Red Storm Rising (video game)

Red Storm Rising

Atari ST cover
Developer(s) MicroProse
Publisher(s) MicroProse
Designer(s) Sid Meier
Arnold Hendrick
Composer(s) Ken Lagace
Platform(s) Amiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, DOS, PC-98
Release date(s) 1988
Genre(s) Simulation video game
Mode(s) Single player

Red Storm Rising is a simulation video game based on Tom Clancy's novel Red Storm Rising and released in 1988 by MicroProse. The player is put in charge of an American SSN submarine in the Norwegian Sea Theater with the overall role of a hunter killer performing various missions in the context of the global conflict described in the book representing a campaign. Its original Commodore 64 version was co-designed and co-programmed by the legendary game designer Sid Meier.

Plot

As with the USS Chicago in the book, the game concentrates on the Norwegian Sea theater, placing the player as captain of a single USN nuclear-powered submarine tasked to disrupt Soviet forces in the area between the Kola Peninsula and the Greenland-Iceland-UK barrier. Missions may include interdiction of tanker fleets, stopping amphibious landing forces, eliminating Soviet Wolf pack submarines and many others. The background story remains true to the book's plot but the final mission is always to prevent the Soviets from launching nuclear missiles by locating and eliminating their ballistic missile submarines.

Gameplay

The player may choose from four different timelines. Starting in the early 1980s limits the player to Permit, Sturgeon or early Los-Angeles class submarines, but the Soviets have weak sonars, whereas starting in the late 1980s allows the player to use the improved Los-Angeles class and even the new Seawolf subs. Weapons improve accordingly, with Tomahawk missiles and improved Mark 48 torpedoes included in later timelines but the Soviets begin deploying nuclear-powered aircraft carriers and much better anti-submarine warfare ships.

The goal of the game is always consistent: Inflicting as much damage as possible on the Soviets in the Norwegian Sea, thus allowing safe passage to supply convoys coming from America and preventing amphibious forces from conquering Norway and Iceland.

In order to make contact with enemy forces, the player must navigate the sub in a map of the northern sea, depending on his sub's sensors as well as allied airplanes, satellites and SOSUS arrays to detect the Soviet forces. The speed and direction of closing in to make contact would be the initial speed and direction in the battle map

Success or failure of the missions impacts the progress of the war depicted by shifts in the front line on a simple map of Europe. If the player fails in a mission then Soviet forces capture more territory, but if he succeeds then NATO is able to resist the Soviet attacks. In the course of the campaign the player can gain rank and possibly earn medals as well. In the end of the war, a final score is calculated and the player is awarded a post-war rank if NATO wins the war; this rank can vary from Commander to Admiral depending on how successful they have been in their missions. A poor performance in the game, particularly in the final mission, means that the Soviets win the war and the player end up with the rank of Tovarishch (comrade), becoming a political prisoner in a communist-ruled America.

Reception

Compute! called Red Storm Rising a "must" for fans of Tom Clancy or military simulations.[1] Computer Gaming World gave the game four and a half stars out of five, commending it for balancing realism and gameplay while noting deviations from realism, such as the durability of the player's submarine. The reviewer noted the game is "relatively easy to learn and win. This reviewer does not mean that the challenge is absent, but while the challenge is omnipresent, it is surmountable".[2][3] In 1996, the magazine ranked it as the 39th best PC game of all time, calling it "a modern submarine combat game unmatched even by today's offerings, the play balance of scenarios, campaigns and realism was near perfect."[4]

References

  1. Sheffield, Richard (February 1989). "Red Storm Rising". Compute!. p. 66. Retrieved 10 November 2013.
  2. Brooks, Evan (Nov 1988), "Diving Into Red Storm Rising", Computer Gaming World, pp. 28–30
  3. Brooks, M. Evan (June 1992). "The Modern Games: 1950 - 2000". Computer Gaming World. p. 120. Retrieved 24 November 2013.
  4. CGW 148: 150 Best Games of All Time

External links

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