Alien Breed 3D II: The Killing Grounds

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alien Breed 3D II: The Killing Grounds
Box art by Kevin Jenkins[2]
Developer(s)Team17
Publisher(s)Ocean Software
Producer(s)Phil Quirke-Webster[3]
Programmer(s)Andrew Clitheroe
SeriesAlien Breed
Platform(s)Amiga 1200, Amiga 4000
Release
  • EU: 26 April 1996
[1]
Genre(s)First-person shooter
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

Alien Breed 3D II: The Killing Grounds is a first-person shooter, the fifth game in the Alien Breed franchise, a series of science fiction-themed shooters by Team17. It was published in 1996 by Ocean Software.

A sequel to Alien Breed 3D, the game continues the story of a space marine who, having recently survived an alien invasion on an extraterrestrial base and now been rescued by the crew on board an Earth spaceship, gets caught in another such invasion that he is forced again to fight off for his life.

The game's release was widely anticipated by the Amiga press and community as a contender to Doom. Reviewers praised the graphics, sound effects, and atmosphere, but were divided on the enemy artificial intelligence, level design, and hardware requirements, particularly for the version requiring 4 MB of RAM. The editors shipped with copies of the game attracted numerous player complaints for missing files, and Team17 uploaded a patch for the editors containing the missing files. The game's programmer, Andrew Clitheroe, disliked the result of its development, stating he wished he had used the time he spent on the rendering engine for developing the gameplay and levels, and Team17 admitted that The Killing Grounds did not meet the company's Alien Breed series' standards in gameplay.

Gameplay[edit]

The player fights a bee-like[4] creature with a laser gun, Level H. The bottom-most part of the screen displays text messages, such as the player character's inner thoughts on the current situation.[5]

Plot[edit]

After surviving an alien invasion on the Osiris base and destroying it, Captain Reynolds's escape shuttle is rescued by an Earth space cruiser, the Indomitable, which then sets course for Earth. However, a massive alien spaceship, having detected the shuttle's distress signal, enters the Indomitable's area, docks the cruiser, and commences an attack, taking its crew hostage. Reynolds awakes in the Earth ship's medical bay, isolated from the attack, and soon discovers that he is forced to fight for his survival on his own again.[6][7]

Reynolds descends to the alien craft through a shaft connecting the two ships, attempting to find the missing Indomitable crew.[8] After a series of fights with the aliens, he comes across a teleporter serving as a transporter between the craft and a planet. He also realizes that he had been lured into their trap, like the marines on board the Indomitable, and finds he is left with no choice but to teleport to the planet and press on.[9] While there, he determines he is inside an alien military compound,[10] and discovers a computer terminal, through which he connects his mind to a vast network of alien minds represented as bright threads. He sees that the threads intertwine, but fail to join or exchange thoughts, and that a large mass had suffered damage, explaining his observation of the aliens' disorganisation.[11]

After crossing the compound's storage area,[12] Reynolds finds the aliens re-coordinating, and spots another terminal with which his mind then accesses the hive consciousness. He sees the central mass pulsing with light and notices two bright red threads like his own, one vanishing and the other dim, and he infers that the latter represent the captured marines of the Indomitable. After joining his own thread with the dimly lit one, the dying marine informs him to forget saving the crew and instead disable the base's planetary defences, followed by images of how to use the cruiser's autopilot and then of the alien planet exploding as the alien ship, tugged out of orbit by the cruiser, penetrates the surface.[13] Reynolds is told about the locations for three separate orbital computer uplinks controlling the defences.[14] After destroying the uplinks, he conceives of an escape plan involving the destruction of the central mass he had seen back in the alien mind space.[15] He confronts the mass—a giant mantis-like[16] creature—and kills it. With a myriad of aliens lying dead or otherwise unresponsive, many of whom having apparently killed themselves after their minds' linkage with the creature had just been severed, Reynolds finds and steps into a teleporter linked to the orbiting alien ship. He returns to the Indomitable to which the ship remains tethered and programs the cruiser to destroy the planet. The cruiser slingshots around the planet's star and catapults the alien ship towards the planet at immense speed, triggering a nuclear fusion in its core on impact and exploding it, before returning home.[17]

Development[edit]

Soon after the release of Alien Breed 3D in October 1995,[18] in the wake of competitors to their first-person shooter, Team17's Martyn Brown commissioned a sequel that would feature improved graphics. The competitors supported a much higher resolution, "but not playability", as Brown saw it,[3] and Andrew Clitheroe, the original Alien Breed 3D's programmer and game designer,[4] returned with the same roles for the new project.[2]

This time Team17 was aiming even higher, hoping to recreate something similar to the Quake engine on an Amiga. Team17 had included two versions of the game spread over 5 disks: one with high-quality sound and textures, the other with reduced quality versions. The reduced version was supposedly able to run on a non-expanded Amiga 1200, although the game ran slowly.

