Twisted Metal (2012 video game)
Twisted Metal | |
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North American cover art | |
Developer(s) | Eat Sleep Play |
Publisher(s) | Sony Computer Entertainment |
Director(s) | David Jaffe |
Producer(s) | Scott Campbell |
Designer(s) |
David Jaffe Scott Campbell |
Artist(s) | David Jaffe, Scott Campbell |
Series | Twisted Metal |
Platform(s) | PlayStation 3 |
Release date(s) | |
Genre(s) | Vehicle combat |
Mode(s) | Single-player, multiplayer |
Twisted Metal is a vehicle combat video game developed by Eat Sleep Play and published by Sony Computer Entertainment for the PlayStation 3. It is a reboot of the Twisted Metal franchise. The game was originally planned to be released in October 2011[3] but was delayed to early 2012.[1][2]
Gameplay
The game focuses heavily on multiplayer combat, including various online game modes with up to 4 player split-screen and 16-players online. For example, the Nuke Mode is a new online game mode where you choose a faction to play against an opposing faction. In this mode, each faction has a giant metal statue that is being held in the air by a helicopter, which the opposing team must try to destroy. In order to destroy these statues, the player must abduct the enemy team's leader, then sacrifice the leader to a missile launcher that will, in turn, launch a nuclear missile.
The person who sacrifices the leader and launches the missile has to control it to hit the opposing teams statue in the air. In order to win the opposing team has to repeat the process 3 times before the statue is destroyed for a team to win. There are four factions: the Clowns, the Dolls, the Skulls, and the Holy Men. The former having been announced as being inspired by Sweet Tooth and Dollface. The latter are led by Mr. Grimm and the Preacher respectively.[4]
Plot
The Twisted Fate of Sweet Tooth the Clown
The first arc features Sweet Tooth, a demented, clown-themed serial killer obsessed with finding Sophie, "the one that got away", to finish the job he started years ago. Frustrated, Sweet Tooth decides to enter the Twisted Metal contest, intent on having Calypso send him to wherever his daughter is hiding. After destroying the Brothers Grimm (who drive over-sized monster trucks), Sweet Tooth confronts Calypso in Calypso Industries, the latter's massive skyscraper headquarters. He demands that Calypso send him to his daughter, only to be transported to a long-buried coffin. It is revealed that Sophie became manically depressed by the events in her life and committed suicide moments before Sweet Tooth attacked the hospital. Swearing revenge on Calypso's treachery (even though he himself specifically wished to be "taken to where Sophia was"), Sweet Tooth futilely pounds on the lid of Sophie's coffin; above ground, his alias has been spray-painted on Sophie's tombstone.
Mr. Grimm's Dark Trip Back
The second arc features Daniel Grimm, a violent biker determined to go back to the past and prevent his father from performing his fatal stunt, saving his life and hopefully putting Daniel's own future back on track. Eventually, Mr. Grimm wins the competition by defeating Iron Maiden, a titanic Dollface mecha. As per his wish, Calypso sends him back in time to before the accident occurred. Unfortunately, Grimm was sent back in adult form and placed inside a car with his younger self and father; when the elder Grimm sees the intruder, a struggle ensues that causes a crash. The crash kills the father, but both young and old Grimms survive. Young Grimm decides to kill his older self with the handgun under the car seat. As a dying Grimm muses that he would've done the same thing if the roles were reversed, his body fades away, implying that the young boy will grow into the same future that his older self tried to prevent.
