Area 51 (1995 video game)

Area 51

The arcade unit of Area 51
Developer(s) Mesa Logic
Publisher(s) Atari Games
Soft Bank (Japan)
Designer(s) Robert Weatherby
Composer(s) Jeanne Parson
Series Area 51
Platform(s) Arcade
PlayStation
Sega Saturn
PC
Release

Arcade

PC

  • NA: September 30, 1996

Saturn

  • NA: November 20, 1996
  • EU: 1997
  • JP: February 7, 1997

PlayStation

  • NA: November 26, 1996
  • JP: March 20, 1997
  • EU: May 1997
Genre(s) First-person shooter
Mode(s) Up to 2 players simultaneously
Cabinet Standard
Arcade system CoJag
Display Raster, 320 x 240 pixels (Horizontal), 65534 colors

Area 51 is a light gun arcade game released by Atari Games in 1995.[1] It takes its name from the Area 51 military facility.

The plot of the game involves the player (Peterson) taking part in a STAAR (Strategic Tactical Advanced Alien Response) military incursion to prevent aliens, known as the Kronn, and alien-created zombies from taking over the Area 51 military facility.

The game was ported to the PlayStation, Sega Saturn and personal computers.

Gameplay

A screenshot showing the player engaging in a battle with multiple opponents.

This game takes the player through several sections of the facility, including a warehouse and underground tunnels. The player character is tasked, along with fellow Special Tactical Advanced Alien Response (STAAR) members Lieutenant Stephanie Grant and Sergeant Major Marcus Bradley, to penetrate Area 51 and activate the nuclear self-destruct sequence. The player must kill any attacking genetically altered soldiers and aliens without harming any allied STAAR team members. If nothing but three STAAR team members are shot, the Kronn Hunter mode is started, taking the role of a Hunter, sent by the Kronn to eliminate the rebels.

There are five types of weaponry available. While the player is only given a semi-automatic pistol in the beginning, weapon upgrades are available as targets. The pistol can be upgraded to an automatic machine gun, a pump shotgun, and finally an automatic shotgun. The shotgun weaponry allows a greater field of error for targeting an enemy. Both the machine gun and automatic shotgun allow the player to keep the trigger pressed down to unleash rounds. If the player character is hit by the enemy at any time, the weapon is downgraded back to the pistol. Grenades are hidden in crates and bonus rooms. When used, they destroy most on screen enemies at once. The player can hold a maximum of nine grenades. In addition, yellow boxes and barrels marked with "flammable" warning symbols can be shot to cause fires or explosions that can harm enemies. By shooting certain objects in the correct sequence, players can unlock shooting exercises, weapon stashes, and bonus items that are not available in the main game plot. Other backdoors allow players to warp ahead to later levels instead of following the game's otherwise linear path.

There are many types of aliens/alien zombies including ones that shoot, punch, fire rockets, and throw things like bricks, grenades, and barrels. Purple alien/alien zombies require more hits than other targets.

Development

In 1994, publisher Atari Games was in desperate need of a hit, having gone years without a single profitable game and losing most of their most talented developers to rival publisher Electronic Arts. As such, they directed Ed Logg to create a light gun shooter, which was one of the most popular game genres in arcades at the time.[2] However, Logg also left to join Electronic Arts while the game, Bounty Hunter, was still unfinished.[2] At this point executives at Atari Games felt it would be safer to entrust development to an external team, and approached Mesa Logic head Robert Weatherby about his team taking over Bounty Hunter. After playing Bounty Hunter and finding it underwhelming, Weatherby asked for a few months to come up with and develop a pitch for his own gun game concept, to which Atari agreed.[3]

Weatherby received the inspiration for the Area 51 concept from an article in Popular Science called "Searching for the Secrets of Groom Lake".[3]

Originally the data from the game was to be streamed from a CD player using Cinepak for compression, but since this could only produce a letterboxed display, lead programmer Charlie Grisafi opted to instead run the game on a CoJag (a modified Atari Jaguar used in arcade games) interfaced with a hard disk drive and using Grisafi's own custom compression software.[3] Grisafi recalled:

The amount of rendering required was a huge obstacle. It was originally done by Robert [Weatherby]'s team in Texas but as time went on, the raw horsepower required to do it all became more than they had. I realized that the Silicon Graphics workstations of all the different teams at Atari in California could be a huge resource for doing this. Atari helped us coordinate getting access to all of the systems in the building after hours when the other teams weren't using their systems, so every night we would take over and turn all the SGI systems at Atari into a large render farm.[3]

The game uses digitized video stored on the on-board hard disk, and gibs into which every enemy blows apart when shot, in exactly the same way. While enemies, innocents, and explosions are 2D digitized video sprites, the levels and vehicles are pre-rendered in 3D.

