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Alien BreedAlien blasting shooter with countless horrors and ugly glitches.The year is 2191 and the galaxy stands on the brink of war. Only the Inter-Planetary Corps maintain the uneasy peace throughout the dark galaxy. After a six month routine patrol around the Intex Network, crew members Johnson and Stone were ordered to check out a remote Space Research Centre which had failed to transmit on any of the Federation wavebands.
Alien Breed is an action packed survival horror science fiction shooter in which you play as a roughnecked marine fighting the rampaging aliens that have infested the Space Research Centre. The game is played from a top-down view as you explore and shoot your way through each level of the station. Everything in this game pushes it toward being a panicked, stressed and hopeless gameplay experience. Alien Breed has six missions, and completing them requires a high level of precision and previous knowledge of the game. Each level of the space station is a labyrinth of locked doors, rooms and corridors going in all directions. Because there's a limited number of keys that can be found, you really need to know which doors to open and which ones to leave untouched. The aliens are constantly respawning outside the edges of the screen, so you're forced to kill extra aliens each time you backtrack to a previous location. Obviously you can't afford to waste bullets like that, and if you make too many mistakes you're either eaten by aliens, or left with no keys to proceed forward. In the latter case you have no option but to restart the game and try again. Needless to say, this is crude game design. Other than collecting extra ammunition, health packs and keys, you'll find money, or credits, lying around here and there. This can be used to buy weapons, keys, extra lives, ammunition etc at the Intex service computers that you'll find scattered across the station. These same computers can also provide you with game statistics, maps and even a worthless Pong clone mini-game called Space Tennis.
The game has support for two players to play cooperatively. This increases your chances for survival, as you'll have twice the keys and twice the bullets at your disposal, but it also introduces an ugly glitch in the game. Both players must be on screen at all times, so you can't leave each other behind. This is fine, but there are security fire doors all over the space station which can't be opened once their lock mechanism is shot. If the two players are on either side of the door when a fire door shuts, you're stuck there forever. Shooting the lock mechanism only requires one shot, and it's easy to do by mistake while fending off waves of aliens. And the risk for this to happen only gets worse when you get more powerful weapons that have projectiles that bounce off of walls. Even if you are on the same side of the door when it shuts, it still can potentially trap you making it impossible to proceed in the game. Aliens will come in two basic forms – the bipedal gray slimy freaks and the bug-like six-legged ones. There are also a couple of alien bosses in there. The controls are easy to grasp, but in order to activate maps and toggle between weapons you'd need to use keyboard keys. It's also worth noting that you can't sidestep or anything like that, which means that you constantly have to reposition yourself while taking aim at enemies. There's also a risk of opening doors without the intention of doing so as merely walking near a door opens it, potentially wasting one of your keys. Alien Breed is definitely a game that you must fail at countless times before you can even think about beating it. You're given four lives to beat the game, and with aliens swarming all over the place, death typically comes quickly. Once you've memorized which doors to open, which paths are worth taking and how to evacuate each level, the game can be beaten in an hour or two. But getting there will require tireless trial and error tactics and the analytical skills of a genius of some sort. It's basically not worth it. As far as bugs and glitches are concerned, it happens every so often that your character gets stuck. The above mentioned fire doors are the biggest culprit here, but we've also seen that you can get stuck in walls, especially if there's a sloping ramp there that can displace you into it. As if there wasn't enough ways to get stuck in the game, there's also this stupid glitch. The game comes with a introduction disk that features the storyline coupled with some pictures. It's there merely to set the mood, and it does so well. A big part of Alien Breed is about setting the mood, and that's a good thing. You'll see fluorescent tubes flicker along the corridors and computers hum in the background. Aliens scream as they die from your wailing laser fire and a female robotic voice denotes what zones you enter as well as your health- and ammo status. They're cheap effects, but it works wonders.
The graphics are quite detailed and the appropriate creepy alien space horror atmosphere is intact throughout the whole game. While the game comes off as gray and somewhat stale in the first few levels, some colors are mixed into it in the later levels. The mixture keeps the visual presentation interesting beyond what you see in the first few minutes of the game, and you'll also keep encountering new elements in the levels as you go. Alien Breed has a lot of potential, but much of it goes untapped here. Blasting ugly aliens in a desolate space station with limited resources has a strange appeal for sure, especially with a buddy on your side. But the game should not have been released in its current state as it locks you up in hopeless dead end situations far too often. Even though the game is unforgettable with its creepy atmosphere and stressful gameplay you'll most likely end up being disappointed with it. This game is cruel with its endless numbers of aliens, stupid glitches and unbalanced gameplay. Written by Mattias - 2010-05-17 |
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