The Order: 1886

The Order: 1886
Developer(s) Ready at Dawn
SCE Santa Monica Studio
Publisher(s) Sony Computer Entertainment
Director(s) Dana Jan
Ru Weerasuriya
Artist(s) Nathan Phail-Liff
Writer(s) Kirk Ellis
Ru Weerasuriya
Composer(s) Jason Graves[1]
Platform(s) PlayStation 4
Release date(s) February 20, 2015[2]
Genre(s) Action-adventure[3]
Mode(s) Single-player

The Order: 1886 is a third-person action-adventure video game developed by Ready at Dawn and SCE Santa Monica Studio and published by Sony Computer Entertainment. It was released for the PlayStation 4 on February 20, 2015.[4] Set in an 1886 alternate history London, the game follows the legendary Knights of the Round Table as they battle to keep the world safe from half-breeds, such as Lycans and vampires, as well as fringe organizations rebelling against the government.

Having been highly anticipated as a PlayStation 4 exclusive before release, The Order: 1886 received mixed reviews from critics. Praise was particularly directed at the game's production value, graphics, and technical achievements, while most criticisms were concerning the length, story, gameplay, replay value, and the overall amount of involvement the player is given.

Gameplay

Played in a third-person perspective, The Order: 1886 is an action-adventure story-focused game with shooting mechanics where players journey through linear set paths in each level to complete the story. Players take control of Galahad, a knight of 'The Order'. Players defeat human and werewolf-like creatures, using a varied selection of firearms. Players complete puzzles and interact with NPCs while following the game's story.

Synopsis

Setting

The Order: 1886 is set in an alternate history London, where an old order of knights keep all of the world safe from half breed monsters, who are a combination of animal and man. In the game's history, around the seventh or eighth centuries a small number of humans took on bestial traits. The majority of humans feared these half-breeds and war broke out. Despite the humans outnumbering the half-breeds, their animal strength gave them the upper hand in centuries of conflict.

Centuries earlier, humanity finds new hope in King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table. King Arthur and his like-minded knights take the fight to the half breeds, but Arthur soon realizes it's a losing battle. Through a mysterious turn of fate, the Knights discover Blackwater, a mystical liquid that significantly extends their lifetimes and gives them remarkable healing abilities. Despite this new advantage, the half-breeds continue to win battle after battle, until the Industrial Revolution turns the tide. Engineers are far ahead of their time, inventing technologies such as thermal imaging, Zeppelins, and wireless communications. New weapons belch electricity, ignite clouds of molten metal on top of enemies, and fulfill dual functions as fragmentation grenades and proximity mines. Additionally, the events involving Jack the Ripper take place 2 years earlier, and appear to occur on a night-by-night basis, as opposed to the 1888 Ripper murders that unfolded on one particular night.

Plot

During the autumn of 1886 London is plagued by both half-breed attacks and an anti-government insurgency. After fighting off rebels in Mayfair, Sir Galahad pursues the survivors into the Underground where he encounters a number of werewolf-like half-breeds known as Lycans. Galahad's mentor, Sir Percival, one of the Order's most veteran knights, suspects that there is a correlation between the two and requests permission to investigate the rebel stronghold of Whitechapel. His concerns are dismissed by the Lord Chancellor, who believes that the Order should remain dedicated to fighting half-breeds.

With tacit approval from Sir Lucan, the Order's Knight Commander and adopted son of the Lord Chancellor, Percival and Galahad undertake a mission into Whitechapel accompanied by the other two members of their team, Lady Igraine and the Marquis de Lafayette. After encountering fierce resistance they reach the rebel headquarters in the abandoned Royal London Hospital, only to find it occupied by Lycans. Galahad and Igrane discover evidence of a rebel plot to infiltrate the Agamemnon, flagship of the United India Company's airship fleet, and assassinate the company chairman Lord Hastings, a frequent guest to the Round Table. The team boards the airship and foils the assassination attempt before a bomb detonates on board. Hastings and most of the passengers are evacuated, but Galahad and Percival remain on board to search for the rebel leader. A second explosion sends the Agamemnon crashing into Hyde Park, destroying the Crystal Palace in the process. Galahad survives but discovers that Percival has been killed.

In council at the Palace of Westminster, Lafayette is knighted and assumes Percival's seat at the Round Table. The Lord Chancellor is highly critical of the mission, asserting that Percival's death and the extensive collateral damage were in vain. The council is interrupted when rebels stage a major attack on Westminster Bridge aimed at killing Hastings, who is once again saved by the knights.

