Batman: Arkham Asylum
Batman: Arkham Asylum | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Rocksteady Studios |
Publisher(s) |
Eidos Interactive Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment[1] |
Distributor(s) |
Square Enix Time Warner |
Director(s) | Sefton Hill |
Producer(s) |
Daniel Bailie Nathan Burlow |
Writer(s) | Paul Dini |
Composer(s) |
Nick Arundel Ron Fish |
Series | Batman: Arkham |
Engine | Unreal Engine 3 |
Platform(s) | |
Release date(s) | |
Genre(s) | Action-adventure |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Batman: Arkham Asylum is a 2009 action-adventure video game based on the DC Comics superhero Batman. It was developed by Rocksteady Studios and published by Eidos Interactive in conjunction with Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment for the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 video game consoles, and Microsoft Windows. It was released worldwide for consoles, beginning in North America on August 25, 2009, with a Microsoft Windows version following on September 15.
Written by veteran Batman writer Paul Dini, Arkham Asylum is based on the long-running comic book mythos. In the game's main storyline, Batman's archenemy, the Joker, instigates an elaborate plot to seize control of Arkham Asylum and trap Batman inside with many of his incarcerated foes. With Joker threatening to detonate hidden bombs around fictional Gotham City, Batman is forced to fight his way through the asylum's inmates and put an end to the Joker's plans. Most of the game's leading characters are voiced by actors who have appeared in other media based on the DC Animated Universe; Kevin Conroy, Mark Hamill, and Arleen Sorkin reprised their roles as Batman, the Joker, and his sidekick Harley Quinn respectively. The game is presented from the third-person perspective with a primary focus on Batman's combat and stealth abilities, detective skills, and gadgets that can be used in combat and exploration.
The game received critical acclaim—particularly for its narrative—and won several awards, including Best Action Adventure game, Best Game, and Game of the Year from different media outlets. It held the Guinness World Record for "Most Critically Acclaimed Superhero Game Ever". A Game of the Year edition was released on March 26, 2010, and an OS X version was released in November 2011. Arkham Asylum's success launched a series of Batman: Arkham sequels, beginning in October 2011 with Batman: Arkham City.
Gameplay
Batman: Arkham Asylum is an action-adventure game viewed from the third-person perspective. The playable character is visible on the screen and the camera can be freely rotated around him.[1][5][6] The player controls Batman as he traverses Arkham Asylum, a secure facility for the criminally insane located off the coast of Gotham City.[7] The opening areas of the game are linear, serving as a tutorial for the moves and approaches available to the player. Once the player emerges onto the island he can freely explore the game world, although some areas remain inaccessible until certain milestones in the main story.[8][9] Batman can run, jump, climb, crouch, glide from heights using his cape, and use his grapple gun to climb low structures or escape to higher ledges.[9]
The player can use "Detective Vision"—a visual mode which provides contextual information, tinting the game world blue and highlighting interactive objects like destructible walls and removable grates, the number of enemies in an area and their status—such as their awareness of Batman's presence—and shows civilians and corpses.[9][10] The mode is also used to follow footprints, investigate odors, and solve puzzles.[1]
Batman has access to several gadgets which he can use to explore or fight. The batarang is a throwing weapon that can temporarily stun enemies or trigger remote devices. A remotely controlled version can be steered once thrown,[11] and the sonic batarang can be used to attract the attention of specific enemies wearing monitoring collars, or detonated to knock a nearby enemy unconscious. Explosive gel can be used on weak walls and floors, and can be remotely detonated—sending rubble crashing onto an enemy.[9][12] The line launcher can be used to traverse horizontal spans.[13] The Batclaw—a grappling device—can be used to interact with remote objects such as vent covers or to grab enemies. The Cryptographic Sequencer is used to override security panels, open new paths, or disable various asylum functions.[14] Some areas are inaccessible until Batman acquires the gadgets necessary to overcoming the obstacle.[15] The player is encouraged to explore the game world away from the main game to find and solve riddles left by the Riddler—who hacks into Batman's communication system to challenge him with riddles. Objects can be collected, and some of the Riddler's puzzles require the player to find areas related to the answer to a riddle and scan it with "Detective Vision".[1][9] The game world has 240 collectable items, such as Riddler trophies, chattering Joker teeth, interview tapes with some of Arkham's inmates, and cryptic messages left in the asylum by its founder Amadeus Arkham that discuss the facility's bleak history.[9] The player is rewarded for solving riddles and finding collectibles with experience points and additional game content, including challenge maps that test the player's skill at the game's combat system, character biographies, and in-game statues of Arkham Asylum's characters.[9][10]
Players can traverse enemy-controlled areas using stealth or direct combat. The game's "Freeflow" combat uses three main buttons: attack, stun, and counter.[9] The system lets Batman move quickly between enemies, chaining attacks together until all enemies are unconscious. Combining the three main abilities can keep Batman attacking while moving between enemies and avoiding being attacked himself. The more combo attacks that are chained together, the faster and more agile Batman becomes, and special attacks—such as a throw, grapple, and an instant takedown which can immediately defeat an enemy—become available. Combat is rewarded with experience points, which are used to unlock gadgets, combat moves, and health upgrades. Higher combos, a wider variety of moves, and avoiding damage delivers more points.[6][8][10] Enemy attacks are preempted with a warning icon, which indicate the attack can be countered.[1] Some enemies require different approaches to overcome; knife-wielding thugs must be stunned before they can be attacked,[8] and others must be struck from behind. Some enemies are armed with guns which significantly damage Batman.[9] Enemies react to Batman's elimination of their allies, which raises their fear level and alters their behavior; for example, they will adopt new patrol routes, requiring the player to adapt to the changing situation.[8][16] During combat, Batman's health is diminished by attacks, but is fully restored once the battle ends.[9]
