Battlecruiser 3000AD

Battlecruiser 3000AD

European cover art
Developer(s) 3000 AD
Publisher(s)

Battlecruiser 3000AD
‹See Tfd›

v2.0
‹See Tfd›

Millennium
3000 AD
Millennium Gold
DreamCatcher Interactive

Designer(s) Derek K. Smart
Platform(s) MS-DOS, Windows
Release date(s)
Genre(s) Space trading and combat simulator
Mode(s) Single-player, multiplayer

Battlecruiser 3000AD (also known as BC3K on Usenet) is a science fiction computer game, noted for its long, troubled development history.

Story

The game takes place in the year 3000 AD, centuries after mankind has developed advanced spacecraft, and discovered new worlds and intelligent life-forms within and beyond the Solar system. However, space travel is described as restricted to military personnel and scientists despite its conveniences. The story goes on to describe an interplanetary war, started in 2041AD, with Earth involved. In 2044AD, Galactic Command (GALCOM) is formed to maintain law and order amongst planets. The Gammulan race opposes the alliance and war is waged between GALCOM and Gammulans.

The player takes the role of a recruit assigned to defend the GALCOM consortium of planets against Gammulans. The events of the game begin with GALCOM diplomatic craft developing a navigational malfunction and straying into Gammulan territory. GALCOM supreme commander Stranix reports a Sphinx class battlecruiser intentionally destroyed by Gammulan orbital defence system, with no survivors; meanwhile, a team of Renegade class interceptors ambushes a Gammulan starfighter in GALCOM space.

Gameplay

Development

Derek Smart began his game development career in the late 1980s, with a vision of creating an all-encompassing space simulation game, featuring strategy elements along with space, planetary, air and ground combat.[3] Smart became a notable personality in the videogame world during the early 1990s, even before releasing his software debut. Smart became known to the then-nascent online gaming world through discussions taking place on Usenet about the game, his development efforts, and many other topics.

The game first appeared on the cover of Strategy Plus in 1992. Shortly afterwards, Three-Sixty Pacific obtained the rights. It held the rights for a year and went out of business shortly afterwards. 3000AD, Inc then signed the rights with Mission Studios. Mission Studios also signed distribution deal with Interplay Productions for its products. The game was showcased in 1994 winter and 1994 summer CES under the Interplay Affiliated label brand. However, due to financial constraints, an agreement was reached which allowed 3000AD, Inc. to seek a new publisher. Intracorp bid for the rights to publish the game; with a disagreement over source code release, the deal never progressed beyond a letter of intent. The game appeared in 1995 E3, then Intracorp went bankrupt shortly afterwards. Take-Two Interactive bought the publish right to the game from Mission Studios in 1995, and released v1.00 of the game,[4] with GameTek (UK) published the game in 1997.[3]

In Take-Two's SEC filings on February 10, 1997, the company stated that Battlecruiser 3000AD accounted for 14.2% of revenue for the fiscal year ending October 31, 1996.[4] The filing also stated that Take-Two "made advances in the aggregate amount of approximately $618,000" for the title.[4]

Versions

Title Released Publisher
Battlecruiser 3000AD (U.S.) 1996 Take-Two Interactive
Battlecruiser 3000AD (UK) 1997 GameTek
Battlecruiser 3000AD v2.0 1999 Interplay
Battlecruiser Millennium 2001 Dreamcatcher Games
Battlecruiser Millennium Gold 2003 3000 AD

Battlecruiser 3000AD v2.0

Development of version 2.0 of the game continued throughout 1998, and Interplay announced that it would publish an improved version (dubbed Battlecruiser 3000AD v2.0) through its Value Product Division.[5] Unlike the previous product, only a Windows version was supported.

3D acceleration is supported only through 3dfx hardware. The game now contains 13 alien races, 25 castes. Game map contains 25 star systems with 75 planets and 145 moons in total.

Battlecruiser Millennium

From 1998 to 2001, Smart developed his next game in the Battlecruiser franchise, Battlecruiser Millennium. The game was to be exclusively distributed at Electronics Boutique locations and was self-published by his company 3000AD, Inc.[6] The deal made with EB was a first of its kind merchant exclusivity deal for a game's release, with an independent developer paying for all materials to publish the game for distribution through the retailer. When asked by the gaming media about his thoughts on the deal, Smart stated "I'm paying for everything. I bear all the risk. I pay for the cost of goods, including the boxes and manuals."[7]

After its retail run Smart released Battlecruiser Millennium on the Internet for free as he had done with his previous titles.[1] He has mentioned that he intends to keep up this practice of releasing his products for free once their "shelf life" has expired.[8]

Battlecruiser Millennium Gold

It is a version of Battlecruiser Millennium with complete updates. A client-server multiplayer engine is introduced in this version. Flight controls can now be done using mouse.

Other new elements include:

The developer originally intended to introduce multiplayer feature when making the original Battlecruiser Millennium back in late 1999, but due to unforeseen circumstances, this feature was dropped in the initial product. The product was to use the RTIME Interactive Networking Engine.[9]

When the game was redesigned, the developer discovered that the original design architecture of the game kernel prevented the implementation of multiplayer, so the game was redesigned. Further information about it was revealed in the Smart Speak section of the manual.[10]

Cancelled releases

Controversies

Before publisher Take-Two Interactive released Battlecruiser 3000AD in September 1996, it had generated one of the longest and largest flame wars in the history of Usenet.[16] This flamewar lasted for several years, garnered over 70,000 posts, and yielded a series of sites that documented and parodied its history.

