- Outcast (video game)
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Outcast Developer(s) Appeal Publisher(s) Infogrames Designer(s) Bruno Bonnell Composer(s) Lennie Moore Engine GAIA Platform(s) Microsoft Windows Release date(s) July 31, 1999 Genre(s) Action-adventure Mode(s) Single player Rating(s) ESRB: T (Teen)
USK: 16+
OFLC: MSystem requirements 200 MHz CPU, 32 MB RAM, 2 MB video card RAM, 4X CD-ROM drive, 600 MB available hard disk space, Windows 95
Outcast is an action-adventure video game by Belgian developer Appeal and released by Infogrames for the PC in 1999. A Dreamcast port of the original was also planned,[1] but was shelved when the PC version failed in the marketplace.
Contents
Plot
In 2007, the U.S. government successfully sends a probe to an alien world in a parallel universe. The probe starts transmitting video images of the world back to Earth. Then, just minutes into the mission, an alien life form discovers the probe and damages it, causing an unforeseen backlash of energy to create a black hole threatening Earth. After being briefed on the situation by his old friend Major Vernon, former U.S. Navy SEAL Cutter Slade is given the job of escorting three scientists (William Kauffmann, Anthony Xue and Marion Wolfe) on a mission to this alien world to recover the probe and close the black hole. Arriving in this alien world, Cutter is separated from the other scientists and is hailed by the natives as their messiah, the Ulukai.
Adelpha is a world that is parallel to our own, and it is here that the action of Outcast takes place.The main population are the Talans, basically the parallel version of human beings. Their technology seems very primitive compared to our own; one could say theirs is roughly equivalent to what would have been found in ancient China or medieval Europe. However, their energy-based weapons and intercontinental portals suggest that at one point they were much more advanced. Adelpha is broken up into several regions, which are hinted to be separated by large water masses. Transport between regions is ensured by gates known as Daokas, which allows its users to instantaneously teleport from one region to another.
Gameplay
Outcast uses a unique way to save games, integrated with the game world. At the start of the game, the player receives an object called a "Gaamsavv". He is instructed that the Gaamsav is able to "capture his essence", so that it may later be restored. To save a game, the player equips the Gaamsavv and "squeezes" it, making it glow and emit a sound. The sound can be heard by enemies and they will investigate, so that the player must take the situation into account before saving a game. After a few seconds, the game pauses and a menu overlay appears.
Development
Graphics engine
Outcast's graphics engine is mainly a combination of a ray casting (heightmap) engine, used to render the landscape, and a texture mapping polygon engine used to render objects. The "Engine Programming" section of the credits in the manual[2] has several subsections related to graphics, among them: "Landscape Engine", "Polygon Engine", "Water & Shadows Engine" and "Special effects Engine". Although Outcast is often cited as a forerunner of voxel technology,[3] this is somewhat misleading. The game does not actually model three-dimensional volumes of voxels. Instead, it models the ground as a surface, which may be seen as being made up of voxels. The ground is decorated with objects that are modeled using texturemapped polygons. When Outcast was developed, the term "voxel engine", when applied to computer games, commonly referred to a ray casting engine (for example the VoxelSpace engine). On the "Engine Technology" page of the game's website, the landscape engine is also referred to as the "Voxels engine". The engine is purely software-based; it does not rely on hardware-acceleration via a 3D graphics card.[4] Outcast features effects such as character shadows, depth of field, bump mapping and reflections. Anti-aliasing is used to smooth certain texture boundaries. The heightmap engine renders reliefs with self-occlusion, motion parallax, and silhouettes (but no shadowing)--even for details such as cobblestones. Water surfaces appear both translucent and reflective. The surface appears to reflect the environment (the skybox)[5] and appears rippled with moving waves, which react to the character's movement while in the water. The degree of translucency depends on the viewing angle. The more vertical the angle, the clearer the water appears while the more horizontal the angle, the stronger the reflections. Other visual effects include bloom and lens flares,[6] falling snow, fire, and other glowing particles.[7] All of these taken together would have crippled even the most advanced graphics card at the time of release.[citation needed] As a result, the graphics were considered beautiful and well ahead of their time upon Outcast's release.[citation needed] The disadvantage of this type of CPU-intensive software-rendering was that Outcast required an extremely powerful CPU (nothing but the most powerful Intel Pentium III processors of the time, in the 500-600 MHz range) and massive amounts of RAM (128 megabytes were recommended) to run at full speed and maximum resolution (512x384). However, these considerations can now be safely ignored, as even low-budget PCs of today significantly surpass those requirements, even to the point that additional software is needed to make the game slow enough to be played.