The player can use predatory tactics through stealth—including silent takedowns, dropping from overhead perches and snatching enemies away, or using the explosive gel to knock foes off their feet—to tilt the odds in their favor. Some areas feature sections that require the player to use these tactics to avoid alerting the Joker's henchmen and thus failing to meet an objective. Many areas feature stone gargoyles placed high above, helping Batman remain concealed. Batman can use his grapnel gun to reach the gargoyles, giving him a high vantage point over the area and the enemies. From the gargoyles, Batman can glide down to attack enemies or hang upside down from the gargoyles to grapple a nearby enemy and leave him tethered there.[10] The player can use floor grates to attack from below, hide around corners, use batarangs to stun enemies from afar,[9] and use the grapnel gun to pull enemies over ledges.[9][10]
Arkham Asylum features a series of challenge maps separate from the game's story mode that are unlocked while playing, and others are available as optional downloadable content (DLC). The maps focus on the completion of specific goals, such as eliminating successive waves of enemies in combat, and subduing patrolling enemies while using stealth. The methods and variety of abilities used to achieve these goals earn an overall performance score that is ranked online against other players.[6][9] On the PlayStation 3, the Joker is a playable character in the combat and stealth challenge maps via optional DLC; he must confront the asylum guards and police commissioner James Gordon. The Joker has his own combat abilities and weapons, such as a handgun, exploding chattering teeth, and x-ray glasses which allow him to see opponents through walls.[17]
On compatible systems, the Microsoft Windows version uses nVidia's PhysX software engine to produce realistic, dynamic interactions with the game world. With PhysX enabled, some areas contain smoke or fog which reacts to Batman moving through it, while with PhysX disabled the fog will not appear at all. Other effects include dynamic interaction with paper and leaves, surfaces which can be scratched and chipped, and dynamic, destructible cloth elements such as banners and cobwebs.[18][19][20] The Game of the Year version features the ability to play the game in 3D on any 2D television using anaglyph 3D glasses.[21]
Synopsis
Characters
Arkham Asylum is set in the fictional Arkham Asylum, a facility on Arkham Island off the coast of Gotham City that houses criminally insane supervillains.[7][22] The game features a large ensemble of characters from the history of Batman comics. Three voice actors, who worked on the DC Animated Universe series of film and television, reprised their roles for the game. Kevin Conroy voices Batman—a superhero trained to the peak of human physical perfection and an expert in martial arts,[23][24][25] Mark Hamill voices Batman's psychopathic nemesis the Joker,[23] and the Joker's sidekick Harley Quinn is voiced by Arleen Sorkin.[26][27] Batman is aided by his allies Oracle (Kimberly Brooks)—who remotely provides him with intelligence, and police commissioner James Gordon (Tom Kane).[28]
In the asylum, Batman is faced with several supervillains; he must defend himself from an enraged Bane (Fred Tatasciore), subdue indiscriminate serial killer Victor Zsasz (Danny Jacobs), confront the monstrous Killer Croc (Steven Blum), defeat the plant-controlling Poison Ivy (Tasia Valenza),[27] and battle his way through hallucinogen-induced nightmares created by the Scarecrow (Dino Andrade).[28][29] The Riddler (Wally Wingert) does not physically appear in the game, but communicates with Batman and challenges him to solve riddles placed around the island.[1][28] Other characters appearing in the game include the asylum's warden Quincy Sharp (also voiced by Kane), Batman's parents Thomas and Martha Wayne (voiced by Conroy and Valenza respectively), and asylum guard Aaron Cash (Duane R Shepard, Sr).[28] The shape-shifting Clayface appears in cameo, taking on the guise of other characters as he tries to trick the player into releasing him.[30] The Mad Hatter was almost included in the game, but the developers removed him.[31] The body of Ra's al Ghul is in the asylum's morgue and the Ventriloquist's dummy, Scarface, appears several times in the story.[30][32] Several other characters—including the Penguin, Jack Ryder, Mr. Freeze, Two-Face, Catwoman, and the asylum's founder Amadeus Arkham—are referenced in the game, but do not appear in it.[30][32][33][34]
Plot
After the Joker assaults Gotham City Hall, he is caught by Batman and taken to Arkham Asylum, which temporarily houses many members of the Joker's gang, who were transferred after a fire at Blackgate Prison.[35] Believing the Joker allowed himself to be captured, Batman accompanies him into the asylum. The Joker's plan is revealed as Harley Quinn takes control of the security and the Joker escapes into the facility, aided by a corrupt guard who kidnaps Commissioner Gordon.[36] The Joker threatens to detonate bombs hidden around Gotham City if anyone tries to enter Arkham, forcing Batman to work alone.[37] While pursuing Quinn to rescue Gordon, Batman is exposed to the Scarecrow's fear toxin and hallucinates, seeing Gordon's death and the corpses of his parents talking to him. Batman fights off Scarecrow and the toxin's influence, and eventually finds Quinn, knocks her unconscious, and rescues Gordon. The Joker then directs Batman to the captured Bane, who has been experimented on by asylum doctor Penelope Young. The Joker frees Bane and Batman is forced to fight him, after which he navigates his way to a secret Batcave installation he had hidden on the island, where Batman restocks his gadgets.