The Madness of Dollface
The third and final arc features Krista Sparks, "Dollface". She is a narcissistic, obsessive, and violent woman seeking to become a famous supermodel; to this end, she is willing to do anything, including sabotage and murder of her competition. Krista's car accident and its aftermath lead to her entrance into the Twisted Metal tournament, intent on wishing the mask away and resuming her career. At the end of the tournament, Krista is forced to destroy Sweet Tooth's Carnival of Carnage, a clown-themed mobile fortress built by fanatical followers of the deceased Sweet Tooth in his memory. Brought before Calypso, she rethinks her wish to be famous rather than free, Krista wishes to be on "the world's biggest runway", bent on becoming the most famous supermodel in the world. Calypso grants this wish by transporting Krista to an airport runway as she failed to specify her wish, where a broken heel causes her to fall and get killed by a landing plane. Ironically the mask finally comes off upon her death.
The Preacher's Quest
Throughout the game, an enigmatic figure known as "the Preacher" seeks to defeat Calypso. He is first heard on a radio talk show, insisting that Calypso is a powerful demonic entity seeking to drive the world into ruin; the talk show host agrees that times are bad, but dismisses the Preacher's claims. Later, he is seen outside Calypso Industries, declaring that he knows who Calypso truly is; as he says this, the building briefly flashes to a more demonic form. The Preacher vows to free the souls trapped by Calypso and lead them to defeat the tournament host; above, Calypso is seen in his office, seemingly aware of the Preacher.
Epilogue
The final ending of the game shows the Preacher sitting in a padded cell, seemingly within a psychiatric ward. As he rants that he will stop Calypso in the name of God, the camera pans out to reveal that he is imprisoned within a demonic structure, surrounded by hundreds of other tormented individuals. The scene pans out to reveal the prison within the large castle painting on the wall of Calypso's office, implying that the villain has been trapping the souls of his tournament's victims, as well as imprisoning anyone who protests the tournament. After showing a few new items in the display case - the license plate from the truck of Daniel's father, Kratos' blades of chaos, Sweet Tooth's machete, and Krista's doll mask - the building is shown from the outside, briefly flashing to its demonic form as the scene cuts to black.
Credits
After part of the credits, a man approaches Sophie's grave. He is revealed to be Charlie Kane, another of Marcus' children and another survivor of the clown's massacre. Over the years, he has come to believe that his father left him alive to act as an heir; if anything happened to Sweet Tooth, he would be able to take his place. Now that his father is dead, Charlie has come to claim his legacy; he digs up Sophie's coffin, containing both her and Sweet Tooth's remains, and retrieves the clown mask. Charlie dons the mask, sets his head alight, and drives away in his father's ice cream truck, vowing to avenge his father's demise by killing Calypso.
At the end of the credits, Calypso himself comes to Sophie's open grave, musing that she had great potential to cause pain and destruction. Throwing a sack into the grave, he resurrects Sophie in an outfit similar to her father, seemingly to serve as his loyal enforcer. As Calypso asks if she is ready, Sophie lifts her head, revealing red eyes behind her demonic clown mask.
Development
Twisted Metal was in development for three years.[5] In early stages of the game, the background setting for Twisted Metal was in a post-apocalyptic wasteland. The name of the project was tentatively titled, Twisted Metal: Apocalypse. This idea was later dropped, due to co-director, Scott Campbell, not being in favor for this post-apocalyptic version of the franchise.[6] The game began development as a downloadable PlayStation Network title, similar to Jaffe's previous Calling All Cars! title. Sony Computer Entertainment was impressed by the title and requested for the title to be expanded into a full retail game. The development of the title then shifted from a PlayStation Network game to a "(USD)$39 product" which was multiplayer-only, similar to 2007's Warhawk and 2008's SOCOM: U.S. Navy SEALs Confrontation. Sony then requested for the game to contain a single-player mode with a story element, while Sony's marketing department said "Yeah, you guys don’t realize how many fans love the Twisted Metal universe, you gotta give us the stories."[7]
The game was first unofficially announced to be developed by Jaffe and his new company, Eat Sleep Play, developing a new title in the Twisted Metal franchise for the PlayStation 3. The announcement, not officially confirmed by Sony, came from a hidden message that was decoded in the Twisted Metal: Head-On "Dark Past" documentary where groups of numbers appeared on screen at points during the video which corresponded to letters of the alphabet. When deciphered, the message reads "Twisted Metal is coming on PS3". The title of the game is believed to have been displayed various times throughout the documentary which is the original Twisted Metal logo but in colors of rustic browns and yellows.[8]
