwide Invitational – The StarCraft 2 Announcement". IGN. Retrieved 2007-05-19.
  12. Park, Andrew (2007-05-18). "Starcraft II warps into Seoul". GameSpot. Retrieved 2007-05-19.
  13. "GiantBomb: Chris Metzen Talks StarCraft II and World of Warcraft: Cataclysm". Blizzplanet. 2010-04-30. Retrieved 2010-05-06.
  14. Thorsen, Tor (July 11, 2010). "Starcraft II launches July 27". May 3, 2010. GameSpot.
  15. "On Kotaku". Kotaku.com. 2010-05-03. Retrieved 2010-07-26.
  16. "BlizzCon 2011: StarCraft II: Heart of the Swarm FAQ". Blizzplanet. 2011-10-27. Retrieved 2011-11-06.
  17. "Heart of the Swarm at MLG". Blizzard Entertainment. 2012-04-30. Retrieved 2012-05-14.
  18. "Heart of the Swarm is 99% complete". Kotaku. 2012-06-15. Retrieved 2012-06-15.
  19. "Heart_of_the_Swarm_Beta_Coming_Soon". Blizzard Entertainment. 2012-08-15. Retrieved 2012-08-15.
  20. "Heart of the Swarm Beta Now Live!". Blizzard Entertainment. 2012-09-04. Retrieved 2012-09-04.
  21. "Heart of the Swarm Beta Ends March 1". Blizzard Entertainment. February 28, 2013. Retrieved March 2, 2013.
  22. "Starcraft II Heart of the Swarm Soundtrack Volume II". Blizzard Entertainment. November 8, 2013. Retrieved March 28, 2014.
  23. "StarCraft II: Heart of the Swarm (PC)". GameRankings. Retrieved 2013-05-28.
  24. "StarCraft II: Heart of the Swarm for PC - Reviews at Metacritic". Metacritic. Retrieved 2013-04-11.
  25. "StarCraft 2: Heart Of The Swarm review". Edge magazine. Retrieved 2013-03-18.
  26. "StarCraft 2: Heart Of The Swarm review". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2013-03-19.
  27. "A Dip In The Dark Side". Gameinformer. Retrieved 2013-03-19.
  28. "StarCraft 2: Hail to the Queen". Gamesradar. Retrieved 2013-03-18.
  29. "StarCraft 2: Heart Of The Swarm review". IGN. Retrieved 2013-03-20.
  30. "StarCraft 2: Heart of the Swarm review: Zerg rushing towards resolution". AOL. 18 March 2013. Retrieved 18 March 2013.
  31. "Starcraft 2: Heart of the Swarn review". PC Gamer. Retrieved 2013-03-22.
  32. "StarCraft 2: Heart of the Swarm". Videogamer. Retrieved 2013-03-18.
  33. "Heart of the Swarm Digital Deluxe". Blizzard Entertainment. Retrieved March 5, 2013.
  34. "Heart of the Swarm Collector's Edition". Blizzard Entertainment. Retrieved March 5, 2013.
  35. McWhertor, Michael (21 March 2013). "StarCraft 2: Heart of the Swarm sells 1.1 million copies in two days". Polygon. Vox Media. Retrieved 21 March 2013.
  36. Bramblet, Matthew (2013-05-18). "PlayStation 3 Diablo III Release Date in 2013". diablo.somepage.com. Retrieved 2013-05-28.
  37. McCormick, Rich (2013-03-20). "StarCraft 2: Heart of the Swarm review". PC Gamer. Retrieved 2013-03-22.
  38. Shannon, Daniel (2013-03-20). "Starcraft II: Heart of the Swarm PC Review". www.gamespot.com. Retrieved 2013-05-28.
  39. 2014 Golden Reel Award Winners: TV/Feature Animation & Documentary Category

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