Severance: Blade of Darkness

Severance: Blade of Darkness[lower-alpha 1] is an action-adventure game developed by Rebel Act Studios and published by Codemasters. The game was released in North America and Europe for Microsoft Windows in February 2001, receiving generally favorable reception.

Severance: Blade of Darkness
European cover art
Developer(s)Rebel Act Studios
Publisher(s)Codemasters[1]
Director(s)Xavier Carrillo Costa
Designer(s)José Luis Vaello Bertol
Programmer(s)Ángel Cuñado Pérez
Artist(s)José Luis Vaello Bertol
Composer(s)Óscar Araujo
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows
Release
  • NA: February 19, 2001
  • EU: February 23, 2001
Genre(s)Action-adventure, hack and slash
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

Synopsis

Setting

The individual levels of the game bear a resemblance to diverse environments from the Middle East, Europe, Africa and South America under fictitious names or names with slightly changed spelling.

Plot

The Lord created Chaos and divided it into two parts, the Light and the Darkness. He gave to them life and thought, and so were born the Spirit of Light and the Prince of Darkness. But the Prince held the unspoken desire of supplanting his Father. He learned the secret language of Creation and tried to create a new being. But the newborn would not accept the commands of the Prince of Darkness, and growing stronger, took part of his own essence and created terrible monsters and demons. The Lord and the Prince of Light tried to stop it, and they waged a great war. Gradually, the being was weakened and finally defeated, but after this, the Father was exhausted and withdrew into the depths of the Universe.

The younger gods, proud of the victory, completed the creations of their father, giving shape to the Sun, the Moon and the Earth. However, the Prince of Darkness attempted to corrupt the souls of the fledgling race of man, amidst the confusion of a new war incited by dark creatures of his own creation. The Earth was in a moment of extreme danger, so one of the younger daughters, Ianna, cast a powerful spell that expelled the gods from their dwelling place and kept the Earth closed to them. The Spirit of the Light went to the Sun and from there protected the Earth during the day. Ianna went to the Moon, to protect it during the night. Thus began the cycle of Day and Night, and a new age of balance was born over the Earth. But all of the gods' creations remained, leaving mankind to contend alone against the diabolical fiends.

The struggle continued for many years until a young hero emerged to defy the Darkness. He was chosen by Ianna to wield the Sacred Sword and fought the Evil in its own lair. The Darkness was defeated, but the hero was mortally wounded, and his friends buried him with his Sword in the Temple of Ianna. After that, they hid four magical gems, which unlock his tomb, where the sword is kept.[2]

But all that was long ago. Now, something strange is happening. The signals are clear. Foul creatures are awakening from their dormancy and spreading terror and destruction. The Darkness has returned, and the end is near. A new hero is needed, a chosen one who will wield the Sword, and destroy the Enemy forever.[3]

This "evil blade" in the game title is in fact, the "Sword of Light" when it is possessed by the forces of darkness (as shown in the intro video). It is liberated and becomes the Sword of Light when the hero comes and imbues it with the six magical runes.

Characters

Severance has an immediately recognizable fantasy premise with swords, sorcery and the like. It features four playable characters: Tukaram, a barbarian; Naglfar, a dwarf; Sargon, a knight; and Zoe, an amazon. Each character starts on a different map, has different preferences and selection of weapons, and has different strengths and weaknesses in terms of power, agility, and defence and, most importantly, different sets of combos or moves.[4]

Gameplay

The four characters start their adventure at different locations but eventually go along the same route. The ultimate goal of the game is to obtain Ianna's Sword, kill the evil necromancer Dal Gurak and then descend into the Abyss for the final confrontation with the Chaos Child. This final skirmish is only accessible to players who have collected all of the runes from the previous levels which collectively empower Ianna's sword with the goddess' blessing. To achieve the magical sword the players have to make sure they have collected six well-hidden magical runic tablets before entering Dal Gurak's tower. The six runes speak about the time of creation (similar to ancient Zoroastrian myths). In addition to the runes, murals and memorials also shed some light on the events preceding the main storyline. The short cutscenes between levels also provide brief insights into the plot.

As the player progresses through the game, experience points are earned, which enables them to increase in level and gain new special attacks and abilities which are executed via combinations of buttons and direction keys, much like a beat-em-up game. Some of these special attacks are weapon-specific and can deal huge amounts of damage or hit multiple foes at one time. The game features a relatively advanced dismemberment system. Once severed, body parts from enemies can be picked up and used as weapons.

The game was shipped with a level editor, which enabled fans to create custom levels and modifications to the game.

