Heart of Darkness (video game)

Heart of Darkness
Developer(s) Amazing Studio
Publisher(s)

Ocean Software (Europe)
Infogrames Multimedia (Europe)


Interplay (North America)
Director(s) Éric Chahi
Fabrice Visserot
Producer(s) Jon Norledge
Designer(s)
  • Éric Chahi
  • Frédéric Savoir
  • Fabrice Visserot
  • Christian Robert
  • Daniel Morais
Writer(s) Éric Chahi
Christian Robert
Frédéric Savoir
Fabrice Visserot
Composer(s) Bruce Broughton
Platform(s) PlayStation, Microsoft Windows, Game Boy Advance (cancelled)
Release

PlayStation

  • EU: July 1998
  • NA: 31 July 1998

Microsoft Windows

  • NA: 31 August 1998
Genre(s) Cinematic platformer
Mode(s) Single-player

Heart of Darkness is a cinematic platform video game developed by Amazing Studio and published by Ocean Software in Europe and Interplay Entertainment in North America for PlayStation and Microsoft Windows. A Game Boy Advance port was announced in 2001 but it was never released.

The game places players in the role of a child named Andy as he attempts to rescue his dog who has been kidnapped by shadow-like spectres.[1] The game has about half an hour of storytelling cinematic sequences, thousands of 2D animated frames, and uses pre-rendered background scenery. The game was supervised by game developer Éric Chahi, known for Another World, this time with a team of artists and developers. The game also features an original score by film and television composer Bruce Broughton.

Gameplay

Heart of Darkness is a cinematic platformer in the vein of Eric Chahi's previous game Another World in which players control Andy, who faces various dangers in search of his dog, Whisky. Players progress through the game's linear storyline by navigating various environments and solving puzzles, all whilst attempting to keep Andy from being killed by evil shadows, hungry wildlife, and perilous obstacles. Along with basic movement, such as running, jumping, and climbing, certain sections of the game give Andy additional abilities. The plasma cannon allows Andy to shoot lightning at shadows in order to disintegrate them. The Special Powers, which can also be used offensively against enemies, can additionally be used to grow and destroy trees born from seeds. The player has unlimited tries, with Andy returning to the most recent checkpoint when he is killed.

Plot

The game begins with the protagonist; a young boy known as Andy being abused by his teacher for sleeping in class where it is revealed that he has nyctophobia (fear of the dark). Being instructed that same day by his teacher to watch the solar eclipse, Andy takes his beloved dog Whisky to the park where dark forces steal Whisky away, prompting Andy to use his assortment of inventions and machines to get him back. Andy travels to another world called the Darkland in a homemade spaceship which promptly crashes and he has to face an assortment of obstacles to rescue Whisky and find his way home.

Throughout the game, Andy is tasked with fighting living shadow creatures and dark monsters while traversing several hostile alien environments such as a canyon, swamp, underwater cave, and lava river. He receives help in this quest from a peaceful alien race called Amigos whom he befriends, and from magic powers he obtains from a meteor referred to as the 'magic rock.' The main antagonist is an evil sorcerer known as the Master of Darkness who intended to capture Andy instead of his dog. Somewhat resembling Andy's teacher from the beginning of the game, the Master of Darkness has an interest in capturing Andy and sends his minions to pursue him. Another major antagonist is the Vicious Servant; a sniveling pink creature that serves the Master but is quick to betray him for personal benefit.

After traveling across the varying alien environments and fighting alongside the Amigos, Andy finds himself inside the Master of Darkness' lair where he proceeds to free Whisky and join forces with the Vicious Servant to help overthrow the Master of Darkness. Planning to use the magic rock's power to destroy the black hole at the lair's center. However, Andy is double-crossed by the servant who kicks Whisky into the black hole and sends Andy into an ambush. Andy ends up fending off droves of shadow creatures and successfully following through with his plan, but falls into the black hole himself along with the Master of Darkness as the structure around him collapses. The black hole's center is the heart of darkness and there Andy must fight the Master and face his fears once and for all. Upon succeeding the darkness dissipates and Andy awakens in his treehouse, believing the experience was all just a dream but after Andy and Whisky go to sleep and it's shown Andy has likely gotten over his fear of the dark, the player is shown the Amigos cleaning up the wreckage of Andy's ship and proving the adventure was perhaps more than imaginary.

Development and release

Heart of Darkness suffered a protracted development cycle marked by numerous delays and changes in platform. Development began in 1992, with the PC as the lead platform.[2] The game was not publicly unveiled until the March 1995 European Computer Trade Show, at which time the developers said it was near completion.[3] A version for the 3DO Interactive Multiplayer was announced, but the game spent so long in development that by the time it was finished, the 3DO (which was not even launched until a year after development on the game began) was no longer commercially viable. In 1996 Sega signed a deal for the console version to be a Sega Saturn exclusive, with the PC version to be held off until after the Saturn version was released.[2][4] A release date of October 1996 was announced with the Saturn version,[2] but due to long delays, the Saturn was also no longer a commercially viable platform by the time Heart of Darkness was finished.

The game's cutscenes were rendered using 3D Studio. According to Éric Chahi, the team did consider using Silicon Graphics workstations, but found that the improvement over 3D Studio was not enough to justify the expensiveness of the workstations or having to restart the work on the cutscenes.[3] Chahi and Chris Delaporte created the game's textures themselves rather than using the 3D Studio texture library.[3]

The game was released with a pair of red/blue 3D glasses, allowing players to watch a 3D FMV sequence at the end of the game. Despite the game featuring gruesome character deaths, the game received the lowest age ratings in its initial releases in North America and Europe, although some later editions received an increased rating.

Reception

Reception
Aggregate score
AggregatorScore
GameRankings(PS) 75.33%[5]
(PC) 71.64%[6]

Aggregating review website GameRankings gave the PlayStation version 75.33% based on 9 reviews[5] and the Microsoft Windows version 71.64% based on 14 reviews.[6]

References

  1. "Heart Of Darkness - Master Of Darkness". 2005-09-07. Archived from the original on September 7, 2005. Retrieved 2015-10-06.
  2. 1 2 3 Hickman, Sam (June 1996). "One Man and His Dog". Sega Saturn Magazine (8). Emap International Limited. pp. 36–42.
  3. 1 2 3 "Heart of Darkness". Next Generation. Imagine Media (6): 82–89. June 1995.
  4. "Saturn's Heart of Darkness". Next Generation. No. 18. Imagine Media. June 1996. p. 19.
  5. 1 2 "Heart of Darkness for PlayStation". GameRankings. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
  6. 1 2 "Heart of Darkness for PC". GameRankings. Retrieved 12 May 2014.
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