There, Batman learns that the Joker returned to the asylum to gain access to Young, who has been developing Titan—a more powerful version of the Venom drug that gives Bane his strength—intending to use it to help patients survive more strenuous therapies. Young learned that the Joker had been funding her research to create an army of superhuman henchmen; her refusal to hand over the formula precipitated Joker's return to the Asylum. While searching for Young, Batman is again attacked by Scarecrow and the fear toxin, and hallucinates the night of his parents' deaths. After he recovers, Batman destroys Young's Titan formula and rescues Young from Victor Zsasz. An explosion kills Young and the Joker obtains the completed batches of Titan.
Quinn releases Poison Ivy from her cell and later fights Batman, but is defeated and imprisoned. Quinn inadvertently reveals that Joker has a Titan production facility in the Arkham botanical gardens. Batman travels there and learns that Titan is created by genetically modified plants. He tries to enlist Ivy's help to create an antidote, but she tells him that it can only be made from spores found exclusively in Killer Croc's lair in a sewer. En route to Croc, Batman is again attacked by Scarecrow and overcomes several doses of fear toxin. Meanwhile, Joker injects Ivy with Titan, enhancing her powers. Ivy begins ravaging Arkham Island with giant mutant plants. Pursued by Batman into the sewers, Scarecrow is attacked by Croc and disappears. Batman recovers the necessary spores and subdues Croc before returning to the Batcave, but can only synthesize one dose of the antidote before Ivy's plants breach the cave and destroy his equipment.
Batman returns to the botanical gardens and defeats Ivy, halting the rampaging plants. The Joker announces that the preparations for his party are finally complete and Batman travels to the asylum's visitor center where the Joker's applauding henchmen welcome him. The Joker reveals he has recaptured Gordon and tries to shoot him with a Titan-filled dart; Batman leaps to Gordon's defense and is shot instead. Batman attempts to resist the change, and an upset Joker takes an overdose of Titan, mutating into a massive monster.[38] In a makeshift arena on the building's roof, the Joker challenges Batman to a fight as Titan-induced monsters in front of news helicopters. Batman refuses to transform, uses the antidote on himself, and defeats the Titan-affected Joker and his henchmen, knocking his nemesis unconscious with an explosive gel-enhanced punch. In the aftermath, those affected by Titan begin to revert to normal, including the Joker—who is restrained and taken into custody as police officers retake the asylum. Batman overhears a call about a crime led by Two-Face in progress and flies back to Gotham City in the Batwing. In a post-credits scene, a crate of Titan formula is shown floating in the ocean near the asylum when a hand surfaces and grabs it.[39]
Development
Batman: Arkham Asylum was first announced in August 2008; it was developed by British studio Rocksteady Studios under the aegis of Eidos Interactive and Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment.[3][40] Eidos obtained the rights to make a Batman game in spring 2007, and approached then little-known Rocksteady after viewing the developer's prototype. At Eidos' request, Rocksteady presented their approach to the Batman license, and by May 2007, they had begun developing the game's concept, with full production beginning in September.[41][42] Writer Paul Dini (Batman: The Animated Series, Detective Comics) was first approached by DC Comics around late 2007 about the prospect of creating a story for an original Batman video game. Dini found the idea intriguing, believing that few Batman games were based on an original idea, instead being adapted from film or television. DC Comics asked Dini what his approach to writing a new Batman film or graphic novel would be, but one that was designed for gameplay. He later met with the Rocksteady team, where it was decided that Dini's ideas were in line with what Rocksteady wanted to achieve.[43] By the time Dini joined the project, Rocksteady were investigating the idea of setting the game within Arkham, and had produced preliminary designs depicting it as a huge estate on an island connected to mainland Gotham City by a bridge. The cast had not been finalized, but given the setting it was certain that the Joker would play a large role.[44] The game and story were developed together, with the limitations of mechanics requiring the story to be built around them. The core aim was to make the game engaging enough for players to spend 8–10 hours completing it, especially those uninterested in Batman-franchised media. Rocksteady would guide Dini when they thought he was writing too much story or character motivation.[43]
Among various Neal Adams and Frank Miller-penned Batman stories, Grant Morrison's Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth was an inspiration for the game's design.[44] Producer Nathan Burlow said the narrative and atmosphere of the 2007 game BioShock influenced Arkham Asylum's design.[45] Director Sefton Hill said the influences of the gadgets and abilities that can be combined and used in different ways in The Legend of Zelda and Metroid. The design team isolated the components that they felt made Batman, and exaggerated these elements. Design ideas which contradicted these facets of the character were dropped, and other elements of Batman, such as his refusal to kill his enemies, were strictly enforced, which provided additional challenges in allowing the player to have complete freedom in the game without transgressing on that fundamental aspect of the character.[46] Arkham Asylum was chosen as the setting because it confined the player to an area containing several enemies, whereas in an open city setting he could receive help, return to the Batcave, or otherwise be able to distance himself from his opponents.[41]