Their project, however, was perhaps over-ambitious. Most Amigas of the time struggled to run the game, even with upgraded RAM and accelerator cards. Even with the fastest CPU at that time (MC68060 @ 66 MHz), the game could not be played smoothly with high details in fullscreen.[19][citation needed]

Team17 had originally intended this to be its final Amiga title. Following the success of Worms, Team17's first multi-format release, the company was looking to get out of the Amiga game market, which had become stagnant over the years. As it transpired, The Killing Grounds was not Team17's final Amiga title—Worms: The Director's Cut was released the following year.

An editor was shipped with the game, allowing users to create their own levels.[20] Team17 made the game's source code freely available in March 1997, on the cover CD of Amiga Format magazine issue 95.[21]

Reception[edit]

Alien Breed 3D II: The Killing Grounds was the top-selling Amiga game from August to September 1996, according to Germany-based software distributor GTI.[25] As late as January 1997, it remained one of the top-selling games for the system.[26]

Critics were divided on the appropriateness of the hardware requirements and the enemy artificial intelligence, but were united in their judgement that the 2 MB version ran smoothly but with rudimentary graphics and that the 4 MB version required an Amiga computer with heavily accelerated graphics. CU Amiga justified the requirements by pointing out that Team17 intended to create a definitive Doom-clone for Amiga and noting that Worms: The Director's Cut, another video game of Team17, required an AGA chipset. The magazine praised the level layout and the artificial intelligence, the latter of which had given the enemies "a sense of menace ... that has not been matched" by the enemies seen in the game's Amiga competitors. The enemies have been described as erratic and unwilling to die, and the level layout is said to emphasise the need to conserve ammunition and health for later levels and battles.[24]

Amiga Format praised the lighting, the sound effects in general, the weapon variety, the automap, the enemy artificial intelligence, the level editor, and the challenge and difficulty curve the game presented. It asserted that the enemies had to be disabled for multiplayer mode because of the limitations on data transfer between Amiga 1200 machines, and its only criticisms focused on sounds of walking over metallic floors and dying monsters, and the fact that the player's weapons tend to be aimed towards ground enemies instead of those hovering above them. It favourably compared the game's quality to Doom II and Quake as an Amiga alternative designed for much less expensive computers.[4] Amiga User International believed that the mission-oriented nature of the levels added to the challenge, and declared the game "quite possibly the greatest release ever for the Amiga."[23]

Amiga Action took issue with the game's hardware requirements and the fact that both 2- and 4 MB versions suffered severe technical drawbacks. The magazine found that the 4 MB version was playable only when the screen size was scaled down to half and the lighting setting turned off, even on a 68060-powered Amiga with six megabytes. However, the 2 MB version, which the magazine found to have a much smoother performance, would run at the lowest possible screen resolution, and lacked lighting effects, and the built-in level editor only worked on Amiga machines with at least four megabytes. It also noted the artificial intelligence's flaws such as not being able to open doors.[22] Amiga Power was more critical. Although it appeared to score the game an exceptionally high 98%, the actual scores for 2- and 4 MB versions ranged in the fifties, and the fake score was notably added to fool readers who skip straight to the bottom lines of the magazine's reviews. It similarly criticised the stiff hardware requirements, noting the lack of floor and ceiling textures in the 2 MB version means that the player sometimes cannot discern floor elevation and will thus unwittingly fall off ledges. The magazine went further to question the developer's design choices and the overall gameplay. It wrote that the enemies would occasionally alternate between attacking the player and seemingly "los[ing] interest and wanter[ing] away," and the player could run through them without trouble when cornered. It contrasted the game's pacing from that of the first Alien Breed 3D in that it is impossible to progress in certain situations without a certain amount of health before grabbing the next medikit, which is further complicated by the game saves occurring only between levels. The magazine wrote it felt that Team17 had not adequately playtested the game and called the game's deathmatch-only multiplayer mode a "waste of time" before concluding that The Killing Grounds was "a comprehensive disappointment".[16]

