Odium

Odium (also known as Gorky 17) is a Polish tactical strategy game with some minor adventure and Survival Horror elements, released in 1999.

Gorky 17 was a secret Russian town where enigmatic experiments were taking place until the town has been carpet bombed to the ground. Now it is one year later, in the unimaginably distant 2010, when mysterious things start happening in a town somewhere in Poland. The first expedition sent out disappears. Three men are sent in the second expedition - Cole Sullivan, Jarek Ovitz and Thiery Trantigne. Their mission: to find out what happened. And boldly go where no man has gone before survive.

Two sequels, Gorky Zero: Beyond Honor and Gorky 2: Aurora Watching were released in the Eastern European market. The sequels share a common plot, but are fairly unrelated to the original Gorky 17, being Metal Gear Solid-style third person stealth shooters focusing on the activities of covert ops specialist Cole Sullivan as he investigates zombie-producing shenanigans being carried out by a rogue scientist and a renegade colonel. Gorky 2 was released as Soldier Elite for the English-language market, but Cole's name was changed to White Fox.

This game provides examples of:

 * Anticlimax Boss: Any of the human bosses,
 * An Axe to Grind
 * Batter Up
 * Bragging Rights Reward: The Energy Blaster. You find it literally three battles before the ending, and the first battle has only monsters that are immune to it.
 * Bullethole Door: Featured in the boss Puppet's introductory cinematic. The street appears empty at first, and then the guy miniguns his way out of a wall.
 * Cheese Eating Surrender Monkeys: Thiery Trantigne has the annoying tendency to declare how they're all going to die when facing even the scrawniest bunch of enemies.
 * Contractual Boss Immunity: Most bosses are immune to stun attacks like the tranquilizer. However, the final boss is not, rendering the final battle a ridiculously one-sided curbstomp if you realize this.
 * Crate Expectations: Small crates with useful stuff inside.
 * Crowbar Combatant
 * Defend Command
 * Denial of Diagonal Attack: All melee attack and some ranged weapons can inexplicably be used to attack only along the vertical and horizontal axis.
 * Dual Boss: The Incubuses.
 * Exploding Barrels: Deal 40 damage to anyone caught in the blast.
 * Exposition Break: Only at the end of the game do you receive an explanation about what's been going on, and it takes a while to listen to all of it.
 * Face Heel Turn:, though it's optional.
 * Fight Woosh
 * Four Is Death: Joan McFadden could be considered the "canonical" fourth party member, since like the 3 main characters she's a NATO operative that was part of the second squad sent in to investigate the incident.
 * Fridge Logic: How can an enemy be tranquilized and on fire at the same time? You'd think the latter would nullify the former.
 * How do the mutants get all the machinery grafted onto them?
 * Gameplay and Story Segregation: Happens any time that combat events happen outside of combat
 * Guest Star Party Member: Everyone who joins you throughout the game.
 * Harmless Freezing: Being frozen paralyzes you and makes you vulnerable to damage for a few turns, but has no aftereffects.
 * He Knows Too Much:
 * Hyperactive Metabolism: The "Food" item, which gives 20 health.
 * Hyperspace Is a Scary Place: The eventual explanation for exactly what the Hell's going on. Apparently the Russians' experiments in teleporting living things eventually brought back a virus that started spreading and mutating everything in the city.
 * Insurmountable Waist High Fence: A tiny bush or a knee-high pipe cannot be walked over and can block your shots. (You cannot even shoot across gaps!) The enemies' shots too, thankfully.
 * Invisible Monsters: Encountered near the end of the game, Fore Shadowed throughout.
 * Lost Forever: The crates that are on the battlefield during combat. They disappear after you kill all the enemies, so you'd better open them before that.
 * The Medic: Joan McFadden, who gets a 15% bonus to using healing items.
 * Man On Fire: You've got flamethrowers, you've got molotov cocktails, and when all else fails you can just lob some vodka at someone, followed by a lit match.
 * Molotov Cocktail: Less of a blast than a grenade, but the fire damage outstrips what a grenade can do easily.
 * Mutually Exclusive Party Members: Slavsky and Medusa.
 * Notice This: All pickups on the map blink.
 * Optional Party Member: Slavsky. You can get him, but you have to pay by and wasting a stun grenade.
 * The Place: Gorky 17, the European title. It's the Russian town from the backstory, though it's not visited in game.
 * Plotline Death:
 * Protection Mission: Pops up five times.
 * Red Shirt Reporter: Anne Hutchens, who joins you as a team member (and is useless).
 * RPG Elements: Your characters gain experience during combat (after every single succesful attack) and level up also during combat. They have stats governing their health, their likelihood of counterattacking, their likelihood of making a critical hit, and how many hits they can take before becoming Enraged.
 * Scenery Gorn
 * Schizophrenic Difficulty: Depending on how good you are at finding equipment caches and how good you are at conserving supplies, some parts of the game could be very, very easy or very, very hard compared to the parts that came before.
 * Send in The Search Team
 * Set a Mook To Kill A Mook: Averted. Enemies will not attack if their attack would harm an ally (or themselves). This can be exploited for tactic value.
 * Short Range Long Range Weapon: A pistol can only fire a square or two further than a thrown knife. A rifle only fires a square or two farther than a pistol. No weapon fires further than eight steps away.
 * So Long and Thanks For All The Gear: Every party member except your starters, sooner or later.
 * Sprite Polygon Mix: Flat backgrounds, polygon characters and monsters.
 * Stationary Boss: Puppet and Messiah.
 * Talkative Loon:.
 * Token Non Human: Medusa.
 * Too Awesome to Use: Missile, Lightning Strike, Energy Beam. All of them are similar, in that they deal tons of damage in a big radius, and can only be used once. (It's fun to use the Energy Beam only to find out that the enemy happens to be immune to energy attacks...)
 * Unique Enemy: Hornet and Harvester. Generic in every respect, except that they only show up in one battle each.
 * Unstable Equilibrium: You REALLY need to find those weapon caches.
 * Unwinnable: Since encounters are non-random and ammo is fairly scarce, if you're too wasteful at the beginning you can find yourself in a situation where you don't have enough ammo to defeat a mandatory encounter later on.
 * Vasquez Always Dies:
 * The Virus: The origin of all the monsters. Most of them were once human, though some seem to have once been animals.
 * We Cannot Go On Without You: Every single character. If anyone at all dies, you lose.
 * Weaksauce Weakness: In the mid-to-late game, any enemy that can be tranquilized is this. It's very easy to surround a target with dudes who stun it and then beat it to death.
 * What Happened to The Mouse: You never figure out who those robbers from the docks were, or who left those BT213 notes behind, or what happened to any of the surviving party members post-game.