The development team wanted to include iconic aspects of the Batman mythos, and decided early on in production to have Conroy, Hamill, and Sorkin reprise their roles in Dini's Batman: The Animated Series as Batman, the Joker, and Harley Quinn, respectively. Hamill has thousands of lines of dialogue in the game, and Conroy has relatively few in comparison. After seeing character models of the Joker's Arkham Asylum appearance, Hamill decided to portray the character as dark and gritty while retaining a clownish and playful nature.[43] Although the game features references to plot events in both The Animated Series and Batman comics, the story does not directly follow any singular story or depiction of the character.[22][41]
The game took approximately 21 months to complete; Rocksteady began development with a team of 40, which had expanded to around 60 by the game's completion.[47] Combat was considered one of the greatest challenges in developing the game; the system went through three iterations. Rocksteady originally developed the game's combat as a full rhythm action game. It was later set in 2D, which involved colored circles crashing into each other during fights; the final system was based on this 2D model.[48] Combat was designed to be unique for Batman, and was given a simple control scheme to reflect the ease with which Batman can perform the moves.[49] Arkham Asylum was built on Epic Games' Unreal Engine 3.[46][50][51] Eidos president Ian Livingstone said one developer spent two years programming Batman's cape, using over 700 animations and sound effects to make it move realistically.[52]
The developers intended to use other Batman characters in the game, but these were removed when it was decided they would not work within the story. For example, Batman's enemy Mr. Freeze did not fit because the character has different motivations to the Joker. Unlike the Riddler, who is obsessed with proving his superiority over Batman, Mr. Freeze does not hold a personal grudge against Batman, and Mr. Freeze would not care about the other villains' plans. A garden maze under Poison Ivy's control was considered as a location; she could grow it in different directions. In its center, Batman would find the Mad Hatter hosting a tea-party, but the developers decided these ideas would not match the game's tone.[43] Batman's vehicles, the Batmobile and Batwing, were considered for inclusion in the game, but developing unique control mechanics and gameplay segments for them would have taken too much time, and compromised its quality; the vehicles appear in the game, but players cannot control them.[53]
Rocksteady began conceiving ideas for a possible sequel, which became Batman: Arkham City, approximately seven months before development of Arkham Asylum was completed. Rocksteady developed ideas for the sequel's story and setting so the games' narratives could be effectively connected.[54][55] A secret room containing hints, blueprints, and concept art for the next game was hidden in the asylum warden's office in Arkham Asylum.[54][55][56] The room remained hidden for six months following the game's release until Rocksteady revealed its presence.[57] Arkham Asylum's musical score was composed by Ron Fish and Nick Arundel, who also composed the soundtrack for the sequel, Batman: Arkham City.[58]
Design
To develop the game's overall aesthetic, the main aim was to create designs that would combine comic book style with realism. The environmental architecture and characters had to be extravagant enough to represent the Batman universe, but needed realistic texture and detail. The second aim was to recreate the dark, Gothic imagery inherent to the Batman universe, especially Arkham Asylum, so that the structure would feel as insane as those whom it houses.[59] The asylum was considered an ideal location because it can house many of Batman's foes.[45]
Batman's design was heavily influenced by the work of comic artist Jim Lee, who drew Batman as a strong, muscular character who could believably take part in extreme combat. His black and dark gray costume was based on modern versions, and has military influences and an industrial look. About 13 concept designs were produced before his final appearance took form.[59][60] Artists avoided film interpretations of the Joker, partly because the developers only had access to the rights to the original Batman license. Alan Moore's 1988 graphic novel Batman: The Killing Joke influenced the character's design. Harley Quinn underwent a drastic redesign, removing her black and red full-body outfit and jester's hat, and replacing them with a costume with design elements from a nurse's outfit and a schoolgirl's uniform.[59] WildStorm, Lee's now-defunct comic book publishing company, produced concept art for the game.[61]
Designs for the asylum departed from comic interpretations of a large mansion and instead developed an entire island, with hints of Alcatraz prison, composed of multiple buildings to allow for greater variety and exploration. Each building was designed with a different architectural style to make the facility appear believable and to imbue each location with a history. The medical building was inspired by Victorian architecture and its metalwork structure was intended to inspire feelings of horror. The intensive treatment unit has a Gothic, industrial aesthetic. The catacombs beneath the facility, inspired by early twentieth-century brickwork and Victorian industry, were meant to feel oppressive. The maximum security area was designed to feel claustrophobic and was retrofitted like a bunker, and the Arkham mansion displays a High Gothic style.[59][60] The designers integrated crooked lines into environmental objects, such as trees and drainpipes, where possible. 40 rooms, 34 corridors, 3 exterior areas, and 3 Scarecrow-induced hallucination areas were designed for the game.[60]