Smart and Take-Two advertised that Battlecruiser 3000AD used a neural network to perform artificial intelligence tasks in the game. However, this claim has been criticised as highly improbable by other games designers. In one article in a computer games magazine, Keith Zabalaoui, former NASA programmer and one of the designers of the Close Combat series of strategy games, was quoted as saying, "I have a hard time believing it's in there... the concept of training [neural nets] to do the complex tasks required in a game is inconceivable. It's mumbo jumbo. I guarantee you that if there's a neural net that does anything in [BC3K] this man would be in the Computer Science Hall of fame."[17]

Upon its initial release of Battlecruiser 3000AD, the game[18] contained many bugs that made it unstable,[3][19][20] according to a GameSpy.com reviewer, who asserted that "Smart consistently overrates his own products and his own abilities."[20] For his part, Derek Smart claimed that the buggy release was the responsibility of Take-Two. After the initial release, Smart issued several patches and upgrades for the product over the next few months, and eventually a final patch was released to fix some of the major bugs. In February 1998, after obtaining publishing rights from Take-Two, Smart released the game on the Internet for download free of charge.[21]

Derek Smart filed a lawsuit against Take-Two (who also released the game in the UK through a sub-license deal with GameTek) for alleging breach of contract.[3] The lawsuit was later settled out of court, and both parties released statements of resolution in late 1998.[22] Smart regained the rights to the game via the settlement. He continued to develop a new version through his personal company, 3000 AD.

Reception

Battlecruiser 3000AD, was covered extensively in gaming magazines during the development process, including a 1992 cover story in Computer Games Strategy Plus. The game was marketed as "The last thing you'll ever desire" in pre-release ads that ran in computer gaming magazines.[20]

Battlecruiser 3000AD was released against the wishes of its main designer, Derek Smart,[23] as it was still incomplete and buggy – although even in this state it was able to collect some positive reviews and revenue.

Battlecruiser Millennium received 65% and 68% at aggregate review sites GameRankings and Metacritic respectively.[24][25] According to some reviews[26] of the game, it was as encompassing and strategically pleasing as the developer had set out to make, but lacked in user interface design friendliness and atmosphere. In 2003 Gamespy named it the 19th most overrated game of all time due to the hype Derek produced with his extremely ambitious game play promises that he would ultimately be unable to fulfill.[27]

References

  1. 1 2 "Battlecruiser series". Retrieved 2006-10-21.
  2. GamesFirest!! Battlecrusier 3000 A.D. review
  3. 1 2 3 4 "loonygames' Guest Editorial: Derek Smart". Retrieved 2006-12-05.
  4. 1 2 3 "Take2 SEC 1998 10KSB Filing". 1998-02-06.
  5. "Press Release: Interplay Value Products Division to distribute Battlecruiser 3000AD v2.0". Interplay. 1998-08-05. Archived from the original on 2000-08-18.
  6. "IGN: EB Signs Pact with Derek Smart". Retrieved 2006-12-06.
  7. "GameSpy.com — GameSpin: Volume 2 -- Battlecruiser Millennium, Tropico and Anarchy Online". Retrieved 2006-12-06.
  8. "AusGamers.com — Australia's Games Community: Battlecruiser Millennium Now Freeware". Retrieved 2006-10-21.
  9. Battlecruiser 3020 AD Gets Support From RTIME
  10. Battlecruiser Millennium Gold product info
  11. Attention: Battlecruiser Commanders
  12. 3000AD NEW PRODUCT ANNOUNCEMENT
  13. Battlecruiser Team Takes on Serious Sam Engine
  14. Battlecruiser Tactical Engagement Info
  15. BATTLECRUISER ONLINE FAQ
  16. "The Saga of Battlecruiser 3000". The 25 dumbest moments in gaming. GameSpy. Archived from the original on 3 July 2006. Retrieved 2006-07-11.
  17. T Liam Mcdonald (March 1997). "The Neural Net that Wasn't". Boot Magazine: 27.
  18. "Get in the Game: Battlecruiser Millennium". Retrieved 2006-12-05.
  19. "Battlecruiser 3000 A.D. for PC Review — PC Battlecruiser 3000 A.D. Review". Retrieved 2006-10-20.
  20. 1 2 3 "GameSpy.com — Article: The 25 Dumbest Moments in Gaming". Archived from the original on 9 November 2006. Retrieved 2006-10-20.
  21. "Battlecruiser 3000 A.D. Set Free — News at GameSpot". Retrieved 2006-12-05.
  22. "Smart, Take-Two Settle differences — News at GameSpot". Retrieved 2006-10-21.
  23. Bub, Andrew S. (2003-04-19). "Derek Smart on Battlecruiser Generations & Beyond". Archived from the original on 20 August 2006. Retrieved 2006-07-11.
  24. "Battlecruiser Millennium Reviews". Retrieved 2006-12-06.
  25. "Battlecruiser Millennium (PC: 2001): Reviews". Retrieved 2006-12-05.
  26. "Battlecruiser Millennium — It's much improved over the previous release but it still asks for too much from the player". Archived from the original on 5 December 2006. Retrieved 2006-12-05.
  27. "Top 25 Most Overrated Games of All Time". Gamespy.com. Archived from the original on 18 Feb 2004.

External links

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