Unreal

For other uses, see Unreal (disambiguation).
Unreal
Developer(s) Main:Epic MegaGames
Digital Extremes
Unreal Mission Pack:Legend Entertainment
Publisher(s) GT Interactive
Producer(s) Jason Schreiber
Greg Williams
Designer(s) James Schmalz
Cliff Bleszinski
Programmer(s) Tim Sweeney
Steve Polge
Erik de Neve
Artist(s) Tim Sweeney
David M. Carter
Composer(s) Alexander Brandon
Michiel van den Bos
Andrew G. Sega
Dan Gardopée
Series Unreal
Engine Unreal Engine
Platform(s) Microsoft Windows, Mac OS
Release date(s)

Microsoft Windows

  • NA April 30, 1998

Mac OS

Genre(s) First-person shooter
Mode(s) Single-player, multiplayer

Unreal is a first-person shooter video game developed by Epic MegaGames and Digital Extremes and published by GT Interactive in May 1998. It was powered by an original gameplay and physics engine that now bears the game's name, one that had been in development for over three years in founder Tim Sweeney's garage before the game was released.

Since the release of Unreal, the franchise has had one sequel and two different series based on the Unreal universe. One official bonus pack, the Epic-released Fusion Map Pack, can be downloaded free of charge. Unreal Mission Pack: Return to Na Pali was released in June 1999, and added new missions to the single player campaign of Unreal. Unreal and Return to Na Pali would later be bundled together as Unreal Gold. Additionally, the games were updated to run on the Unreal Tournament version of the game engine.

Plot

For more details on this topic, see List of Unreal characters.

The player takes on the part of Prisoner 849, aboard the prison spacecraft Vortex Rikers. During transport to a moon-based prison, the ship is pulled to an uncharted planet before reaching its destination. The ship crash-lands on the lip of a canyon on the planet Na Pali, home of the Nali, a primitive tribal race of four-armed humanoids. The Nali and their planet have been subjugated by the Skaarj, a race of brutish yet technologically advanced reptilian humanoids. Skaarj troops board the downed Vortex Rikers and kill the remaining survivors, except for Prisoner 849, who manages to find a weapon and escape from the ship.

The planet Na Pali is rich in "Tarydium", a mineral that is found as light blue crystals, which possesses a high energy yield and utility that is the reason the Skaarj have invaded. The ship has crashed near one of the many Tarydium mines and processing facilities that the Skaarj have built. Prisoner 849 travels through the mines, meeting Nali slaves and eventually entering the ruins of Nali temples, villages and cities, where the extent of the Nalis' suffering and exploitation are made clear.

Throughout the game the player stumbles across the remains of other humans, often with electronic journals that detail their last days and hint at the cause of their demise. Usually the tales are of desperate struggles to hide from the Skaarj or other bloodthirsty inhabitants of the planet. The player never meets another live human aside from a wounded crew member on the bridge of the prison ship who gasps and dies immediately. Prisoner 849 is likely the only human alive on the planet Na Pali throughout the game.

Prisoner 849 continues to make their way through a series of alien installations, a second crashed human spaceship, and ancient Nali temples infested with Skaarj troops and their minions, eventually arriving at the Nali Castle. Inside the castle, the prisoner locates a teleporter that leads to the Skaarj Mothership. The mothership proves to be a vast labyrinth, but Prisoner 849 manages to find the ship's reactor and destroys it, plunging the vessel into darkness. After navigating the corridors in the dark, the player arrives at the Skaarj Queen's chamber and kills her. Prisoner 849 jumps into an escape pod as the mothership disintegrates. Although the prisoner survives the Skaarj, the escape pod is left to float into space, with slim hopes of being found.

Expansion plot

The expansion, Return to Na Pali, developed by defunct Legend Entertainment picks up not long after Unreal's ending; Prisoner 849 is found by a human warship, the UMS Bodega Bay. Upon learning of the prisoner's identity, the UMS (the Unified Military Services) conscripts them into service, forcing the prisoner to return to Na Pali in order to locate the downed ship UMS Prometheus. There, the prisoner is to retrieve some weapons research. In return, the prisoner will receive a full pardon and transportation back to Earth, though the real plan is revealed to be maintaining the secrecy of the mission by killing the prisoner immediately after the information is secured.

Upon arriving at the Prometheus, Prisoner 849 finds the secret weapons log, but soon after, she finds a working radio communicator nearby. The prisoner listens to a recently recorded and archived conversation between the Bodega Bay and a nearby space station, the UMS Starlight, exposing the military's treachery. As Prisoner 849 transmits the research log, a squad of marines beam on board the ship, intending to eliminate the prisoner, who manages to escape into a nearby mine system.

Once again, Prisoner 849 is forced to traverse a series of alien facilities and Nali temples in an attempt to locate another way off the planet. Eventually the prisoner ends up at another Nali Castle, where a small space shuttle is stored. After fighting through Skaarj, the prisoner manages to take off in the spacecraft. However, the Bodega Bay is waiting in orbit, and launches a missile at the prisoner's ship. The prisoner outmaneuvers the missile, and leads it back on a collision course with the Bodega Bay. The large ship is disabled by the ensuing blast, and Prisoner 849 escapes into space.