Still enraged by Percival's death, Galahad returns to Whitechapel seeking a confrontation with the rebel leader, who is revealed to be an Indian woman named Lakshmi who is later revealed to be the hitherto presumed dead Queen Lakshmibai of Jhansi of the princely state of Jhansi in Indian subcontinent. Pleading with Galahad that the United India Company is the true enemy, she leads him to the company's warehouses in Blackwall where they discover a large number of hibernating vampires packed in crates bound for the Northeastern United States. According to Lakshmi, Lord Hastings himself is a vampire (known to the general public as "Jack the Ripper") and is acting in response to the Order's recent success.

At Westminster, Galahad's concerns fall on deaf ears. Lucan sympathizes with him however, and joins Galahad and Lakshmi in infiltrating the United India Company headquarters in Mayfair. They find evidence of a conspiracy to traffic half-breeds overseas and encounter Hastings in his vampire form. Before Galahad can act against Hastings, Lucan reveals himself to be a Lycan and attacks Galahad. The two fight, but Lucan flees as the authorities arrive. Galahad is taken into custody by Lafayette and Igraine, charged with treason, and sentenced to death.

After several weeks, Galahad escapes captivity in the Westminster Catacombs and attempts to flee only to be cornered. Facing re-imprisonment, Galahad throws himself off a ledge into the River Thames and is recovered by Nikola Tesla , the Order's armourer with the help from an old-man. Tesla later sought help from Lakshmi to help take care of him. Lakshmi later reveals to Galahad, upon being questioned about her having blackwater, that she was bestowed a knighthood by Sir Bors de Ganis. Fearing that Tesla has come under suspicion, Galahad returns to Westminster in an attempt to extract him. He finds Tesla alive but also encounters Lucan in the laboratory. The two fight a second time with Galahad emerging the victor. The mortally wounded Lucan expresses regret for having betrayed the Order, claiming that he only did so in order to save his race from extinction. The two are discovered by the Lord Chancellor, who confesses his knowledge of Lucan's true nature. He reveals to Galahad that centuries before he had fought and destroyed an entire tribe of Lycans, but couldn't bring himself to kill the infant Lucan, who he adopted as a son instead. The Lord Chancellor orders that evidence of Lucan's betrayal may not be used to exonerate Galahad and must be kept a secret for the sake of the Order. Still unwilling to kill his son, he leaves Galahad to administer the coup de grace. The two former comrades reconcile, and a remorseful Galahad raises his weapon and fires, killing Lucan, as the screen cuts to black.

In a post-credits scene, Galahad is seen on the roof of a building overlooking London, which has been put under martial law. He is warned by Tesla over the radio that the police could strike anytime and that they should leave the city immediately. Galahad reminds Tesla that he is "Galahad no more".

Development

"I hope people who do like these kind of games [games with short length], do play them. But I also want to be in an industry where me as a gamer, I'm given the choice to do that. I've played games that lasted two hours that were better than games that I played for 16 hours. That's the reality of it. Gameplay length for me is so relative to quality. It's just like a movie. Just because a movie is three hours long, it doesn't make it better"[5]

Ru Weerasuriya, founder of Ready at Dawn

In a post on the PlayStation Blog, Ready at Dawn CEO and creative director Ru Weerasuriya revealed that The Order: 1886 has been in the works since 2010. The game was announced at the Sony E3 2013 Conference as a new intellectual property for the PlayStation 4.[6] The studio's internal proprietary RAD Engine 4.0 was used for the game's development.[7] On August 29, 2013, Weerasuriya revealed that the decision to go ahead with The Order: 1886 was influenced by Uncharted 2: Among Thieves. On February 6, 2014, it was announced that the game would be single-player only and that the game will run at 30 FPS.

On January 17, 2015, Ready at Dawn confirmed that the game had been declared gold, indicating it was being prepared for production and release.[8] The Order: 1886 was released on February 20, 2015.

A video of the game's full-length playthrough, with a duration of about 5 hours, was leaked online before the game's official release.[9] As a single-player only and full-priced game at launch, concern was raised about the value of the game.[5] Weerasuriya defended the game, saying that "it's a matter of quality, not quantity."[5] Technical officer Andrea Pessino also responded to the actual length of the game, saying that the game will take eight to ten hours to finish if the player play it at normal pace and difficulty level.[10]

