Unreal Tournament 3
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Unreal Tournament 3 | |
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File:Unreal Tournament 3.jpg
Box art for Unreal Tournament 3
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Developer(s) | Epic Games |
Publisher(s) | Midway Games |
Designer(s) | Steve Polge |
Artist(s) | Jerry O'Flaherty |
Composer(s) | Jesper Kyd Rom Di Prisco Kevin Riepl |
Series | Unreal |
Engine | Unreal Engine 3 with PhysX |
Platforms | Microsoft Windows PlayStation 3 Xbox 360 Cloud (OnLive) |
Release date(s) | Microsoft Windows NA November 19, 2007 EU November 23, 2007 AUS November 29, 2007 JP September 18, 2008 PlayStation 3 NA December 11, 2007 AUS February 21, 2008 EU February 22, 2008 JP September 18, 2008 Xbox 360 AUS July 3, 2008 EU July 4, 2008 NA July 7, 2008 JP September 18, 2008 |
Genre(s) | First-person shooter |
Mode(s) | Single-player, multiplayer |
Unreal Tournament 3 (UT3) is a first-person shooter and online multiplayer video game by Epic Games, and is the latest installment of the Unreal series. It is published by Midway Games, and was released for Microsoft Windows on November 19, 2007, PlayStation 3 on December 11, 2007, and Xbox 360 on July 3, 2008. The Linux and Mac OS X versions of the game were planned to be released as downloadable installers that work with the retail disc. Ryan C. Gordon has uploaded screenshots of the game, dating from September 2008, running on both platforms.[1][2] On May 22, 2009, Ryan stated that the UT3 port for Linux was still in process.[3] On December 16, 2010, Steve Polge announced that the Linux port would never be released, making it the first Unreal Tournament game not to be released on Linux.[4]
Unreal Tournament 3 is the fourth game in the Unreal Tournament series and the eighth Unreal game, but is numbered in terms of the engine it runs on. The original Unreal Tournament uses the first Unreal Engine, while UT2003 and UT2004 use Unreal Engine 2. Since 2004 incorporates all of the content from 2003, they are regarded as part of the same generation. UT3 is the third generation, as it runs on Unreal Engine 3, and does not reuse any content.[5] In March 2008, Midway announced that UT3 had sold over a million copies worldwide.[6]
On May 8, 2014, Epic Games announced a new, free and crowdsourced Unreal Tournament title.[7][8]
Contents
Gameplay
Game modes
Similar to the prior entries of the series, the game is primarily an online multiplayer title offering several game modes, including large-scale Warfare, Capture-the-Flag, and Death match. It also includes an extensive offline multi-player game with an in-depth story, beginning with a simple tournament ladder and including team members with unique personalities. The following game modes are included:
- Deathmatch
- Team Deathmatch
- Capture the flag
- Duel – A one versus one game mode. It uses a queuing system: the winner stays, and the loser goes back to the end of the queue. A typical match lasts fifteen minutes with the winner being the player with most kills.
- Warfare – A mix of Onslaught and Assault game modes. While basic game rules are equal to those of Onslaught, Warfare adds countdown nodes (which, after being captured and defended for a certain period of time, create a vehicle or trigger an event helpful to the capturing team) as well as the orb, which can be used to instantly capture and defend nodes.
- Vehicle Capture the Flag – Capture the Flag, with vehicles as part of the map; this game mode is distinct from the standard Capture the Flag mode. Also, players are given a hoverboard rather than a translocator.
- Betrayal – This game type places freelance players on teams, and when the members of each team kill enemies, the pot for that team grows. Anybody on a team with a pot can betray the rest of the team by shooting them, thus taking the pot, but they must defend themselves from the betrayed teammates for 30 seconds after that, or the teammates receive extra points.
- Greed – Greed is a game that (like the UT2004 mod of the same name) focuses on collecting skulls dropped from dead players and capturing them in the opposing team's base. For Greed, the game uses all Capture the Flag and Vehicle Capture the Flag maps.