Development

The Unreal game engine was seen as a major rival to id Software's id Tech 2 engine, and the Unreal game itself was considered to be technically superior to Quake II, which was out on the market at the same time (between December 1997 and May 1998). Originally, Unreal was going to be a Quake-style shooter—earlier screens showed a large status bar and centered weapons, similar to Doom and Quake.

As development progressed, various levels were cut from development. A few of these levels reappeared in the Return to Na Pali expansion pack. A number of enemies from early versions are present in the released software, but with variations and improvements to their look. One monster that didn't make the cut was a dragon. One of the weapons shown in early screenshots was the "Quadshot"—a four-barreled shotgun. The model remains in-game, while there is no code for the weapon to function (several player-made mods bring the weapon back in the game). Another weapon shown was a different pistol, however this may have just been an early version of the Automag. At one point the rifle could fire three shots at once, which is wrongly stated as the alternate fire in the Unreal manual that comes with the Unreal Anthology.

Screenshot of UnrealEd 1.0

Since Unreal came packaged with its own scripting language called UnrealScript, it soon developed a large community on the Internet which was able to add new mods (short for "modifications") in order to change or enhance gameplay. This feature greatly added to the overall longevity of the product and provided an incentive for new development. A map editor and overall complete modification program called UnrealEd also came with the package.

Unreal's method of creating maps differs in major ways from that of Quake. The bundled UnrealEd map editor uses the Unreal engine to render scenes exactly as they appear in-game, as opposed to external editors like Worldcraft attempting to recreate it with different methods. Whereas Quake maps are compiled from a variety of different components, Unreal maps are inherently editable on the fly. This allows anybody to edit any map that is created, including the maps included with the game.

Unreal was the first game to implement EAX 1.0 (Environmental Audio eXtensions) features.

Graphics

Nali Castle flyby on Voodoo Graphics

The Unreal engine brought a host of graphical improvements, including colored lighting. Although Unreal is not the first major release with colored lighting (see Quake II), it is the first to have a software renderer as feature rich as the hardware renderers of the time, including colored lighting and even a limited form of texture filtering referred to by Tim Sweeney as an ordered "texture coordinate space" dither.[1] Early pre-release versions of Unreal were based entirely on software rendering.

Unreal was one of the first games to utilize detail texturing. This type of multiple texturing enhances the surfaces of objects with a second texture that shows material detail. When the player stands within a small distance from most surfaces, the detail texture will fade in and make the surface appear much more complex (high-resolution) instead of becoming increasingly blurry.[2] Notable surfaces with these special detail textures included computer monitors, pitted metal surfaces aboard the prison ship and golden metal doors and stone surfaces within Nali temples. This extra texture layer was not applied to character models. The resulting simulation of material detail on game objects was intended to aid the player's suspension of disbelief. For many years after Unreal's release (and Unreal Tournament's release), detail texturing only worked well with the S3 MeTaL and Glide renderer. It was, in fact, disabled in the Direct3D renderer by default (but could be re-enabled in the Unreal.ini file) due to performance and quality issues caused by the driver and present even on hardware many times more powerful than the original S3 Savage3D and 3Dfx Voodoo Graphics.

Because of Unreal's long development time, the course of development occurred during the emergence and rapid progression of hardware 3D accelerators. So, along with the advanced software 3D renderer, Unreal was built to take advantage of the 3Dfx Glide API, which emerged as the dominant interface towards the end of the game's development. When Unreal was finally released, Microsoft's Direct3D API was growing almost exponentially in popularity and Epic was fairly quick to develop a renderer for their game engine. However, the Direct3D renderer, released initially to support the new Matrox G200, was less capable and slower than the Glide support, especially in the beginning when it was unstable, slow, and had many graphics quality issues.[3] Unreal also had official OpenGL support.

Music

Main article: Unreal soundtracks.
Unreal Introduction theme (Flight Castle)
31 second sample from the intro theme of Unreal, written by Alexander Brandon.

Problems playing this file? See media help.

While many game companies went from FM synthesis or General MIDI in the early 1990s to CD audio and pre-rendered audio, many of the Epic games used the less common system of module music, composed with a tracker, which used stored PCM sound samples of musical instruments sequenced together to produce music. Epic had been using this technology for other games such as Jazz Jackrabbit and One Must Fall: 2097, which allowed relatively rich music to be stored in files usually smaller than one megabyte. This technology allowed easy implementation of dynamic music for mood changes in Unreal. The Unreal soundtrack was written by MOD music authors Alexander Brandon and Michiel van den Bos with a few selected tracks by Dan Gardopée and Andrew Sega. Unreal's music engine also supports CD audio tracks.

Community patch support

The official patch support by Epic MegaGames ended with patch 2.26f in July 2000. Therefore, with the awareness and permission of Epic, the fan community started the OldUnreal Community patch project based on the original source code in 2008.[4] The latest patch iteration, 2.27i, released in November 2012, features DirectX 9 and OpenAL support and fixes many incompatibilities with modern operating systems and hardware.