Reception

Reception
Aggregate scores
AggregatorScore
GameRankings62.61%[11]
Metacritic63/100[12]
Review scores
PublicationScore
Destructoid6/10[13]
EGM4.5/10[14]
Game Informer7.75/10[15]
Game Revolution[16]
GameSpot5/10[17]
GamesRadar[18]
GameTrailers8.2/10[19]
Giant Bomb[20]
IGN6.5/10[21]
Play81%[22]
Polygon5.5/10[23]
VideoGamer.com6/10[24]
Hardcore Gamer2.5/5[25]
Metro (UK)4/10[26]
The Escapist[27]

The Order: 1886 received mixed reviews from critics, with some praise particularly directed to the game's production value, graphics and technical achievements, while receiving strong criticism regarding the game's length, story, gameplay, replay value and the player's involvement in the game. It received an aggregated score of 62.61% on GameRankings based on 66 reviews[11] and 63/100 on Metacritic based on 94 reviews.[12]

Daniel Bloodworth from GameTrailers praised its impeccable graphics, textures, lighting and facial animation, as he stated that "the look and feel of The Order is powerful enough to be worth a playthrough on its own." He also praised the detailed design of characters, environments and locations.[19]

Play gave the game an 8.1/10, praising its satisfying action, high production value, decent voice-acting and dialogue, detailed recreation of 19th Century London and realistic cover-based gunplay. Also praised was the overall amount of gameplay, such as cover-based shooting, stealth and puzzle-solving. However, the weapons were criticized, stating "ranging from the borderline useless to the ludicrously overpowered" The review was summarized by saying that "while a brief yet explosive cinematic adventure might not be what some modern gamers want, it's quite clearly the best way to showcase the true power of a new console just after its first birthday."[22]

Matt Miller from Game Informer praised its filmic presentation, atmospheric orchestral music, rewarding but scripted action scene, huge variety of weapons, smooth control, solid gunplay, complicated characters, authentic environments and memorable location. However, he criticized the low replay value, the story for leaving way too many unresolved conflicts and questions, as well as the combat and gameplay which he stated "feels like playing through a long- established template for third-person shooting mechanics" He summarized the review by saying that "1886 goes against the current tide of open-world wandering and emergent sequences, and banks on the idea that players can enjoy a straightforward and relatively brief cinematic adventure."[15]

Brandin Tyrrel from IGN gave the game a 6.5/10, while praising its engaging and atmospheric universe and creative weaponry, he criticized the game pacing, lack of a sense of interactivity with the world delivered, disappointingly generic cover-based shooting, non-tactical gameplay, poor aspect ratio, shallow quick-time events, and excessive linear missions, which he stated "has stripped players away from freedom". He also criticized the lack of content, which he stated "There is no reason to revisit the short and stunted single-player campaign once it’s been completed, there just isn’t a lot to it."[21]

Chris Carter from Destructoid criticized its gunplay, calling it "well-built but standard", lack of gameplay, which he stated "Where The Order ceases to be great is the self-indulgent camera angles and need to focus so much on turning the game into a walking simulator." He also criticized the linear gameplay, predictable narrative, forgettable characters, disappointing boss fight, short length, as well as the lack of replay value and any types of multiplayer. He summarized the review by saying that "I sincerely hope this isn't the last we've seen of this universe, but for now, it's only worth visiting once, briefly."[13]

David Houghton from GamesRadar criticized the limited variety of enemy types, the narrow view of environmental design, restrictive world, basic combat, needless cinematic sequences, unremarkable story and characters, and the excessive use of quick time events, which he described as "the maddening, illogical, pathological need to turn everything into a QTE killing any excitement or sense of control." He also criticized the game for lacking player involvement and constantly taking control away from the players. He also stated that "It [The Order] seemingly gross lack of insight into either the state of gaming in 2015." He summarized the game by saying that "The Order’s archaic, player-detached approaches to interaction and narrative nonetheless make it a dated and instantly forgettable experience."[18]

Kevin VanOrd from GameSpot criticized the story telling, gameplay and lack of missions with guns and werewolves which had been replaced with long periods of inactivity of observing objects and slowly walking. VanOrd did however praise the stylish visuals, fun weapons when given the opportunity to be used and the excellent voice acting that was "far better than the material deserved."[17]

Peter Paras from Game Revolution was critical of the game, citing its poor AI, uncompelling story, lack of character development, unenjoyable gameplay, and the length of the game, which he states "overstays its welcome even at less than 7 hours." He compared the game to Ryse: Son of Rome and Heavenly Sword, calling it "a ho-hum action-adventure game that accompanies a console’s first-year launch."[16]

David Jenkins from Metro gave the game a 4/10, calling it a Gears of War clone, claiming it had uninspired gameplay, boring storytelling, lifeless and repetitive action and bland characters. He stated that "perhaps their programmers should have taken their obvious talents to some visual effects company, because they clearly have no appetite for interactive entertainment."[26]

