Killzone (video game)

Killzone

European cover art
Developer(s) Guerrilla Games
Supermassive Games (PS3)
Publisher(s) Sony Computer Entertainment
Designer(s) Martin Capel
Composer(s) Joris de Man
Series Killzone
Platform(s) PlayStation 2, PlayStation 3
Release date(s)

PlayStation 2

  • NA: November 2, 2004
  • EU: November 26, 2004
  • JP: October 27, 2005

PlayStation 3

  • NA: October 23, 2012
  • EU: October 24, 2012
Genre(s) First-person shooter
Mode(s) Single-player, multiplayer

Killzone is a first-person shooter, developed by Netherlands-based Guerrilla Games and released on November 2, 2004 in North America. The game was remastered in HD by Supermassive Games[1] and re-released within the Killzone Trilogy for PlayStation 3 as well as a standalone PSN title on October 23, 2012.[2]

Killzone takes place in the middle of the 24th century and chronicles the war between two human factions; the Vektans, and the Helghan. The game is played from a first-person view and follows Jan Templar, a high-ranking officer within the Interplanetary Strategic Alliance, as he battles invading Helghan forces into Vekta.

Prior to its release Killzone was heavily anticipated with several publications considering it to be Sony's "Halo killer" title. Upon release, however, the game was met with divided responses, with most critics praising Killzone's visuals, art design, soundtrack and atmosphere, but agreed that the final product was disappointing, with criticism also aimed at the game's narrative, characters and gameplay. Despite mixed reactions, Killzone spawned numerous sequels, several of which attained critical acclaim.

Plot

Killzone takes place in a fictional world set in the year 2357. After nuclear war rendered much of the Earth uninhabitable in 2055, world governments formed an international order known as the United Colonial Nations. Partnering with private firms, the UCN moved to establish human colonies in Alpha Centauri, a system occupied by two planets: Vekta, a rich Earth-like world (named after the CEO of the mining conglomerate Helghan, Philip Vekta), and Helghan, a barren wasteland named after the same company. The Helghan Corporation sought to buy ownership of Vekta as well, but when the UCN imposed sanctions against its unfair business practices, a war broke out (known as the First Extrasolar War), which led to the ISA, the military arm of the UCN, driving the company out of Vekta. In response, the exiled colonists established their own civilization on Helghan, built on the principles of militarism and authoritarianism. The harsh environment and atmosphere killed many Helghans, forcing the survivors to use respirators and air tanks just to breathe. Eventually, the population, now known as the Helghast, mutated into pale-skinned hairless humanoids with increased strength, stamina, and intelligence. They consider humans to be beneath them, and dream of one day reconquering Vekta and expanding their empire to Earth.

Story

Scolar Visari, emperor of Helghan, sends the Helghast Third Army to launch a secret invasion of Vekta. Alerted to the attack, the ISA attempt to prevent it with their SD (Solar Defense) network, but are unable to activate it in time to stop the invaders. With the element of surprise on their side, the Helghast quickly overwhelm the unprepared ISA ground forces and capture several strategic locations, including ISA Central Command.

While taking part in an offensive to slow the Helghast assault, Captain Jan Templar, a veteran ISA officer, is summoned to a meeting by his mentor and close friend, General Bradley Vaughton. Vaughton discloses that the ISA has requested assistance from the UCN and are working to restore the defense network. He also reveals that Colonel Gregor Hakha, a half-Helghan intelligence officer, had, on his orders, infiltrated the inner circle of Third Army commander General Joseph Lente, only to vanish while traveling to an extraction point in Vekta's slums. As Hakha is the only individual with knowledge of how the invasion bypassed SD, he assigns Jan to locate him. After fighting his way through the Helghast occupying the exterior of Central Command, Jan runs into Luger, a former comrade who is now working with an elite ISA division known as the Shadow Marshals. He also recruits the services of Ricardo Velasquez, an ISA gunner seeking revenge for the massacre of his entire platoon.

After rescuing Hakha, the team discovers that General Stuart Adams, the overseer for SD, is secretly working for Lente. He murders Vaughton and takes control of the system, planning to use it to destroy the relief fleet headed to Vekta. Under Jan's leadership, the team destroys several Helghast bases and infrastructure projects, eventually intercepting and killing Lente when he tries to deal with them personally. Adams retreats to the SD control center and tries to reason with the group, explaining that the Helghast will stop at nothing to reclaim Vekta, regardless of how many lives they lose. Nevertheless, the team disables the station and escapes just as the fleet destroys it, killing Adams. Jan and Luger speculate about what the future holds, realizing that the real war is far from over.

Reception

Reviews
Publication Score
PSM 9.5 of 10[3]
Game Revolution Grade C[4]
GameSpot 6.9 of 10[5]
Gaming Target 8.4 out of 10[6]
IGN 7.5 of 10[7]
Official PlayStation 2 Magazine UK 9 out of 10 (previous score)

7 out of 10 (flashback score)

Review compilations
GameRankings 74% (based on 80 reviews)[8]
Metacritic 70/100 (based on 67 reviews)[9]

Killzone received mixed to positive reviews. PSM stated that Killzone is "Graphically stunning and hits the mark in so many ways, it's baffling; they promised us we'd experience future war, and we have... and come away shaking."[3] Other reviewers cited technical problems with Killzone, including inconsistent AI,[7] occasional bugs, frame-rate issues, distracting graphical glitches,[7] repetition of the same voices,[5] short draw distance, and an awkward control system. Critics also complained about the gameplay, with IGN labeling it "underwhelming and mediocre"[7] and Into Liquid Sky stating that it "needs more refinement".[10]

Reviewers such as GameSpy[11] claimed that Killzone partly suffered due to the incredible publicity it received before release, raising expectations only for them to go unfulfilled. Despite this, Killzone was admired for its sound effects, its soundtrack, and its presentation of a gritty war zone;[7] it was also credited for its unique hard sci-fi art design.[11]

References

  1. "Killzone HD". Supermassive Games. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  2. "Killzone Trilogy joins PlayStation Collection on October 23rd – PlayStation.Blog". Blog.us.playstation.com. Retrieved 2013-08-16.
  3. 1 2 "Killzone Critic Reviews for PlayStation 2". Metacritic. Retrieved June 30, 2012.
  4. GameRevolution.com's review of Killzone. URL retrieved 8 November 2006.
  5. 1 2 Gamespot review of Killzone. URL retrieved 8 November 2006.
  6. GamingTarget review of Killzone. URL retrieved 8 November 2006.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 IGN review of Killzone. URL retrieved 8th November 2006.
  8. Gamerankings.com page for Killzone. URL retrieved 2 October 2007.
  9. Metacritic page for Killzone. URL retrieved 2 October 2007.
  10. IntoLiquidSky review of Killzone. URL retrieved 8 November 2006.
  11. 1 2 GameSpy review of Killzone. URL retrieved 8 November 2006.
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