Mac OS

The Mac version was released in parallel with the PC version. It supported RAVE hardware acceleration as well as 3DFX's Voodoo, built-in software rendering and, later on, OpenGL rendering. RAVE acceleration support allowed the game to support hardware 3D acceleration with just about every Mac that included it. It also supported Apple's Game Sprockets.

The last update for the Mac OS port was version 224b, which breaks network compatibility between it and the PC version, as well as lacking support for some user-created content made for 225 and 226f. Westlake Interactive, the company responsible for the port, claimed that previous patches were produced voluntarily in their free time, beyond their contractual obligations.[5] They also stated that they did not receive the code for the 225 patch and that it had become unavailable due to Epic moving on to develop version 226.

Linux

An unofficial content port of the single-player maps to Linux was created by several users of icculus.org, which allowed the Unreal single-player game content to be run as a modification for Unreal Tournament.[6][7][8] The online retailer Tux Games at one point sold a box set including the Linux version.[9][10] The 227 community patch contains a full Linux port for Unreal.

Books

Two novels titled Hard Crash and Prophet's Power were published, expanding on the premise and story first introduced in Unreal. Prophet's Power, numbered as the second book in the series, is actually a prequel to the first, Hard Crash; thus it is harder for readers to understand what happened in the story. On June 23, 2014, a book called Escape to Na Pali: A Journey to the Unreal was published.[11] It is an adventure to the world of Unreal, written by Kaitlin Tremblay and Alan Williamson.[12][13]

Reception

Reception
Aggregate score
AggregatorScore
GameRankings88.58%[14]
Review scores
PublicationScore
AllGame[15]
CVG9/10[16]
Edge8/10[17]
Game RevolutionB+[18]
GameSpot8.4/10[19]
IGN9/10[20]
PC Gamer (UK)94/100[21]
PC Zone9.3/10[22]
GamePro[23]
Thunderbolt9/10[24]

Unreal was very well-received upon release, and has since sold over one million copies worldwide.

Further reading

References

  1. Yong, Li Sheng. Texturing As In Unreal, flipcode.com, July 10, 2000.
  2. 6.20 Detail Textures, OpenGL.org, August 6, 1999.
  3. MATROX OFFERS SNEAK-PEAK AT UNREAL DIRECT3DPATCH, Epic MegaGames Inc., September 24, 1998.
  4. Meer, Alec (2012-10-12). "Patchy Like It’s 1998: Unreal 1 Updated". rockpapershotgun.com. Retrieved 2012-12-21. The list of fixes upon fixes are too long to mention here, but the essential purpose of v227 is to add DirectX9 and OpenAL support as well as mending everything that needs mending. Epic are aware of and permit the patch [...]
  5. Unreal Macintosh Status
  6. Unreal Gold for Linux - icculus.org
  7. Unreal Gold (Linux) - Gampespy)
  8. Gaming and Linux in 2003 - LinuxHardware.org
  9. Unreal - Tux Games
  10. Unreal Available at Tux Games - LinuxGames
  11. "Introducing Escape to Na Pali, and our new editor!". Five out of Ten. Retrieved 2014-08-16.
  12. "Escape to Na Pali". Five out of Ten. June 2014. Retrieved 2014-08-16.
  13. Kaitlin Tremblay and Alan Williamson (22 July 2014). "The Original Unreal Got Aliens Right". Kotaku. Retrieved 2014-08-16.
  14. "Unreal Review (PC)". GameRankings. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 4 October 2014.
  15. L. House, Michael. "Unreal Review". AllGame. All Media Network. Archived from the original on 14 November 2014. Retrieved 18 October 2015.
  16. Fulljames, Stephen (15 August 2001). "Unreal Review. Time to upgrade that P200 already...". Computer and Video Games. Future plc. Archived from the original on 10 January 2007. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  17. Edge Staff (1 July 1998). "Unreal Review". Edge. Future plc. Archived from the original on 31 May 2013. Retrieved 4 October 2014.
  18. Anderson, Tom (5 June 2004). "Unreal Review, Right game, wrong time". Game Revolution. Retrieved 4 October 2014.
  19. Shamma, Tahsin (10 June 1998). "Unreal Review, What gives Unreal an edge is how these differences, while not always positive, distinguish it from the legions of other 3D shooters". GameSpot. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 4 October 2014.
  20. Harris, Craig (12 August 1998). "Unreal Review, As corny as it sounds, the title says it all". IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved 4 October 2014.
  21. Owen, Steve. "Unreal Review". PC Gamer. Future plc. Archived from the original on 2 December 2000. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  22. PCZone (13 August 2001). "Unreal Review". Computer and Video Games. Future plc. Archived from the original on 11 March 2007. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  23. Klett, Steve (1 January 2000). "Unreal Review". GamePro. International Data Group. Archived from the original on 20 June 2004. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  24. Wadleigh, Matt (19 March 2003). "Unreal PC Review". Thunderbolt. Retrieved 4 October 2014.

External links

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