Fade to Black (video game)

Fade to Black

Cover art drawn by Jean Giraud
Developer(s) Delphine Software International
Publisher(s) Electronic Arts
Director(s) Paul Cuisset
Designer(s) Paul Cuisset
Programmer(s) Philippe Chastel
Sébastien Clement
Guillaume Genty
Claude Levastre
Alain Ramond
Alain Tinarrage
Benoît Verillaud
Artist(s) Thierry Perreau
Composer(s) Raphaël Gesqua
Platform(s) DOS, PlayStation, AROS, MorphOS
Release date(s)

DOS

  • NA: 31 August 1995

PlayStation

  • NA: 28 June 1996
  • EU: July 1996
  • JP: 2 May 1997

AROS

  • EU: 26 November 2013

MorphOS

  • EU: December 2013
Genre(s) Action-adventure
Mode(s) Single-player

Fade to Black is an action-adventure game developed by Delphine Software International and published by Electronic Arts. It is the sequel to the 1992 video game Flashback. The game was released for DOS and PlayStation; planned Nintendo 64 and Sega Saturn versions were cancelled.

Gameplay

The game is displayed in full gouraud shaded 3D for DOS and fully textured 3D for the PlayStation. It features an over-the-shoulder viewpoint, with almost no platform sequences. The style of the game is action-adventure.

Plot

The main protagonist is Conrad Hart who, in Flashback, destroyed the planet of hostile aliens called the Morphs and went into suspended animation in a spaceship that floats aimlessly through outer space. In the year 2190 (50 years later), he is found by the Morphs and imprisoned in the Lunar prison of New Alcatraz. There, he is rescued by a man who introduces himself as John O'Conner, who tells him that the Morphs beat him to Conrad's ship, and leaves Conrad a few items "of interest" (a PDA and a handgun), before destroying the camera. On the PDA is a message that's from John, who tells Conrad to sneak around the base. Mandragore agents left a radar-scrambler there. Conrad soon makes it to John's ship. As they blast off, Morph ships start attacking them. They teleport to Mandragore base Shadow just as the ship is destroyed.

They meet Sarah Smith, the leader of the Mandragore resistance. Later, in a meeting with Mandragore commander Hank, she tells Conrad that while he was in suspended animation the Morphs attacked Earth with superior forces, which made the governments surrender. The Mandragore has far fewer people, but they refuse to give up. Agents then call Sarah and tell her that they have found the location of Professor Bergstein: Morph asteroid base D321. Sarah sends Conrad and John there to rescue him. Conrad eventually finds Bergstein, who tells him that the base must be destroyed because it contains the Morph's new mind-manipulating weapon. He gives him a datacube (similar to the holocube that is in Flashback), which he explains contains a virus that he programmed in. The virus will blow up the base when the datacube is connected to the core. They connect the virus to the core and escape the base with John as it blows up, along with the asteroid itself.

Conrad is then sent to Pluto, where he meets Ageer. He tells Ageer about his previous adventures. Ageer tells Conrad that he and his people, an ancient alien race, want to join the Mandragore and can lead them to victory. Soon, Ageer tells Conrad that he must find the oracle. Conrad travels to Easter Island. Ageer then tells Conrad that the oracle will lead him to the pyramid. As he travels, the Super Morph arrives to kill Conrad, who finds a glass eyeball that he gives to a hand creature that then gives him the oracle. The oracle does lead Conrad to the pyramid, which Ageer uses to give the history of the Ancients to Conrad:

The Ancients live in peace until the Morphs arrive. The Ancients think that they come in peace and they welcome them. However, the Morphs attack the ancients. The Ancients put their souls in the pyramid, which is then captured by the Morphs.

As Conrad starts returning to his ship, he sees John telling Master Brain that their plan has become a success; with his identity, he has managed to infiltrate Shadow and put in an active detonation device. Master Brain tells John that someone is spying on them. John looks back, sees Conrad, and then transforms into his true identity: the Super Morph. Conrad quickly takes the pyramid and returns to Shadow, which is then attacked by the Morphs. Conrad fights his way through the Morphs as agents get killed. Conrad gets a key from a rescued soldier, which gives him access to the command room, where Conrad meets Hank. He tells Conrad that Sarah can give him the code to disable the detonation device, but she has been taken hostage by a Morph. Conrad gets to the floor and saves Sarah, who then gives him the code and teleports away.

After Conrad disables the device, Ageer and Hank enter the command room as Sarah explains their new plan. The Ancients have given the Mandragore the ability to know where the central Master Brain is on Easter Island. She and Conrad will teleport there and destroy it. As they arrive, they separate. Conrad eventually teleports to the central Master Brain and throws the oracle in front of it. As he then teleports away, the oracle disappears and leaves behind the pyramid, which now contains the souls of the Ancients. The Ancients then fight the central Master Brain. The Ancients sacrifice themselves in order to destroy the central Master Brain. As Conrad flees Easter Island, it starts exploding, and the Super Morph gives chase. From here there are two endings:

Development

The idea of doing a 3D sequel to Flashback started in 1993.[1] The game was originally announced under the title "Crossfire".[2]

Conrad's animations were created using motion capture.[2]

Reception

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
EGM8 out of 10 (PS1)[3]
Next Generation (PS1)[4]

The PlayStation version was a bestseller in the UK,[5] and sold enough copies to go Platinum.

Fade to Black received a moderately positive critical response.[6] Electronic Gaming Monthly gave the PlayStation version their "Game of the Month" award.[3] Reviewers generally criticized the game's steep difficulty[3][4][7] and blocky polygon models,[3][7] but praised the background graphics and animations,[3][7] and generally concluded that the game's close blend of action and puzzling in a 3D environment was a success.[3][4][7]

Cancelled sequel

Flashback Legend was an unfinished second sequel of Flashback. It was in co-development by Delphine Software International and Adeline Software International for a planned release in 2003. As opposed to Fade to Black, it was going to be a 2D side-scroller game, like Flashback, but without non-scrolling areas. It was targeted exclusively for the Game Boy Advance.[8] The game was cancelled when Delphine went bankrupt and ceased operations in the end of 2002. However, a prototype ROM, dated 21 June 2002, was leaked and spread over the Internet at some point. It features all 16 levels with minor glitches and one music track, which is a compressed tune from Fade to Black. Despite multi-language options, the beta can only be played in French with an English pause menu, can be played in English via patch.[8]

References

  1. "Caught in the Crossfire". Next Generation. Imagine Media (6): 63. June 1995.
  2. 1 2 "Crossfire". Next Generation. Imagine Media (6): 59–62. June 1995.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Review Crew: Fade to Black". Electronic Gaming Monthly. Ziff Davis (84): 22. July 1996.
  4. 1 2 3 "Knockout". Next Generation. Imagine Media (21): 148. September 1996.
  5. Gallup UK Playstation sales chart, September 1996, published in the Official UK PlayStation Magazine issue 10
  6. Fade to Black at GameRankings
  7. 1 2 3 4 "ProReview: Fade to Black". GamePro. IDG (96): 66. September 1996.
  8. 1 2 Flashback Legends at Unseen64
Preceded by
Adidas Power Soccer
UK number-one PlayStation game
July–August 1996
Succeeded by
Resident Evil
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