Artificial intelligence
The AI used in Outcast was considered revolutionary at the time it was released.[8] It was based on a proprietary engine codenamed GAIA, for Game Artificial Intelligence with Agents, which was composed by a set of C++ libraries that provided sophisticated control of game characters based on research in distributed AI. Intelligence is represented as a distributed activity over a set of autonomous routines called agents. An agent uses skills, such as hearing, sight, acrobatic, to complete assigned tasks. These agents can interact and even compete with each other to realize a complex task.
Music
Outcast features a high-quality orchestral score composed by Lennie Moore and performed by the Moscow Symphony Orchestra and choir. At the time of Outcast's release, orchestral game scores were uncommon, and Moore's achievement was hailed as "absolutely top-notch".[9] Game's publisher Infogrames released the hour-long score on a soundtrack album and it was later made available for MP3 download on the game's official website. Anyone who owns the original game can listen to the soundtrack by putting disc 2 into a CD player.[10]
Promotion
After Outcast was released, developer Appeal published a series of short films on its website, called "Outcast Outtakes", which were also included on the DVD version of the game. It was essentially a series of in-game recordings which were made to poke fun at itself, such as Cutter making an advertisement for his backpack that acts much like a magic satchel, by showcasing that he could store house furniture such as doors and chairs in it, or extra scenes involving Nikaa, a Talan whose gender remains under debate to this day.
Reception
Outcast was named the "Adventure Game of the Year" by GameSpot.[11]
Legacy
A sequel, Outcast II was originally being developed for the PlayStation 2. During development, the company Appeal went bankrupt and development ceased. Appeal had been requesting funds from their publisher to help finish the game for release but this plea fell on deaf ears.
The Eternal Outcasts are developing a free sequel called Open Outcast[12] as a Crysis Wars mod. The project initially used the Gothic and later the Crystal Space 3D engines but has now made the step to the CryEngine 2. The project already released two techdemos (Oasis 1.0 & 1.1) which can be played together with the Crysis Wars Demo version.
On 20 April 2010, Outcast was re-released via digital distribution by Good Old Games. The re-released game is compatible with Windows XP and Windows Vista.[13] This version of the game includes fixes for several of problems, including a community developed patch that negates the need to use a CPU slowdown program, and is generally playable on modern PCs without any extra troubleshooting required.[14]
References
- ^ FAQ from the official site of Outcast archived by The Internet Archive
- ^ Outcast Manual (german ed.). p.34: Infogrames Deutschland GmbH. 1999. OUTCAPC52D/B2
- ^ Bertuch, Manfred (2009). Klötzchenwelten in c't Magazin. 04. p.183: Heise Zeitschriften Verlag GmbH & Co. KG. ISSN 0724-8679
- ^ "Voxel terrain engine", introduction. In a coder's mind, 2005.
- ^ [1]
- ^ [2]
- ^ [3]
- ^ [4]
- ^ Goldwasser, Dan (2000-09-17). "Outcast Soundtrack". SoundtrackNet. http://www.soundtrack.net/albums/database/?id=2505. Retrieved 2007-05-03.
- ^ [5]
- ^ "The Best & Worst of 1999: Adventure Game of the Year". GameSpot. http://www.gamespot.com/features/1999/p3_02a.html. Retrieved 2007-05-03.
- ^ [6]
- ^ [7]
- ^ [8]
External links
Categories:- 1999 video games
- Action-adventure games
- Cancelled Dreamcast games
- Cancelled Nintendo 64 games
- Cancelled PlayStation games
- Cancelled Game Boy Color games
- Science fiction video games
- Video games developed in Belgium
- Video games set in 2007
- Video games with voxel graphics
- Windows games
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