Modes not returning from the prior Unreal Tournament games include Invasion, Mutant (having been later on partially replaced by the Titan mutator in the UT3 Titan Pack), Onslaught (replaced by Warfare), Bombing Run, Last Man Standing, Domination, Double Domination, and Assault; Assault was removed from the game during production.[9]
Vehicles
In this installment of Unreal Tournament, the vehicles are split into two factions, the Axon vehicles and Necris vehicles. The Axon vehicles are the same vehicles from UT2004, but several have significant game play changes. In addition, on vehicle maps every player is equipped with a personal hover board, a skateboard-like device that allows players to quickly traverse large maps and grapple onto other team-mates' vehicles. The hover board is very vulnerable to attack, and any hit will knock the player off the board and disable him or her for several seconds, leaving the player exposed and vulnerable. The player cannot use any weapons while on the board. Board open Q caps.
Teams
Unlike the prior Unreal Tournament games, the single-player campaign does not follow a plot based around the Tournament Grand Championship, and therefore several of the teams within Unreal Tournament 3 are not Tournament competitors.
The five playable factions are: Iron Guard, a team of human mercenaries led by former Tournament champion Malcolm; the Ronin, a band of four survivors of a Skaarj attack on a human colony; Liandri, a series of advanced humanoid robots custom-built or retrofitted for combat; the Krall, a warlike race of aliens formerly under the leadership of the Skaarj, returning from their initial appearance in the original Unreal; and the Necris, warriors who have undergone the process of the same name, making them stronger at the expense of replacing their biological processes with "Nanoblack", effectively turning them into undead soldiers (hence the name, Necris).
In the Campaign, players control members of the Ronin, and the Necris serve as the chief antagonists.
Plot
Lua error in Module:Details at line 30: attempt to call field '_formatLink' (a nil value). In 2307, some years after UT2004, a Necris attack occurs on a colony on unknown planet, releasing armed Kralls on the humans. The colony is defenseless, but a group of Ronins arrives on the scene, defending the survivors. Reaper, the group's leader, advises his second-in-command warrior Othello and his sister Jester to destroy the orbital Necris blockade with a fighter, and orders team's sniper expert, Bishop, to provide cover as he swarms to save the colony. Suddenly, he is caught in the explosion of an incoming rocket missile and passes out, but not before seeing an unknown Necris woman shooting a soldier next to him.
Reaper is rescued by Othello and Jester and wakes up in the base of the Izanagi, a guerrilla force that fights against Necris and Axon, and he meets with the leader, revealed to be Malcolm, who also leads the Iron Guard as the Izanagi's army. The unknown woman who Reaper saw turns out to be Akasha, the Necris operative who destroyed the colony and also leads the Necris forces. Reaper wants to kill her, but Malcolm tells him that he needs to prove himself first.
Marketing
On October 26, 2007, a limited collector's edition of the game was announced for release on PC. This version of the game features an exclusive collector's edition tin and a hardcover art book. A bonus DVD is also included, featuring more than twenty hours of Unreal Engine 3 Tool kit video tutorials, the history of the Unreal Tournament series, and behind-the-scenes footage of the making of Unreal Tournament 3. The Limited Collector's Edition is being sold in the United States, Canada, Latin America, Europe, South Africa, Australia and most other territories.[10]
Development
Windows version
The game was announced in May 2005 as Unreal Tournament 2007 for a 2006 release.[11] In 2006 the game was delayed until the first half of 2007.[12] In January 2007 the game was renamed to Unreal Tournament 3.[13]
Xbox 360 version
Upon release, the Xbox 360 version had five exclusive maps, two exclusive characters, a two-player split screen mode,[14] and all the downloadable content released by Epic already on the disc. With the release of the PS3 and PC "Titan Upgrade" patch on March 5, these versions offered the formerly exclusive Xbox 360 content, as well as other content.[15] The Xbox 360 version does not support user-generated mods, as additional content has to be verified by Microsoft before being released. It is the only version to support controllers only.
PlayStation 3 version
The PS3 version supports mods that can be uploaded and downloaded to the PS3's HDD or external media, as well as mouse and keyboard inputs. The 1.1 patch was released on March 21, 2008. It adds the ability for players using the North American and European versions to play together, fixes problems with some USB headsets, and displays the lowest pinging servers at top of the server list. Some updates only applied on the North American version, since the PAL version released in March 2008 was already partially updated.[16] The 2.0 patch was released on March 5, 2009, and adds better PC mod support, split screen, smarter AI, forty eight attainable Trophies, server-side improvements, an improved map vote, local multi-player, and a new user interface. Online and LAN multiplayer for this version was terminated on July 2014, following the shutdown of all GameSpy servers.