For its 100th issue, Amiga Format ranked the game No. 90 on its 1ist of the 100 best Amiga games.[27] Retro Gamer offered a mixed analysis of the game's quality, calling the graphics "absolutely stunning", but criticising the enemy AI and difficulty, believing that the project was overambitious.[28] Andrew Clitheroe was dissatisfied with how he handled development, calling the game "a huge mistake". In the company's own retrospective of the first 100 games they developed or published, Team17 admitted that The Killing Grounds did not meet the Alien Breed series' standards of gameplay, citing its sluggish frame rate and Clitheroe's own admission of inadequately developing the levels, gameplay, and story.[29]

Cancelled sequel[edit]

A PC/Dreamcast follow-up to The Killing Grounds, entitled Alien Breed: Conflict, began development in 1999. The development was cancelled due to the size of the project. To date, Conflict remains as the only title in the series that was developed specifically for the PC and as the only PC game in the series developed solely by Team17 (the PC version of Alien Breed was ported by MicroLeague, while Alien Breed: Tower Assault were ported to the PC by East Point Software). According to what little information there is concerning this game, Conflict was also planned to be a first-person shooter and, presumably, would have followed on directly where The Killing Grounds left off.[citation needed]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Release dates". Checkpoint. Computer and Video Games. No. 174. May 1996. p. 65. Retrieved 15 May 2024.
  2. ^ a b Manual 1996, p. 22.
  3. ^ a b Dykes, Alan (March 1996). "Previews – Alien Breed 3DII". CU Amiga. No. 73. pp. 38–39. Retrieved 16 May 2024.
  4. ^ a b c d Smith, Andy (September 1996). "Screenplay – Alien Breed 3D II: The Killing Grounds". Amiga Format. No. 88. pp. 40–43. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
  5. ^ "Previews – Alien Breed 3D II The Killing Grounds". Amiga Format. No. 83. April 1996. pp. 31–33. Retrieved 13 May 2024.
  6. ^ Manual 1996, p. 2.
  7. ^ Löwenstein, Richard (August–September 1996). "Test: Alien Breed 3D II: The Killing Grounds". Amiga Joker [de] (in German). pp. 10–12. Retrieved 15 May 2024.
  8. ^ Level C
  9. ^ Level G
  10. ^ Level H
  11. ^ Level J
  12. ^ Level K
  13. ^ Level L
  14. ^ Level M
  15. ^ Level P
  16. ^ a b c Nash, Jonathan (September 1996). "Game Reviews – Alien Breed 3D 2". Amiga Power. No. 65. pp. 14–17.
  17. ^ Ending sequence
  18. ^ "The Killing Grounds". Amiga Action. No. 82. May 1996. pp. 32–33. Retrieved 16 May 2024.
  19. ^ Amiga Power Issue 65, September 1996, pages 14-17
  20. ^ Amiga Format Issue 91, December 1996, pages 90-91
  21. ^ Alien Breed 3D II. Amiga Format (CD). No. 11. March 1997. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
  22. ^ a b Maddock, Andy (November 1996). "Review: Amiga Breed 3D 2 – The Killing Grounds". Amiga Action. No. 88. pp. 6–7. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
  23. ^ a b Forbes, Mark (November 1996). "Alien Breed 3D 2 - The Killing Grounds". Amiga User International. Vol. 10, no. 11. p. 86. Retrieved 13 May 2024.
  24. ^ a b Dykes, Alan (September 1996). "Game Review: The Killing Grounds". CU Amiga. No. 79. pp. 37–38.
  25. ^ "GTI's Top Ten Games - September 1996". Amiga Computing. No. 107. Christmas 1996. p. 66. Retrieved 14 May 2024.
  26. ^ "GTI Chart Toppers". Amiga Computing. No. 111. April 1997. p. 63. Retrieved 14 May 2024.
  27. ^ Smith, Andy (August 1997). "The 100 Best Amiga Games Ever..." Amiga Format. No. 100. p. 24. Retrieved 29 April 2024.
  28. ^ Day, Ashley (2 February 2006). "Developer Lookback: Team 17". Retro Gamer. No. 21. pp. 65, 67. Retrieved 29 April 2024.
  29. ^ "Team17's 100 Games - Part Five: 1996 (Worms Reinforcements, X2, Alien Breed 3D II & more)". Team17. 10 October 2018. Archived from the original on 29 April 2024. Retrieved 29 April 2024.

Works cited[edit]

  • Alien Breed 3D II: The Killing Grounds manual. Team17 Software Ltd. 1996.