To bring these areas to life, the level designers produced game mechanic elements using simple room layouts and shapes, while concept artists worked in tandem to create artwork for each location, following the art direction. Environment artists would then build 3D layouts based on those designs. Finding an appropriate color palette for the game world was difficult; browns and monochromatic colors could depict the desired dark and moody atmosphere, but the developers wanted the aesthetic to resemble the vibrant color schemes of a comic book. To this end, they used saturated colors for in-game lighting. Lighting was an important component of the game, being used to highlight points of interest and to draw the player onward in otherwise boring corridors.[60] To maintain the intended level of detail and allow the game's console versions to fit into the devices' memory, each area had to be streamed in and out of memory seamlessly to free up memory for textures and geometry. All of the cutscenes were storyboarded by Rocksteady artists, being visualized in the game engine before the character performances were motion-captured.[59] The design team decided that cutscenes should be used to advance character relationships, and that after each cutscene the player should have had their goal changed or the importance of their actions modified. Priority was given to keeping action scenes under the player's control rather than showing them in cutscenes.[49]
Release
Batman: Arkham Asylum was released for PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 in North America on August 25, 2009, and on August 28 in Europe and Australia.[2] It was released for Microsoft Windows in North America on September 15, 2009, and on September 18 in Europe and Australia.[3] A Game of the Year edition was released on March 26, 2010, in Europe and on May 11 in North America.[62][63] Feral Interactive developed an OS X version, which was released on disc and as a download on November 3, 2011.[4][64] On the Windows version of the game, the developers used an anti-duplication measure that disables Batman's glide ability and causes other bugs, preventing copied games from progressing beyond a certain point. Although not the first game to implement such countermeasures, Arkham Asylum received media coverage, as this was seen as a novel method of copy protection.[65][66]
A Collector's Edition containing the game, a 14-inch (36 cm) replica of Batman's batarang, a behind-the-scenes DVD, a leather-bound 48-page book about Arkham's inmates, and a code to download the "Crime Alley" challenge map was released.[67][68] Pre-ordering the game at some retailers allowed access to the "Dem Bones" challenge map.[29][69] The Game of the Year version was initially announced for release only in Europe, Asia, and Australia, but a North American release was later added.[70][71] The Game of the Year version includes the game, support for TriOviz 3D visual effects, two pairs of themed 3D glasses, and the six released DLC challenge maps—two of which were omitted from the North American version.[21][62][63]
Downloadable content
In April 2009, it was announced that the Joker would be a downloadable playable character for use in the game's challenge maps exclusively for the PlayStation 3.[72][73] Additional DLC packs were later released. The Insane Night pack, containing the "Totally Insane" combat and "Nocturnal Hunter" stealth challenge maps, was released on September 17, 2009.[74] The "Prey in the Darkness" pack was released on September 23, 2009, and contains the "Heart of Darkness" combat and "Hothouse Prey" stealth challenge maps. In North America, the "Prey in the Darkness" pack was released exclusively for the PlayStation 3.[75]
Marketing
A demo version of the game was released via digital download for the PlayStation 3 on August 6, 2009, and for Xbox 360 and Microsoft Windows on August 7.[76] The PlayStation 3 version of Arkham Asylum unlocked a Batcave-themed virtual apartment for players on the social-gaming platform, PlayStation Home.[77] Additionally, North American game retailer GameStop ran a contest which allowed one winner to be rendered in-game as an Arkham inmate.[34][78] A series of action figures based on character designs from the game were released through Warner Bros.' outlet DC Direct.[79][80]
Reception
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Batman: Arkham Asylum received critical acclaim. Aggregating review websites GameRankings and Metacritic gave the Xbox 360 version 92.34% and 92/100,[82][85] the PlayStation 3 version 92.07% and 91/100,[81][84] and the Microsoft Windows version 91.89% and 91/100.[83][86] The game held the Guinness World Record for "Most Critically Acclaimed Superhero Game Ever" based on an average Metacritic score of 91.67,[95] until it was succeeded by Arkham City.[96]
Arkham Asylum was called one of the best comic book superhero games ever made. Edge magazine said it was "by some distance the best superhero game of modern times",[89] IGN's Greg Miller called it "the greatest comic book game of all time",[93] and Eurogamer's Dan Whitehead called it "the best superhero game bar none", and wrote that it has "excellent visuals, a compelling story and superb voice acting." Whitehead also wrote, even without the iconic superhero, it would be a polished and engrossing game featuring compelling story and superb voice acting.[9] PSM3's Andy Kelly wrote, "Rocksteady have struck the perfect balance of giving you the confident power of a superhero, but with enough weaknesses to make the game challenging; a remarkable feat of balancing and design".[24] Wired's Chris Kohler said that the game's strength lies in its tight script and masterful acting, making what could be a generic game captivating.[25] 1UP.com's Thierry Nguyen gave the game an A−, stating that Rocksteady "manages to combine combat, stealth, storytelling, and cartoon voices into the best digital Batman simulator we've seen to date."[87]
Several reviewers compared Arkham Asylum to other games—including BioShock for its ability to deliver a unique adventure and establish a connection with the game world, and its innovative ideas;[90] The Legend of Zelda for its adventuring style;[88] Metroid for its world layout;[25] and Resident Evil and Tomb Raider for its classic action-adventuring that acts as a true hybrid of brawling, stealth, and platforming.[9]
