One (video game)

One is a video game released for the Sony PlayStation in 1997. The game was released as a PSone Classic for download on the PlayStation Network on March 18, 2010.

One
North American cover art
Developer(s)Visual Concepts
Publisher(s)
Director(s)Scott Patterson
Composer(s)Mark Chosak
Platform(s)PlayStation
Release
  • NA: November 30, 1997
  • PAL: March 1998
  • JP: March 25, 1999
Genre(s)Third-person shooter
Mode(s)Single-player

Gameplay

One is a linear 3D platform shooter with a dynamic camera that automatically shifts perspectives with the action.

In lieu of power-ups, the player builds the "rage meter" by killing enemies. Building the rage meter increases their character's abilities, in some cases in ways that are necessary to advance through the levels.[1]

There are six levels in total with a boss at the end of each, most of whom cannot be dispatched by direct gunfire and instead must be defeated by usage of the surrounding environment.

Plot

The goal of One is for the player to discover the identity of the main character John Cain. The only clue available is a barcode on the player-character's neck. At the beginning of the game, John Cain awakens on the floor of an apartment building, with a gun in place of one arm, no memory, and police helicopters shooting missiles through a window. Meanwhile, the player character is pursued across the city and country-side by military and police forces who are apparently intending to kill Cain, and have mistaken the player character for him. To combat the police and military forces and other enemies, the player has the option to use Cain's newly installed arm cannon, or rely on more traditional fighting weapons like punch and kicking combos.

Development

Visual Concepts president Greg Thomas stated, "The whole idea behind this game was to take the kind of hard-hitting fast pace you used to see in side-scrolling platform games and translate those values into a 3D game."[2]

The game uses asynchronous loading, a common PlayStation technique which makes the game load data into the console's RAM during play, thus preventing the game from having to pause for load times.[2]

Reception

Shawn Smith of Electronic Gaming Monthly selected One as his pick for "Sleeper Hit of the Holidays", praising the originality of mechanics such as the rage meter and saying the game "brings back some of the feel of the Super NES Contra games - and does it well on a 32-bit machine to boot."[3]

Next Generation reviewed the PlayStation version of the game, rating it two stars out of five, and stated that "One had a lot of promise. If only ASC could've gotten the graphics and the control in sync. But then that's the trick, isn't it?"[4]

gollark: what could POSSIBLY go wrong.
gollark: Which you can do.
gollark: Don't you just need to, er, either edit your sudo config so it works passwordlessly, *or* suid it?
gollark: i do not KNOW™™(™)
gollark: ~~|~~

References

  1. "One: Despite All my Rage...". Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 97. Ziff Davis. August 1997. p. 106.
  2. "NG Alphas: One". Next Generation. No. 30. Imagine Media. June 1997. pp. 87–88.
  3. "The 5 Sleeper Hits of the Holidays". Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 100. Ziff Davis. November 1997. p. 184.
  4. "Finals". Next Generation. No. 39. Imagine Media. March 1998. p. 111.
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