While the STAAR members were rendered with motion capture, the assorted enemies were created with stop motion animation by Sneaky Pete Kleinow.[3]

According to producer Rob Rowe, the total cost of developing Area 51 was $2,500 (equivalent to $3,929 in 2016).[3]

In 1998, Atari Games released an arcade sequel titled Area 51: Site 4 and re-released the first game as part of one machine called Area 51 vs. Maximum Force duo that also included Maximum Force.[4] In 2005, a first-person shooter which shares the name and uses the original as an inspiration was released for the PlayStation 2, Xbox, and PC by Midway Games. It features a more sophisticated storyline and the voices of David Duchovny, Marilyn Manson, and Powers Boothe. The original arcade game makes a brief appearance here as well. In 2007, Midway released BlackSite: Area 51 to multiple platforms.

Ports

In 1996, the game was ported to the PlayStation, Saturn, and PC. Because Atari Games had been purchased by WMS Industries in the interim,[5] these versions were published by WMS's Midway Games subsidiary. It was re-released on the PlayStation in 2001 by Midway as part of their Midway Classics range. Tiger Electronics later released a handheld version of the game with an LCD screen and small light gun.

The PlayStation version supports fullscreen play, while the Saturn version has a border covering about 15% of the screen. The Saturn version supports all of the console's light guns. The PlayStation version supports the Konami Justifier, but not the Namco GunCon.

Despite the arcade version being run on a modified Atari Jaguar, it was never ported on to the system itself.

Reception

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
AllGame (ARC)[6]
(PS1)[7]
(SAT)[8]
CVG1/10 (PS1)[9]
IGN7/10 (SAT)[10]
Computer Games Magazine (PC)[11]
Next Generation (ARC)[12]

Area 51 was a major hit in the arcades, selling over 20,000 cabinets.[3] Executive producer Mark Pierce recalled that the home versions had above average sales by the standards of console light gun games (which typically did not sell as well as other arcade ports, since players could not get the full experience without purchasing a light gun for the console).[2]

Next Generation's review of the arcade version stated that "Area 51 provides shooters with what they want", noting in particular the dark and varied levels, realistic and graduated scenery, intriguing story themes, and fun power-ups. Despite this, the reviewer concluded that the game "stands up better against shooters of the past like Virtua Cop 1 and Mad Dog McCree, and not the current crop."[12] The game took the number one slot in the December 1995 "Player's Choice" chart of RePlay Magazine.[13]

In a 1998 review of the Saturn version, IGN, while remarking that the game lacks sufficient playtime or extras to last long and does not measure up to Virtua Cop 2, found it to be a well-designed and fun experience in both single player and two-player mode.[10]

Steve Bauman of Computer Games Magazine gave the PC version two stars out of five and wrote, "This is a perfect example why you don't convert some arcade games to the PC." Bauman called the game "repetitive and boring" because of its lack of the arcade version's light gun.[11]

In a retrospective review of the arcade version, Brad Cook of AllGame wrote, "Not only is this game fun, it's not incredibly hard either. [...] The graphics are extremely well done, and it's very fast-paced." He also praised the storyline, attract mode, and varied backgrounds.[6] Anthony Baize of AllGame called the PlayStation version "very exciting." Baize remarked that while the graphics are not as good as the arcade version, they are still solid, and the unlimited continues gives it an advantage over the arcade version.[7] AllGame praised the Saturn version's music and sound, and recommended that players use a light gun instead of a joypad. AllGame also wrote that the graphics were, "Not as crisp as the PS and PC versions but good for the Saturn."[8] In 2001, Stephen Fulljames of Computer and Video Games reviewed the PlayStation version and wrote that it "plays as if it's on rails - the pre-rendered environments offering a totally predictable environment. We challenge anyone not to be bored within a week."[9]

References

  1. Matt Cabral, "Area 51: A History of Violence," PlayStation: The Official Magazine 004 (March 2008): 82-83.
  2. 1 2 3 Drury, Paul (December 2016). "Mark Pierce Q&A". Retro Gamer. No. 163. Future Publishing. p. 49.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Drury, Paul (December 2016). "The Making Of: Area 51". Retro Gamer. No. 163. Future Publishing. pp. 48–53.
  4. Area 51/Maximum Force Duo Videogame by Atari Games (1998) - The International Arcade Museum and the KLOV
  5. "News Bits". GamePro. No. 94. IDG. July 1996. p. 17.
  6. 1 2 Cook, Brad. "Area 51 (arcade) Review". AllGame. Archived from the original on November 15, 2014.
  7. 1 2 Baize, Anthony. "Area 51 (PlayStation) Review". AllGame. Archived from the original on November 15, 2014.
  8. 1 2 "Area 51 (Saturn) Review". AllGame. Archived from the original on November 15, 2014.
  9. 1 2 Fulljames, Stephen (August 15, 2001). "Area 51 Review (PlayStation)". Computer and Video Games. Archived from the original on October 11, 2007.
  10. 1 2 "Area 51 Review". IGN. January 2, 1998. Retrieved August 1, 2015.
  11. 1 2 Bauman, Steve (1996). "Area 51 (PC) Review". Computer Games Magazine. pp. 1–2. Archived from the original on December 20, 1996.
  12. 1 2 "Area 51". Next Generation. Imagine Media (12): 201. December 1995.
  13. Webb, Marcus (March 1996). "Time Warner Interactive is for Sale". Next Generation. No. 15. Imagine Media. p. 23.
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