The game world's design and the game's attention to detail were well received by critics. Game Informer's Andrew Reiner said the game's setting had a taut and mesmerizing atmosphere, and was a place of wonder and inexplicable horror.[90] Miller called it the right mix of creepy and cool, and appreciated the gradual damage reflected on Batman's suit as the story progressed, but said that pixelated CGI and lip synching issues diminished the presentation.[93] Whitehead said that the impressive animation makes Batman feel alive, but wrote that the world itself was lifeless and lacking in interactive objects. He criticized segments in which character logic was sacrificed for video game tropes, citing repeated use of poison gas and electric floors as obstacles.[9]
The combat system was well received for the simplicity of its implementation, allowing players to use it effectively without learning complex combinations of special moves, and the emphasis upon timing and flow to create fluid, graceful, and satisfyingly brutal attacks. Reviewers said that the combat remained challenging with the inclusion of more difficult-to-overcome enemies, and better use of combat was well incentivized without punishing those unable to master it.[9][10][89] The design of stealth and the wide variety of methods available to disable enemy opponents were praised. Computer and Video Games' Andy Robinson wrote that it is a "thinking man's stealth game" that is the centerpiece of the game,[10][97] and Edge said that the stealth offering was thrilling. Others wrote about the way in which enemies react with fear to the elimination of their allies,[92] but some reviewers criticized the AI for allowing Batman to easily escape when discovered, and for being oblivious to Batman's presence.[89][98] Whitehead said that stealth was not as directly rewarding as combat, citing difficulty in controlling Batman at close quarters and the inconsistent contextual actions.[9]
Arkham Asylum's boss fights were criticized, with many reviewers labeling them as the game's biggest failing. Reviewers found that the battles often rely on old-fashioned, tedious, and repetitive game tropes that required the player to learn and repeat monotonous routines—some of which, in the case of Bane, had already been employed on lesser enemies—or to confront repetitive attack patterns and one-hit deaths.[9][10][15][89] Reviewers generally agreed that the fights were anti-climactic to their build-up spectacle.[9][10][15] The final boss fight with the Joker was singled out for vapid gameplay,[10][89] a battle with Killer Croc was labeled boring and overly long, and the reviewers said these should not have been in the game.[25] However, the fear toxin-induced hallucination segments of Scarecrow's battles were almost unanimously praised as some of the game's best and most cerebral moments for their fourth wall manipulation, subversion of the game's established narrative and expectations, and meta-textual influences that were compared to the battle against Psycho Mantis in 1998's Metal Gear Solid, and 2002's Eternal Darkness.[9][25][99]
The main voice cast—including Conroy as Batman, Sorkin as Harley Quinn, Valenza as Poison Ivy, and Wingert as Riddler—was well received,[9] but Hamill's performance received consistent praise, with reviewers commenting upon his excellent inflection and timing on a cackling, maniacal performance that steals the show.[10][25][93] Nguyen said that Dini and Hamill's Joker was the best depiction of the character outside of The Killing Joke and Heath Ledger's incarnation in The Dark Knight (2008).[87]
Writer Grant Morrison said the game was the inspiration for his Batman Incorporated comic book. He said he wanted to "capture the feeling of the Batman: Arkham Asylum game ... When I played that game, it was the first time in my life where I actually felt what it is like to be Batman ... We are now the heroes, and we can look through their eyes."[100]
Sales
Worldwide, the game sold nearly two million units in its first three weeks of release, and had sold 2.5 million by the end of September 2009.[101][102] According to NPD Group, Batman: Arkham Asylum sold approximately 593,000 units in North America during the five tracked days following its release on August 25.[101] By December 2009, the PlayStation 3 version of the game had outsold the Xbox 360 version by approximately 10,000 units despite multi-platform titles typically selling better on the Xbox 360 at the time. The exclusive content featuring the Joker as a playable character was cited as a possible reason for the success of the PlayStation 3 version.[103] The game took two of the top five spots on the US software chart in its first week of release, and topped the UK all-format chart for two weeks.[102]
Accolades
At the 2009 Spike Video Game Awards, Rocksteady Studios won Studio of the Year, while the game received nominations for Best Action Adventure Game, Best Graphics, Best Voice for Hamill and Sorkin, respectively, Best Xbox 360 Game, and Game of the Year.[104][105] As part of the Academy of Interactive Arts & Sciences (AIAS) 2009 awards, it won Outstanding Achievement awards for Character Performance (Mark Hamill as the Joker), Game Design, and Adapted Story, and was nominated for Adventure Game of the Year, Overall Game of the Year, and Outstanding Achievement awards for Animation, Original Music Composition, and Game Direction.[106][107] At the 6th British Academy Video Games Awards, it won the awards for Best Game, and Gameplay, and received nominations for Action, Original Score, Story, Use of Audio, Artistic Achievement, and the publicly voted GAME Award of 2009.[108] It won Best Game Design at the 10th Game Developers Choice Awards, and was nominated for Game of the Year and Best Writing.[109][110] It was also nominated for Best Sound Editing: Computer Entertainment for the 2010 Golden Reel Awards.[111] According to Metacritic, on all platforms, Arkham Asylum was tied with God of War Collection and Forza Motorsport 3 as the fourth-highest-rated game of 2009. It was also the highest-rated Microsoft Windows game alongside Dragon Age: Origins and Street Fighter IV, the third-highest-rated Xbox 360 game alongside Forza Motorsport 3, and the fifth-highest-rated PlayStation 3 game alongside FIFA 10 and Killzone 2.[112][113][114]