Development

According to lead designer Jose Luis Vaello, the initial concept for Severance was to make a game that borrowed from "sword and sorcery movies like Conan the Barbarian and ... mythical literature like The Lord of the Rings."[5]

Reception

Reception
Aggregate score
AggregatorScore
Metacritic75/100[4]
Review scores
PublicationScore
Edge2/10[6]
Eurogamer9/10[7]
Game Informer8.25/10[8]
GamePro[9]
GameRevolutionC[10]
GameSpot7.2/10[11]
GameSpy81%[12]
GameZone8.5/10[13]
IGN8.8/10[14]
Next Generation[15]
PC Gamer (US)82%[16]
X-Play[17]

Jim Preston reviewed the PC version of the game for Next Generation, rating it four stars out of five, and stated that "This is the kind of fun that only comes from kicking an orc's ass, once you've sliced it off."[15]

The game received "generally favorable" reception, according to review aggregator Metacritic.[4] The game launched with a shipment of 20,000 units to retailers in Spain and 250,000 in the rest of Europe, a record for a Spanish game.[18] While Severance reached global sales above 300,000 units by 2001,[19] and ultimately surpassed 500,000 sales,[20] it fell below Rebel Act's expectations.[19] It was unsuccessful in the United States and in Spain, selling below 20,000 units in the latter country despite high anticipation.[21]

It received high marks for its graphics, particularly the lighting effects of real-time shadows. Character animation was done via motion capture. The texturing was very well done, although the game does not utilize larger texture sizes (anything above 256x256, whereas other games already used 1024x1024 resolution with texture compression in 2000-2001). The soundtrack of the game allegedly contains non-copyrighted samples, which were also used in many commercials, soap operas and other media worldwide. Overall, a relatively powerful computer for its time (the minimum requirements were a P2 400 MHz and 64MB of RAM) was required to fully experience all of the features. This game is the first and only game that can perform water reflection wave effects only using DirectX 7.0 hardware (Geforce 2 or Radeon 7500; perhaps even Nvidia RIVA TNT is enough to perform water effects at the same quality level like in DirectX 8 or higher).

However, the game failed to become popular, mainly due to bad marketing. Other reasons for the relatively low sales were the untimely publication (neither the code nor the storyline had been finalized) and the lack of gameplay difficulty levels - the game proved to be too difficult on "factory" defaults for many players. Nonetheless it did establish a large cult following that still exists today.. Currently it is unknown what company holds the distribution rights, as Codemasters lost the distribution rights in 2014.[1]

gollark: Thus, offline mode ish.
gollark: PWAs are great. My mostly static website is technically considered a PWA because I added a service worker.
gollark: It seems suboptimal for what you specified versus an FPGA + dedicated silicon CPU.
gollark: Definitely very neat but impractical without much work.
gollark: Asynchronous CPUs barely get a wikipedia page.

References

  1. known as Blade of Darkness in North America and Blade: The Edge of Darkness in Spain
  1. "Removal of Blade of Darkness from the GOG.com catalog". GOG.com. Retrieved October 14, 2014.
  2. "Blade of Darkness for Windows (2001)". MobyGames. Retrieved February 15, 2016.
  3. "Blade of Darkness - PC". IGN. Retrieved February 15, 2016.
  4. "Blade of Darkness for PC Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved February 15, 2016.
  5. Font, Joan (June 2001). "Así se hace un juego". GameLive PC (in Spanish) (8): 24–28, 30–33.
  6. Edge staff (March 2001). "Severance [Blade of Darkness]". Edge (95).
  7. Bye, John "Gestalt" (February 22, 2001). "Severance: Blade of Darkness". Eurogamer. Retrieved February 15, 2016.
  8. "Blade of Darkness". Game Informer. 2001.
  9. Human Tornado (April 11, 2001). "Blade of Darkness Review for PC on GamePro.com". GamePro. Archived from the original on February 9, 2005. Retrieved February 15, 2016.
  10. Sanders, Shawn (April 2001). "Blade of Darkness Review". Game Revolution. Retrieved February 15, 2016.
  11. Kasavin, Greg (February 28, 2001). "Blade of Darkness Review". GameSpot. Retrieved February 15, 2016.
  12. Haumersen, Lee (March 6, 2001). "Blade of Darkness". GameSpy. Archived from the original on February 23, 2005. Retrieved February 15, 2016.
  13. Lafferty, Michael (March 16, 2001). "Blade of Darkness Review - PC". GameZone. Archived from the original on February 21, 2008. Retrieved February 15, 2016.
  14. Adams, Dan (February 27, 2001). "Blade of Darkness". IGN. Retrieved February 15, 2016.
  15. Preston, Jim (June 2001). "Finals". Next Generation. Vol. 4 no. 6. Imagine Media. p. 88.
  16. Smith, Rob (May 2001). "Blade of Darkness". PC Gamer: 84. Archived from the original on March 15, 2006. Retrieved February 15, 2016.
  17. Lee, Ed (March 23, 2001). "Blade of Darkness (PC) Review". X-Play. Archived from the original on April 9, 2001. Retrieved February 15, 2016.
  18. https://web.archive.org/web/20020327165701/http://www.meristation.com/sc/noticias/noticia.asp?c=GEN&n=1894
  19. https://web.archive.org/web/20190628024421/https://as.com/meristation/2001/06/29/noticias/993794400_048049.html
  20. https://archive.org/details/Micromania100/page/n99
  21. https://web.archive.org/web/20190628024240/https://as.com/meristation/2002/04/22/noticias/1019455200_049830.html
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