Sales

The retail version of The Order: 1886 was the best selling game in its week of release in the UK and Ireland,[28] debuting at No. 1 in the UK retail software sales chart. This made it the first game developed by Sony's in-house team to take the first spot in the chart since August 2014.[29]

References

  1. Ru Weerasuriya (November 26, 2014). "Orchestrating The Order: 1886". PlayStation Blog. Sony. Retrieved November 26, 2014.
  2. Phillips, Tom (June 10, 2014). "The Order: 1886 release date confirmed". Eurogamer. Retrieved June 10, 2014.
  3. Yin-Poole, Wesley (25 June 2013). "PS4 exclusive The Order: 1886 is a linear third-person action adventure with shooting mechanics". Eurogamer. Retrieved 10 September 2015.
  4. "‘The Order: 1886’ Stands to Dramatically Divide the PlayStation Audience". VICE.
  5. 1 2 3 Wesley Yin-Poole (2015-02-16). "Ready at Dawn responds to concern over The Order: 1886 campaign length". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2015-02-18.
  6. Moriarty, Colin. "Gamescom: PS4-Exclusive The Order: 1886 Will Launch in 2014". IGN. Retrieved August 22, 2013.
  7. "The Order: 1886 Preview – Exploring Ready At Dawn’s PS4 Engine".
  8. Rob Crossley (2015-01-21). "The Order 1886 Goes Gold, With Preorder Bonuses Revealed". GameSpot. Retrieved 2015-01-21.
  9. Emily Gera (2015-02-16). "Leaked playthrough of The Order: 1886 suggests you can complete the game in five hours". Polygon. Retrieved 2015-02-18.
  10. Rob Crossley (2015-02-17). "The Order 1886 Dev Denies "Five Hour" Claim". GameSpot. Retrieved 2015-02-18.
  11. 1 2 "The Order: 1886 for PlayStation 4". GameRankings. Retrieved July 22, 2015.
  12. 1 2 "The Order: 1886 for PlayStation 4 Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved July 22, 2015.
  13. 1 2 Chris Carter (2015-02-19). "Review: The Order: 1886 - Not Enough Chaos". Destructoid. Retrieved 2015-02-20.
  14. Andrew Fitch (2015-02-19). "The Order: 1886 review". Electronic Gaming Monthly. Retrieved 2015-02-20.
  15. 1 2 Matt Miller (2015-02-19). "The Order: 1886 review: Uncompromising Cinematic Vision". Game Informer. Retrieved 2015-02-20.
  16. 1 2 Peter Paras (2015-02-19). "The Order: 1886 Review". Game Revolution. Retrieved 2015-02-20.
  17. 1 2 Kevin VanOrd (2015-02-19). "The Order: 1886 review: From hell". GameSpot. Retrieved 2015-02-20.
  18. 1 2 David Houghton (2015-02-19). "The Order: 1886 review". GamesRadar. Retrieved 2015-02-20.
  19. 1 2 Daniel Bloodworth (2015-02-19). "The Order: 1886 - Review". GameTrailers. Retrieved 2015-02-20.
  20. Jeff Gerstmann (2015-02-19). "The Order: 1886 Review". Giant Bomb. Retrieved 2015-02-20.
  21. 1 2 Brandin Tyrrel (2015-02-19). "The Order: 1886 review: The Struggle Within". IGN. Retrieved 2015-02-20.
  22. 1 2 "The Order: 1886 review". Play Magazine. 2015-02-19. Retrieved 2015-02-20.
  23. Justin McElroy (2015-02-19). "The Order: 1886 review: London Calling". Polygon. Retrieved 2015-02-20.
  24. Steven Burns (2015-02-19). "The Order: 1886 review". VideoGamer.com. Retrieved 2015-02-20.
  25. Steve Hannley (2015-02-19). "Review: The Order: 1886". Hardcore Gamer. Retrieved 2015-02-20.
  26. 1 2 David Jenkins (2015-02-19). "The Order: 1886 review - Victorian Folly". Metro. Retrieved 2015-02-20.
  27. Justin Clouse (2015-02-19). "The Order: 1886 Review - All Out Of Steam". The Escapist. Retrieved 2015-02-20.
  28. "The Order: 1886 sales success, shows reviews don't matter". Gamezone.
  29. Rob Crossley (2015-02-23). "UK Chart: The Order 1886 Shoots to First". GameSpot. Retrieved 2015-02-23.

External links

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