For two years, Sony would not officially confirm the existence of the game, and upon further questioning on multiple occasions Jaffe would insistently decline to comment further, and in general refused to officially announce the title of Eat Sleep Play's first major game until Sony was ready for him to do so. Despite this, rumors persisted heavily that Eat Sleep Play was indeed developing another Twisted Metal. While presenting an award at the AIAS Interactive Achievement Awards ceremony in the States, a heckler in the crowd yelled, "Twisted Metal!" To which Jaffe replied, "Soon, bitch. Eight or nine months."[9] In the months leading up to the Electronic Entertainment Expo of 2010, rumors surfaced that a new Twisted Metal would be announced under the names of either Twisted Metal X[10] or Twisted Metal: Harbor City, the same name as the cancelled sequel to Twisted Metal: Black.[11] In response to this, Jaffe posted on his Twitter, which he later confirmed in an email to the games site Joystiq that Eat Sleep Play was not working on a new Twisted Metal game.[12]
However, at the very end of Sony's E3 2010 press conference, a surprise live-action teaser trailer was shown, with no previous indication as to what it was, that revealed a new Twisted Metal game. The trailer was followed up by a real-life replica of the character Sweet Tooth's ice cream truck driving onto the stage, driven by a man in a Sweet Tooth costume (based on Twisted Metal: Black). David Jaffe and Scott Campbell appeared out of the back, revealed that Eat Sleep Play was in fact developing a new Twisted Metal game, simply entitled Twisted Metal, and then proceeded to give a gameplay demonstration.[13] After the press conference, a blog post went up on the official PlayStation web site by Jaffe explaining why he had outright lied about the existence of Twisted Metal for PS3 and Eat Sleep Play's involvement. He explained that he felt E3 was a show all about joyful surprises, and that because of the internet, those were becoming increasingly rare. In light of this, Sony approached him to make a surprise E3 announcement, and he decided to do whatever it took to keep it a surprise in hopes that the fans of the series would experience such a reaction of joy and wonder.[14] At E3, Jaffe and Campbell further detailed the new online multiplayer mode, and gave the official tentative 2011 release date.
Marketing and release
Prior to its release, Twisted Metal was marketed and promoted heavily through the use of numerous Internet and TV trailers. In addition, Sony offered anyone who logged into the Shoot My Truck website on February 13 and 14 the opportunity to activate an M249-SAW aimed at the Sweet Tooth truck Sony constructed to promote the series.[15] For marketing considerations, the original release date of the game was pushed back to apply some "extra time, polish, and love". In addition, Twisted Metal creator David Jaffe asked fans to help pick what goes on the back of the box by voting for one of a number of choices.[16]
Buyers of the first batch of copies (Limited Edition) received a voucher to download Twisted Metal: Black for free. It is not a high-definition remake, however, it is simply a port of the original PlayStation 2 version; lacking the online function that was added in a later re-release.[17] In addition, every copy of Twisted Metal included a voucher to download the Sweet Tooth Outcast multiplayer skin for Starhawk.[18] Sony collaborated with several retail outlets on a pre-order bonus (early access to Axel) available through several store chains throughout the world.[18]
Online pass
Justin Trease, Twisted Metal's QA lead, confirmed to press at CES that the game will come equipped with an online pass code system - a system that requires players who purchased used copies of the game to purchase a pass to access online features. Twisted Metal creator David Jaffe hoped to avoid implementing an online pass for the game, but said it was not his decision. Jaffe acknowledged that an online pass is "probably good business" for publisher Sony, but said it could be counter-productive when trying to earn the trust of gamers.[19]
Demo
A demo was released on January 31, featuring eight vehicles to try out in two online modes Deathmatch and Nuke, as well as an offline single-player challenge mode. The servers as of February 8 are no longer up and the demo is no longer available.[20][21]
Soundtrack
Twisted Metal (Original Soundtrack) | |
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Soundtrack album by Various Artists | |
Released | January 14, 2012 |
Recorded | Various times |
Genre | Alternative metal, hip hop, electronica |
Length | 01:01:30 |
Label | Sony Computer Entertainment America LLC |
Producer | Various |
The game's score has a collection of original compositions by a multiple artists such as Brain, Larry LaLonde, Dan Monti & Greg Tripi.[22] The soundtrack also features a collection of licensed tracks from well known artists such as Rob Zombie, Iggy Pop and Wolfmother. The song "Get Twisted" was debuted by HipHopGamer, who is known more for being a video game journalist with the artist Brain performing the music. Two of the game's tracks, "Dragula" and "More Human Than Human" from Rob Zombie and White Zombie, respectively, have been featured in previous Twisted Metal games in the franchise.
