Boiling Point: Road to Hell: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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[[Wide Open Sandbox|Open-ended]] [[First-Person Shooter]] developed by the Ukrainian game studio Deep Shadows. It was perhaps the [[Trope Maker|first of its genre]], [[Older Than They Think|predating]] both ''[[STALKER|Stalker: Shadow of Chernobyl]]'' and ''[[Far Cry|Far Cry 2]]''. [[Love It or Hate It|Extremely polarizing game]], mostly because the game was released with [[Obvious Beta|literally hundreds of bugs]], though almost all of them were eventually fixed by patches.
[[Wide Open Sandbox|Open-ended]] [[First-Person Shooter]] developed by the Ukrainian game studio Deep Shadows. It was perhaps the [[Trope Maker|first of its genre]], [[Older Than They Think|predating]] both ''[[STALKER|Stalker: Shadow of Chernobyl]]'' and ''[[Far Cry|Far Cry 2]]''. [[Love It or Hate It|Extremely polarizing game]], mostly because the game was released with [[Obvious Beta|literally hundreds of bugs]], though almost all of them were eventually fixed by patches.


The game plays like [[Deus Ex (Video Game)|Deus Ex]] as a [[Wide Open Sandbox]], having a [[Stat Grinding|skill system]], a [[Stealth Based Game|stealth system]], and a lot of time spent talking to people.
The game plays like [[Deus Ex]] as a [[Wide Open Sandbox]], having a [[Stat Grinding|skill system]], a [[Stealth Based Game|stealth system]], and a lot of time spent talking to people.


The plot follows one Saul Myers (whose [[No Celebrities Were Harmed|character model is based]] on [[Arnold Vosloo]], though the resemblance in actual game graphics is... [[Off-Model|somewhat questionable]]), a [[Retired Badass|veteran of the French Foreign Legion]] living abroad in Paris. Myers' daughter, [[Damsel in Distress|Lisa]], is a [[Intrepid Reporter|globetrotting journalist]]. Lisa runs afoul of and is kidnapped by persons unknown while working in the [[Banana Republic|fictional, troubled South American nation of Realia]]. News of this is quickly relayed to Myers, who hastily departs for Realia, where he must tangle with local politics and the criminal underworld while trying to track down his missing daughter.
The plot follows one Saul Myers (whose [[No Celebrities Were Harmed|character model is based]] on [[Arnold Vosloo]], though the resemblance in actual game graphics is... [[Off-Model|somewhat questionable]]), a [[Retired Badass|veteran of the French Foreign Legion]] living abroad in Paris. Myers' daughter, [[Damsel in Distress|Lisa]], is a [[Intrepid Reporter|globetrotting journalist]]. Lisa runs afoul of and is kidnapped by persons unknown while working in the [[Banana Republic|fictional, troubled South American nation of Realia]]. News of this is quickly relayed to Myers, who hastily departs for Realia, where he must tangle with local politics and the criminal underworld while trying to track down his missing daughter.


The game has two [[Spiritual Successor|spiritual successors]] (''[[White Gold War In Paradise|White Gold: War in Paradise]]'' and ''[[The Precursors (Video Game)|The Precursors]]'' which were [[No Export for You|only released in Russia and Ukraine]], though there are [[Fan Translation|fan translations]] available.
The game has two [[Spiritual Successor|spiritual successors]] (''[[White Gold War In Paradise|White Gold: War in Paradise]]'' and ''[[The Precursors]]'' which were [[No Export for You|only released in Russia and Ukraine]], though there are [[Fan Translation|fan translations]] available.


{{tropelist}}
{{tropelist}}
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* [[Karma Meter]]: Your "Reputation with Civilians" stat is basically this.
* [[Karma Meter]]: Your "Reputation with Civilians" stat is basically this.
* [[Killer Rabbit]]: Those helpless old Grannies sitting by the side of the road will often pull out frag grenades and start tossing them at you if you start mowing down civilians in the middle of town.
* [[Killer Rabbit]]: Those helpless old Grannies sitting by the side of the road will often pull out frag grenades and start tossing them at you if you start mowing down civilians in the middle of town.
* [[Market-Based Title]]: On its' motherland, the prequel is known as ''Xenus: The Boiling Point''. Does this situation remind you of ''[[Fahrenheit]]'' or should it be said as ''The Indigo Prophecy''?
* [[Market-Based Title]]: On its' motherland, the prequel is known as ''Xenus: The Boiling Point''. Does this situation remind you of ''[[Fahrenheit (2005 video game)]]'' or should it be said as ''The Indigo Prophecy''?
* [[Obvious Beta]]: ''Don't'' play this without Patch 2.0.
* [[Obvious Beta]]: ''Don't'' play this without Patch 2.0.
** To give you an idea, one of the fixes reported in the patch changelog is 'NPCs now avoid obstacles when moving'.
** To give you an idea, one of the fixes reported in the patch changelog is 'NPCs now avoid obstacles when moving'.

Latest revision as of 10:46, 9 April 2014

Boiling point reached!


Open-ended First-Person Shooter developed by the Ukrainian game studio Deep Shadows. It was perhaps the first of its genre, predating both Stalker: Shadow of Chernobyl and Far Cry 2. Extremely polarizing game, mostly because the game was released with literally hundreds of bugs, though almost all of them were eventually fixed by patches.

The game plays like Deus Ex as a Wide Open Sandbox, having a skill system, a stealth system, and a lot of time spent talking to people.

The plot follows one Saul Myers (whose character model is based on Arnold Vosloo, though the resemblance in actual game graphics is... somewhat questionable), a veteran of the French Foreign Legion living abroad in Paris. Myers' daughter, Lisa, is a globetrotting journalist. Lisa runs afoul of and is kidnapped by persons unknown while working in the fictional, troubled South American nation of Realia. News of this is quickly relayed to Myers, who hastily departs for Realia, where he must tangle with local politics and the criminal underworld while trying to track down his missing daughter.

The game has two spiritual successors (White Gold: War in Paradise and The Precursors which were only released in Russia and Ukraine, though there are fan translations available.

Tropes used in Boiling Point: Road to Hell include: