Strife (2015 video game)

Strife was a multiplayer online battle arena (MOBA) video game developed by S2 Games. This is S2 Games' second MOBA game aimed to a more casual player base than Heroes of Newerth, most notably incorporating various gameplay elements that focus on heavily reducing player toxicity and introducing persistent mechanics outside of the arena, including Pets and Crafting. The game uses an engine called Kodiak which is based on the Heroes of Newerth (K2 Engine) with some improvements on lighting and physics.[2]

Strife
Developer(s)S2 Games
Publisher(s)S2 Games
EngineK2 Engine
Platform(s)Linux, OS X, Windows
Release
  • WW: May 22, 2015[1]
Genre(s)Multiplayer online battle arena
Mode(s)Multiplayer Single Player

Gameplay

Strife pits two teams of players against each other, both teams are based at opposite corners of the map in their respective bases. Bases consist of one central structure, creep spawn points, three generators and a hero spawning pool. The goal of the game is to destroy the central structure of the opposite base, called the "Crux".[3] Players achieve this by selecting heroes with unique skills to combat the other team, both teams can select the same heroes. Each game a player chooses one hero to be for the duration of the match. Every hero has four abilities that may be acquired and upgraded as the hero gains experience and levels up. Heroes abilities are often very similar to the ones of the characters of several other MOBA games.

Development

Strife was announced on August 8, 2013[4] after it had been in development for 2 years.

As of February 22, 2014, Strife went in closed beta.

As of August 29, 2014 Strife went in open beta.[5]

As of April 9, 2015 Strife has been published on Steam as an early access game.[6]

As of May 22, 2015 Strife has been released as a free-to-play on Steam.[1]

As of October 2018 Strife servers have been shut down without comment from developers with S2 Games being quietly closed down.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.