Batman: Arkham Asylum appeared on several lists of the top video games of 2009. It was placed at number one by The A.V. Club,[115] number two by CNET, Time and CraveOnline,[116][117][118] number three by Complex, IGN UK, Joystiq, and The Daily Telegraph,[119][120][121][122] number four by CBC News and Wired,[123][124] and number five by Gamasutra and IGN Australia.[125][126] Giant Bomb named it the 2009 Best Multiplatform Game,[127] GamesRadar labeled it their Game of the Year ahead of Uncharted 2: Among Thieves,[128] and Eurogamer listed it on their "Games of 2009" series.[129] GameSpot listed it as having the Best Atmosphere and the Best Use of a Creative License as part of their "Best Games of 2009" series,[130][131] and IGN UK named it the Best PC Action Game and Best Xbox 360 story.[132][133] GameTrailers named the title both Best Action-Adventure Game and Biggest Surprise of 2009.[134][135] In 2013, Eurogamer listed it as the twentieth best game of the contemporary console generation,[136] Game Informer named it the second best superhero game of all time,[137] and GamingBolt listed it as the eighty-ninth greatest game ever made.[138] In 2014, Empire named it the 28th Greatest Video Game of All Time, behind Arkham City at number 12,[139] and IGN listed as the twenty-second best game of the console generation.[140] In 2015, PC Gamer named it the fiftieth best PC game,[141] and IGN listed it as the 91st Top Game of All Time.[142]
Year | Award | Category | Recipient | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2009 | Academy of Interactive Arts & Sciences | Adventure Game of the Year | Batman: Arkham Asylum | Nominated | [106][107] |
Outstanding Achievement in Adapted Story | Batman: Arkham Asylum | Won | |||
Outstanding Achievement in Animation | Batman: Arkham Asylum | Nominated | |||
Outstanding Achievement in Character Performance | Mark Hamill for Joker | Won | |||
Outstanding Achievement in Game Design | Batman: Arkham Asylum | Won | |||
Outstanding Achievement in Game Direction | Batman: Arkham Asylum | Nominated | |||
Outstanding Achievement in Original Music Composition | Batman: Arkham Asylum | Nominated | |||
Overall Game of the Year | Batman: Arkham Asylum | Nominated | |||
Spike Video Game Awards | Best Action Adventure Game | Batman: Arkham Asylum | Nominated | [104][105] | |
Best Graphics | Batman: Arkham Asylum | Nominated | |||
Best Voice | Arleen Sorkin for Harley Quinn | Nominated | |||
Mark Hamill for Joker | Nominated | ||||
Best Xbox 360 Game | Batman: Arkham Asylum | Nominated | |||
Game of the Year | Batman: Arkham Asylum | Nominated | |||
Studio of the Year | Rocksteady Studios | Won | |||
2010 | BAFTA Video Games Awards | Action | Batman: Arkham Asylum | Nominated | [108] |
Artistic Achievement | Batman: Arkham Asylum | Nominated | |||
Best Game | Batman: Arkham Asylum | Won | |||
GAME Award of 2009 | Batman: Arkham Asylum | Nominated | |||
Gameplay | Batman: Arkham Asylum | Won | |||
Original Score | Batman: Arkham Asylum | Nominated | |||
Story | Batman: Arkham Asylum | Nominated | |||
Use of Audio | Batman: Arkham Asylum | Nominated | |||
Game Developers Choice Awards | Best Game Design | Batman: Arkham Asylum, Sefton Hill and Ian Ball | Nominated | [109][110] | |
Best Writing | Batman: Arkham Asylum | Won | |||
Game of the Year | Batman: Arkham Asylum | Nominated | |||
Golden Reel Awards | Best Sound Editing: Computer Entertainment | Batman: Arkham Asylum | Nominated | [111] | |
Legacy
Arkham Asylum's success launched a series of Batman: Arkham sequels, beginning in October 2011 with Batman: Arkham City. Batman: Arkham City, set one year after the events of Arkham Asylum, is the direct sequel to the earlier game. It was developed by Rocksteady Studios, and distributed by Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment.[143][144] Manipulated by Hugo Strange, Gotham City's mayor Quincy Sharp closes Arkham Asylum and Blackgate prison, and converts a section of the city's slums into an open air prison known as Arkham City, to house all of Gotham's criminals.[145] While a wary Batman watches over the activities in Arkham City,[146] the Joker is dying from his consumption of Titan.[145][147] The sequel introduces several new characters—including Hugo Strange, Robin, Catwoman, Ra's al Ghul, and Mr. Freeze—to the series. A limited, six-issue comic series, also titled Batman: Arkham City—bridging the plots of Arkham Asylum and Arkham City—was written by Paul Dini and featured art by Carlos D'Anda. The first issue was released on May 11, 2011.[148][149] A third installment of the Arkham series, Batman: Arkham Origins, was released in October 2013, featuring a story set before the events of Arkham Asylum.[150] A narrative sequel to Arkham City, Batman: Arkham Knight, was released on June 23, 2015 and is set to be the series' concluding chapter.[151][152]
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Joker: You're trying to resist the change. That's not fair! Come on, give in. So you wanna play hard ball Bats? Do ya? Your call. Oh, you're ruining my big night! Months of planning down the crapper! I just wanted to bring down your grim facade and for once let you see the world as I see it, giggling in a corner and bleeding. But you've denied me even that. I have nothing to live for! [Joker shoots himself with a Titan dart].
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- ↑ Alexander et. al, Leigh (January 4, 2010). "The best games of 2009". The A.V. Club. The Onion, Inc. Archived from the original on April 7, 2013. Retrieved April 7, 2013.
- ↑ "Batman: Arkham Asylum (360, PS3, PC)". CNET. CBS Interactive. December 16, 2009. Archived from the original on April 7, 2013. Retrieved April 7, 2013.
- ↑ Grossman, Lev; Ha, Peter (December 8, 2009). "Top 10 Video Games - 2. Batman: Arkham Asylum". Time (Time Inc.). Archived from the original on April 5, 2013. Retrieved April 5, 2013.
- ↑ Norris, Erik (December 28, 2009). "10 Best Games of 2009". CraveOnline. AtomicMedia. Archived from the original on April 6, 2013. Retrieved April 6, 2013.
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- ↑ "Best Games of 2009". IGN UK. J2 Global. Archived from the original on April 7, 2013. Retrieved April 7, 2013.
- ↑ Grant, Christopher (January 1, 2010). "Joystiq's Top 10 of 2009: Batman: Arkham Asylum". Joystiq. AOL. Archived from the original on April 5, 2013. Retrieved April 5, 2013.
