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Spycraft: The Great Game (DOS/Win95)
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Many interesting things happened when the Soviet Union disbanded, but one of the most curious was the incredibly rapid end of hostilities and the secrets guarded by them. Maybe we were all sick of war. Maybe it was a process glasnost started, and officials on both sides were just waiting for the final all-clear to start offloading favorite war stories. Plus, and let's be honest, a lot of professionals were now out of a job. So I guess it's no real surprise that a strange sort of declassification process occurred. Books were written, very qualified consultants for films popped up everywhere, even the CIA, which long wouldn't even admit it was headquartered in Langley, owned up to that fact. Tom Cruise revitalized the Mission: Impossible franchise, United Artists brought Bond back after a ten year slump, and spies were back bigger than they were in the 60's. If you know the period then, it's no surprise at all that Activision blended popular culture and made an FMV spy adventure. You play as a CIA case agent named Thorn. You're called in as part of a team to work a growing international incident that could threaten U.S.-Russian relations. One of Russia's presidential candidates gets half his face blown off (literally; do mind the adult content warnings) during a speech in Red Square. The agent who was supposed to be in charge of this investigation gets shot while training you at Camp Peary. You're left in command of the four remaining agents as you attempt to track down the assassin and his handlers before the situation spirals further out of control.
You interface with your tools through the "Interlink" software that, in the world of the game, connects all of the major federal agencies into one data network. You can get your email or reports from your PDA, and thus anywhere in the game, but the investigative tools almost always require you to use your computer terminal. Emails are the lifeblood of the game, in both text and video form. Most every update you get will be sent to you in this manner, which also means this is how the plot is moved along. A break in the case will frequently be made, reported in an email, and the requisite software programs for cracking the discovered puzzle will be attached. You solve the puzzle, and report your findings in your own email. These reports are typed out automatically, with key information filled in by you out of a lengthy multiple choice list. Once you've proven you solved the puzzle, the next batch of in-game emails gets sent to you. If you're wrong, you'll simply get an email telling you some part doesn't add up and you'll need to try again.
The world of the game is entirely contained within the CDs, but does try to branch out and blur reality lines. One of the Interlink options is a news service where you can receive the daily intel brief or view CNN-style news clips on the game's growing political situation. If you're running the Windows 95 version of the game, you can also get real life news to stream along with these, and on a news ticker running at the bottom of that page. There are fake in-game web pages dealing with your investigation, but the Win95 version also links to the real homepages of the various agencies and provides links to some interesting Learning Channel kinds of backstory to tools or concepts, like the history of cryptography. It's sort of like special features on a DVD, I suppose. This "Spycraft Online" option serves two purposes. The first is to make the game seem like it's going on right now, the other is an attempt to make it seem entwined with reality. It's a good thing all of this is just extra fluff, since it doesn't work. The DOS version doesn't have the capability, and if the Win95 version ever did as advertised, then its links no longer function. The game is still completely playable since no important information was ever stored on the actual Internet, but that little link to reality was lost. The game was never endorsed by either the CIA or the KGB, though I don't believe they've ever endorsed such materials. Still, William Colby, former Director of Central Intelligence, and Oleg Kalugin, former Major General of the KGB, were hired as the game's poster children. Both make limited appearances in the game, with Colby getting the most star time. He joins as an advisor to help find a double agent in your ranks, and sends emails where he reads from a script and tells you not to trust anyone. Thanks, Chief. Will do.
Still, you get a large variety of things to do. They understood that if you're going to be making a game of puzzles, you at least better not be doing the same thing twice. Some can actually be fun (tracking a break-in using call and access records), some can be overly frustrating (doctoring a photo), some can be downright sadistic (you have the option to torture a prisoner for information), but they're all different. The graphics are sharp, the computer interfaces clean, and the controls are a cinch to use. The CD sound is used well in a number of sound analysis puzzles, the dialogue and the FMV scenes are clearly recorded and well-acted. It's a competent effort and a unique title, but hard to call very serious, captivating, or much of challenge. It would have been interesting to see how this game would have been if it came out after 24, or if the show made a game in this fashion. With a little grit and a more intense execution (time limits, anyone?), this game could have been a serious winner. Instead, you're mostly jockeying a desk; lazily unraveling a plot that never seems all that dangerous (this is the only game you'll play where capturing a nuclear bomb is a little pit stop from the actual plot). It's a fine choice at a bargain price, but not much of a thriller. -reviewed 1/28/07 - game copyright 1996 Activision
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