Twisted Metal (Original Soundtrack) | |||
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No. | Title | Artist | Length |
1. | "Twisted Metal Theme" | Larry LaLonde, Dan Monti and Greg Tripi | 2:18 |
2. | "Gentlemen, Start Your Weapons" | Chuck Carr | 3:24 |
3. | "Boom" | Dan Monti | 3:25 |
4. | "Deathwish" | Larry LaLonde and Dan Monti | 2:57 |
5. | "The Twisted Fate of Sweet Tooth the Clown" | Michael Wandmacher | 3:33 |
6. | "Race to Destruction" | Brain | 2:58 |
7. | "Shotgunner" | Larry LaLonde and Dan Monti | 2:52 |
8. | "Carmageddon" | Tommy Hopkins, Jake Bowen, Joel Stevenett and Chuck E. Myers | 2:54 |
9. | "Object Identified" | Lovechild | 3:14 |
10. | "Mr. Grimm's Dark Trip Back" | Michael Wandmacher | 2:37 |
11. | "Ready Set Destroy" | Sascha Dikiciyan | 3:37 |
12. | "Roadkill" | Larry LaLonde and Dan Monti | 2:47 |
13. | "Motopsycho" | Chuck Carr | 3:31 |
14. | "The Madness of Doll Face" | Michael Wandmacher | 2:16 |
15. | "Ready to Die" | Brain and Buckethead | 3:11 |
16. | "Bruise Control" | Lovechild | 4:21 |
17. | "Hell on Wheels" | Chuck Carr | 3:06 |
18. | "Shoot to Kill" | Lovechild | 2:58 |
19. | "Calypso Industries" | Michael Wandmacher | 2:19 |
20. | "Get Twisted" | Brain and Hip Hop Gamer | 3:12 |
Licensed Tracks in Twisted Metal | |||
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No. | Title | Artist | Length |
1. | "California Queen" | Wolfmother | |
2. | "The Champ" | Ghostface Killah | |
3. | "Cold Metal" | Iggy Pop | |
4. | "Crazy" | Patsy Cline | |
5. | "Don’t Smile" | The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion | |
6. | "Dragula" | Rob Zombie | |
7. | "Frenetica" | Wolfgang Gartner | |
8. | "Heavy Metal" | Sammy Hagar | |
9. | "I Can't Drive 55" | Sammy Hagar | |
10. | "Mask" | Sepultura | |
11. | "More Human than Human" | White Zombie | |
12. | "Natural Born Killer" | Avenged Sevenfold | |
13. | "Raise the Flag" | Airbourne | |
14. | "Riding on the Wind" | Judas Priest | |
15. | "Sea Shanty Medley" | Phillip Green (PRS) (C) | |
16. | "Straight Outta Compton" | N.W.A |
Reception
Reception | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Twisted Metal received generally positive reviews. Aggregating review websites GameRankings and Metacritic gave the game 76.28% and 76/100.[23][24] Reviewers praised the multiplayer and gameplay, but several criticized its story mode, lack of characters compared to earlier installments, and somewhat difficult controls.
