Project Firestart
Project Firestart is a cinematic survival horror game for the Commodore 64 computer system. It was designed by Jeff Tunnell and Damon Slye and published by Electronic Arts in 1989. The game features a story with multiple paths and endings.
Project Firestart | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Dynamix |
Publisher(s) | Electronic Arts |
Designer(s) | Jeff Tunnell Damon Slye |
Programmer(s) | Dariusz Lukaszuk Paul Bowman Richard Rayl |
Artist(s) | John Burton Dariusz Lukaszuk |
Composer(s) | Alan McKean |
Platform(s) | Commodore 64 |
Release | 1989 |
Genre(s) | Survival horror |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Plot
In 2061, agent Jon Hawking of the United System States is sent to the research ship Prometheus, in orbit around Titan. Hawking's mission is to make contact with the members of Project Firestart, an initiative of the System Science Foundation, who have recently dropped out of communication with their superiors on Earth. Hawking is further instructed to retrieve all of the scientific data on board the Prometheus and then to destroy the ship, based on the USS' belief that Project Firestart has been compromised and could potentially pose a threat to Earth. Should Hawking fail in his mission, the USS will remotely activate the Prometheus' self destruct sequence on the assumption that Hawking himself has been killed.
On board the Prometheus, Hawking discovers the entire crew brutally murdered and the ship infested with large, hostile creatures. Retrieving the ship's science logs, Hawking discovers that Project Firestart was a genetic engineering program that sought to create a mining species resistant to extreme cold and low oxygen levels by combining the DNA of oxen with a new species of fungi discovered in asteroids around Titan. Hawking further learns that one of the scientists on the project, Dr. Annar, secretly altered the DNA of the mining creatures in an attempt to create a race of super soldiers. The plan backfired, as Annar's creations proved to be mindlessly hostile and capable of asexual reproduction. Unable to contain the monsters, the crew of the Prometheus was slaughtered. Annar himself survived by placing himself in cryosleep; upon Hawking's arrival on the Prometheus, he awakens. Also in cryosleep is Mary, another Firestart scientist who survived the massacre because she was placed in suspended animation after suffering a minor injury.
The creatures spawn a giant, white version of themselves, which begins attacking them. The white creature then seeks out Hawking, who discovers that it is completely invulnerable to all of his weaponry. Using the Firestart scientists' notes on the genetic flaws in their original organisms, he must improvise a way to kill the creature using the resources available to him on board the ship.
Endings
The ending of the game varies depending on different actions taken by the player:
If the player rescues Mary and escapes the ship with the science logs, Hawking is attacked on board the escape shuttle by Annar, who doesn't want knowledge of his experiments to leak out. By firing their weapon at the right time, the player can shoot and kill Dr. Annar; on board the rescue craft, Hawking is reunited with Mary.
If the player does not rescue Mary but escapes with the science logs, Hawking is still attacked by Dr. Annar. The player can still kill him, and be brought on board the rescue craft.
Failing to fire at the right time will result in Dr. Annar overpowering Hawking and killing him. The Prometheus is destroyed, but Annar escapes with his research notes to begin his work anew.
Leaving without the science logs results in Hawking's superiors chastising him as a coward and a failure.
Dying on board the Prometheus results in the creatures overrunning the ship, multiplying uncontrollably. The USS remote detonates the station, destroying it and the creatures.
Gameplay
The game is a side-scrolling, pseudo-3D action-adventure game. The player's character can run left or right through environments, shooting enemies with his laser gun and entering doors. The game adopted a cabinet projection for giving the action greater depth, and some areas allowed for movement into and out of the background. The HUD and on-screen information is very limited, just showing the health of the main character and the amount of ammo available.
Some of the terminals throughout the space station contain logs and journals of the personnel, which provide a history of the genetic project and thus the backstory - a revolutionary feature in 1989, which has become very common in modern videogames. Occasionally, due to a player action or at fixed points in the game, the game would pause for a cutscene featuring either the hero or the monsters.
Reception
Project Firestart was generally well received by the press in 1989. The famous videogame magazine Zzap!64 rated the game 91%, with the following comment: "Project Firestart is jam-packed with the sort of fast-paced, polished presentation and chilling atmosphere which make software epics.".[1] Another magazine, PowerPlay, rated the game 78/100, describing it as "characterized by an unbelievably thick atmosphere" and at the same time criticizing its use of a disk-exchange system, which requires the player to swap the disks many times mid-game.[2] Computer Gaming World noted the game succeeds outside the traditional mold of action or adventure games and said, "While the game may fail to satisfy devout action gamers because the pacing of the action is slow or doctrinaire role-players because of the lack of true interaction and character development, it is a suspenseful blend of music, graphics, decision-making, action, clues, plot, and even, romance."[3]
Although never commercially successful, the game has an enduring cult following, and is ranked on Lemon64 as the 21st best Commodore 64 game by user votes (minimum 120) as of 2016.[4]
Legacy
IGN has called it the first "fully formed vision of survival horror as we know it today," citing its balance of action and adventure, limited ammunition, weak weaponry, vulnerable main character, feeling of isolation, storytelling through journals, graphic violence, open exploration, cut-scenes, multiple endings and use of dynamically triggered music—all of which were characteristic elements of later games in the survival horror genre.[5] Penny Arcade has similarly described it as "the Survival Horror template in its entirety".[6]
References
- Zzap! Review for Project Firestart at Mobygames
- German Project Firestart review on PowerPlay (scan)
- Wilson, David (October 1989), "Quest for Firepower", Computer Gaming World, p. 18
- http://www.lemon64.com/?mainurl=http%3A//www.lemon64.com/games/
- Travis Fahs. "IGN Presents the History of Survival Horror". IGN. Retrieved 2009-11-02.
- Jerry Holkins. "My Friend Wyrmidon". Penny Arcade (webcomic). Retrieved 2011-02-02.
External links
- Project Firestart at MobyGames
- Project Firestart at Lemon 64