- ↑ Cowen, Nick (December 14, 2009). "Top 10 video games of 2009". The Daily Telegraph. Telegraph Media Group. Archived from the original on April 6, 2013. Retrieved April 6, 2013.
- ↑ Nowak, Peter (December 29, 2009). "Top five video games of 2009". CBC News. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Archived from the original on April 7, 2013. Retrieved April 7, 2013.
- ↑ Kohler, Chris (December 30, 2009). "The 10 Best Videogames of 2009". Wired. Condé Nast Publications. Archived from the original on April 7, 2013. Retrieved April 7, 2013.
- ↑ "Gamasutra's Best Of 2009: Top 10 Games Of The Year". Gamasutra. Think Services. December 23, 2009. Archived from the original on April 6, 2013. Retrieved April 6, 2013.
- ↑ Kolan, Patrick (December 3, 2009). "IGN AU's Top 10 Games of 2009". IGN Australia. J2 Global. Archived from the original on April 6, 2013. Retrieved April 6, 2013.
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- ↑ "The Platinum Chalice Awards 2009". GamesRadar. Future plc. December 18, 2009. Archived from the original on April 3, 2013. Retrieved April 3, 2013.
- ↑ Whitehead, Dan (December 27, 2009). "Games of 2009: Batman: Arkham Asylum". Eurogamer (Gamer Network). Archived from the original on April 17, 2013. Retrieved April 17, 2013.
- ↑ "Special Achievement: Best Atmosphere". GameSpot. CBS Interactive. Archived from the original on March 16, 2013. Retrieved January 4, 2015.
- ↑ "Special Achievement: Best Use of a Creative License". GameSpot. CBS Interactive. Archived from the original on March 16, 2013. Retrieved March 16, 2013.
- ↑ "Best Action Game - Batman Arkham: Asylum". IGN UK. J2 Global. Archived from the original on April 7, 2013. Retrieved April 7, 2013.
- ↑ "Best Story - Batman: Arkham Asylum". IGN UK. J2 Global. Archived from the original on April 7, 2013. Retrieved April 7, 2013.
- ↑ GameTrailers.com (December 21, 2009). "GT GotY Awards 2009 Best Action-Adventure Game". Archived from the original on May 9, 2010. Retrieved June 9, 2010.
- ↑ GameTrailers.com (December 29, 2009). "GT GotY Awards 2009 Biggest Surprise". Archived from the original on April 12, 2013. Retrieved June 9, 2010.
- ↑ Robinson, Martin (November 4, 2013). "Eurogamer's Games of the Generation: The top 50". Eurogamer (Gamer Network). Retrieved November 4, 2013.
- ↑ Reeves, Ben (December 19, 2013). "The Best Superhero Games Of All Time". Game Informer. GameStop. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
- ↑ Philip, Rohan (April 19, 2013). "Top 100 greatest video games ever made: 89. Batman Arkham Asylum". GamingBolt. CraveOnline. Archived from the original on July 6, 2015. Retrieved July 6, 2015.
- ↑ "28 - Batman: Arkham Asylum". Empire. August 2014. Archived from the original on August 28, 2014. Retrieved August 28, 2014.
- ↑ "Top 100 Games of a Generation: #22 - Batman: Arkham Asylum". IGN Australia. J2 Global. 2014. Archived from the original on July 6, 2015. Retrieved July 6, 2015.
- ↑ "The PC Gamer Top 100 Greatest Games (Page 7)". PC Gamer. September 3, 2015. Archived from the original on September 25, 2015. Retrieved September 25, 2015.
- ↑ "Top 100 Games of all Time: #91 - Batman: Arkham Asylum". IGN Australia. J2 Global. 2015. Archived from the original on October 31, 2015. Retrieved October 31, 2015.
- ↑ "Get Your Batman: Arkham City Questions Answered". IGN. J2 Global. September 5, 2011. Archived from the original on August 10, 2013. Retrieved August 10, 2013.
- ↑ Yin-Poole, Wesley (March 11, 2011). "Batman: Arkham City release date". Eurogamer. Eurogamer Network. Archived from the original on February 2, 2013. Retrieved March 11, 2011.
- 1 2 Narcisse, Evan (October 21, 2011). "The Surprising Stories That Connect Batman: Arkham City to Arkham Asylum". Kotaku. Gawker Media. Archived from the original on November 12, 2012. Retrieved November 12, 2012.
- ↑ Vore, Bryan (October 11, 2010). "Batman: Arkham City - Preview". Game Informer (GameStop). Archived from the original on November 29, 2012. Retrieved November 6, 2012.
- ↑ Bradford, Matt (February 9, 2012). "Rocksteady dissects Batman: Arkham City's controversial ending". GamesRadar. Future plc. Archived from the original on February 4, 2013. Retrieved February 4, 2013.
- ↑ "Batman: Arkham City Comic Book First Look". GameSpot. CBS Interactive. April 4, 2011. Archived from the original on November 6, 2012. Retrieved March 27, 2013.
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- ↑ Vore, Brian (April 9, 2013). "May Cover Revealed: Batman: Arkham Origins". Game Informer. GameStop. Archived from the original on April 14, 2013. Retrieved April 14, 2013.
- ↑ Moriarty, Colin (March 4, 2014). "The New Batman Game is Batman: Arkham Knight". IGN. Archived from the original on March 4, 2014. Retrieved March 4, 2014.
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