References
- 1 2 Twisted Metal Update: Happy Valentine’s Day
- 1 2 Dutton, Fred. "Twisted Metal Euro release date announced". Eurogamer.
- ↑ Twisted Metal Release Update
- ↑ "Official Twisted Metal 2011 Website".
- ↑ Ingham, Tim. "Twisted Metal PS3 in development for 18 months". CVG.
- ↑ Jaffe, David (16 July 2010). "Twisted Metal: Apocalypse!". davidjaffe.biz. Retrieved 29 April 2011.
- ↑ Cullen, Johnny (March 15, 2011). "Jaffe: Twisted Metal reboot was originally PSN title". VG247. Retrieved March 15, 2011.
- ↑ Brian Crecente (February 7, 2008). "Jaffe: PS3 Twisted Metal Next Project". Kotaku.
- ↑ Robinson, Andy. "Jaffe drops more Twisted Metal hints". CVG.
- ↑ "Twisted Metal X rumored to be at E3 2010". Daily Radar. June 2010.
- ↑ Dorian Whittley. "Possible Pre-E3 Games List Leaked?". Platform Nation.
- ↑ Ben Gilbert. "David Jaffe Not Working on New Twisted Metal". Joystiq.
- ↑ "Twisted Metal PS3 - E3 Sony Press Conference".
- ↑ David Jaffe. "Surprise! Twisted Metal Coming to PS3". Playstation.Blog.
- ↑ Hillier, Brenna. "Twisted Metal promo lets you shoot up a truck". VG247.
- ↑ "Twisted Metal cover art revealed". CVG.
- ↑ A Twisted Metal Message from David Jaffe
- 1 2 Twisted Metal Goes Gold, Comes with Starhawk Sweet Tooth Skin
- ↑ Jackson, Mike. "Twisted Metal gets Online Pass despite Jaffe's wishes". CVG.
- ↑ Jackson, Mike. "Twisted Metal demo out today in US". CVG.
- ↑ Garratt, Patrick. "Twisted Metal demo live until February 13". VG247.
- ↑ "Twisted Metal Soundtrack". David Jaffe. Retrieved 4 February 2012.
- 1 2 "Twisted Metal for PlayStation 3". GameRankings. 2012-02-14. Retrieved 2013-05-08.
- 1 2 "Twisted Metal for PlayStation 3 Reviews". Metacritic. 2012-02-14. Retrieved 2013-05-08.
- ↑ Sliva, Marty (2012-02-16). "Twisted Metal Review for PS3 from". 1UP.com. Retrieved 2013-05-08.
- ↑ "Review: Twisted Metal". Destructoid. Retrieved 2013-05-08.
- ↑ PS3. "EGM Review: Twisted Metal". EGMNOW. Retrieved 2013-05-08.
- ↑ http://www.g4tv.com/games/ps3/64114/twisted-metal/review/
- ↑ Bjyman (2012-02-14). "Twisted Metal Review: Car Combat's Explosive Return - Twisted Metal - PlayStation 3". www.GameInformer.com. Retrieved 2013-05-08.
- ↑ "Twisted Metal Video Review". GameSpot.com. 2012-02-14. Retrieved 2013-05-08.
- ↑ "Page 2 - Twisted Metal (2012) Review". GamesRadar. Retrieved 2013-05-08.
- ↑ "Twisted Metal Review Text". GameTrailers. Retrieved 2013-05-08.
- ↑ "Twisted Metal Review - IGN". Ps3.ign.com. Retrieved 2013-05-08.
- ↑ Hinkle, David (2012-02-14). "Twisted Metal review: On cruise control". Joystiq. Retrieved 2013-05-08.
External links
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