Soundtrack
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Unreal Tournament 3: The Soundtrack is primarily based on the original Unreal Tournament score, which was composed by Straylight Productions and Michiel van den Bos.[17][18] Jesper Kyd and Rom Di Prisco remixed many of UT99's tracks and composed several other original tracks, which were released on November 20, 2007 by Sumthing Else.[19] Sandhya Sanjana was featured as a guest vocalist. Kevin Riepl did also contribute in music production for the game, scoring the cutscenes as well as a few in-game music tracks.[20]
According to IGN, Di Prisco's work in Unreal Tournament 3 is influenced by a variety of electronic music periods and artists, such as Vangelis, Tangerine Dream, William Orbit, Orbital, and Roni Size. The Crystal Method, Kraftwerk and Peter Gabriel are also mentioned as influences on the soundtrack.[21]
Titan Pack
On March 5, 2009, a free update called the Titan Pack was released for the PC; the PS3 version of the pack was released on March 19, 2009.
The pack includes five maps and two characters that were formerly exclusive to the Xbox 360 version, along with eleven brand new maps, two new game modes ("Greed" and "Betrayal"), and the Titan Mutator. The Titan Mutator causes a player to grow in size as they do better, while carrying alternative weapons and power ups. The expansion also includes a new power up, a new vehicle, two new deployables, and the addition of stinger turrets. A new patch was also released in conjunction with the Titan Pack, which allowed for various AI improvements (especially in vehicle modes), networking performance upgrades and added support for Steam Achievements (PC) and Trophies (PS3). It also adds a two player split screen mode (formerly exclusive to the 360 version) and mod browsing for the PS3 version.
The Black Edition is a complete Unreal Tournament III package—included is the complete UT3 (with patch 2.0) as well as the Titan Pack. The Titan Pack gives players a substantial amount of enhanced features and new content, including many original environments, new gametypes, the namesake Titan mutator, powerful deployables and weapons, new characters, and the Stealthbender vehicle.
Reception
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Unreal Tournament 3 received generally positive reviews from critics. The Windows version received an average score of 84% based on 38 reviews on the review aggregator Game Rankings,[44] and an average score of 83 out of 100 based on 41 reviews on Metacritic.[45] The PS3 version received an average score of 86% based on 41 reviews on the review aggregator Game Rankings,[46] and an average score of 86 out of 100 based on 41 reviews on Metacritic.[47] Xbox Magazine rated it 8.5 out of 10.[48] Midway announced in March 2008 that they had shipped over 1 million units worldwide.[49] GameSpot gave it an 8 out of 10 for the Xbox 360 version and 8.5 for PC and PS3.[50] PlayStation: the Official Magazine gave it 5 stars out of 5 in its February '08 issue and stated, "UT3 looks great, but it's every bit the stunner under the surface."
Unreal Tournament 3 is mentioned in the book 1001 Video Games You Must Play Before You Die.
References
- ↑ New Unreal Tournament 3 Linux Details
- ↑ Linux and Mac Screenshots
- ↑ Phoronix: Ryan Gordon On Linux UT3: "still on its way"
- ↑ For Those Hoping To See UT3 On Linux This Holiday...
- ↑ Mark Rein talks Gears of War downloads, UT3 on PS3 | Xbox 360 News | GamePro.com
- ↑ Unreal Tournament 3, Stranglehold Break 1M Sold - Shacknews - PC Games, PlayStation, Xbox 360 and Wii video game news, previews and downloads
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ http://gamevideos.1up.com/video/id/9489
- ↑ PC: Unreal 3 Collector's Edition Detailed
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- ↑ UT3 Does Split Screen
- ↑ IGN: Unreal Tournament 3 Media Blowout
- ↑ PS3 1.1 Patch Fix List
- ↑ Unreal Tournament 3 Soundtrack Gets Released, IGN
- ↑ Unreal Tournament III - The Soundtrack, Discogs
- ↑ Jesper Kyd Online
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- ↑ (September 2008). Xbox Magazine. Issue 87, p. 66-67.
- ↑ UT3 and Stranglehold hit 1m sales - www.mcvuk.com
- ↑ http://www.gamespot.com/xbox360/action/unrealtournament2007/review.html
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