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Uplink

miracle69 writes: "Well, it looks like the perfect convergence for the average Slashdot reader. What we've got here is a game that is approaching the Slashdot Enthusiast's Valhalla. It's released under Windows and Linux, costs a mere 25 USDs, and has no middleman to jack prices up. Of course, that means it's not available in stores, nor will it be seen on TV, but according to Newsforge, it's got great gameplay. So, will 25 bucks, a fresh game idea, and a Linux release make others in the gaming world stand up and take notice?"

10 of 315 comments (clear)

  1. Fun by austad · · Score: 5, Informative

    I grabbed the demo about 2 weeks ago, and I have to say, it's pretty damn fun. After I hacked in and changed some guys social security number, the demo ended because my rating got too high.

    Apparently there's a story line which gets quite interesting, and the CD has a password protected zip file on it. You have to crack it to find out what's in it. I don't have the full version yet, but I'm planning on buying it. 2 of my friends just received their copies today.

    Just download the demo and try it out, chances are that you'll buy it. I can't stop playing once I sit down in front of it, and I'm not normally into games at all.

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    1. Re:Fun by ChazeFroy · · Score: 4, Informative

      Here is a review of the game on isonews.com.

  2. It's not exactly a "real-world" game by Rackemup · · Score: 4, Informative
    I tried out Uplink a while ago, i'm surprised it's just getting to /. now.

    The reason there aren't many screen shots is because it's not an FPS and it's not a RTS.. it's more like a text-based SIM. You basically take on the "role" of a hacker for hire. Everything is done in-game and you get emails from the company that hired you containing tasks (ie servers to hack into, jobs to complete).

    You download "tools" from the company server and you get paid for jobs you complete. More complex jobs require more expensive tools so you have to save up for them.

    It's interesting, but it doesnt exactly reflect the real world. Nothing you learn in-game could help you hack into a bank or anything.

  3. It's a nice game by IdentityCrisis · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's a very nice game, with sleek graphics though there is nothing more than a few pictures at best.
    the game isn't realistic at all (not opengl style cracking like the movie 'hackers' , but not real either)

    Though the game gets pretty repetitive, it does have an external plot, and is very nice.
    For a nice review check out the home of the underdogs' review
    Another game that is being exclusivly published over the net is pontifex, better known as bridge builder 2, which is an awesome and very addictive game.

  4. where to download by nonane · · Score: 4, Informative

    this is where you can download the windows demo version version:

    http://www.ciudad.com.ar/ar/portales/juegos/nota_c obranded/0,1506,42211,00.html

  5. Re: Permissions by thebabelfish · · Score: 5, Informative
    Here's Google's cache of the main stuff you'll want to see: Sorry no screenshots, images.google.com doesn't seem to have them. Enjoy!
    --
    "I don't trust goats," --To Catch a Spy
  6. Site down, but google saves! by Wizard+of+OS · · Score: 5, Informative

    The site
    http://www.introversion.co.uk/ gives a 403 error, but thanks to google we can still do some kind of browsing:

    Main site: http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:HF4gZfFTKQQ:w ww.introversion.co.uk/uplink/+&hl=en

    How to browse the site? Easy: just hoover your mouse over a link, copy-paste the URL in google, and click the 'view google's cache' link. Browsing has never been more easy! :)

    --

    --
    If code was hard to write, it should be hard to read
  7. Not exactly a new idea... by RobertFisher · · Score: 5, Informative
    It's curious just how frequently "new" ideas appear in the computing world. It usually turns out that someone had the same idea (and often a better implementation) long before. The new implementation
    often has better looking graphics, and runs on speedier machines, but the idea is basically the same. There's a joke that everything in the computing world was invented in 1962. The only thing funnier than the joke is to see younger folks
    "invent" the same thing over and over again.


    Uplink sounds basically the same as an early 1980s Activision game called Hacker
    which appeared on the Commodore 64 and other personal computer of that era. At that time (to the best of my knowledge), Hacker was a kind of revolutionary game. It offered no explanation, either on-screen or in the game documentation, as to what was going on. You were simly presented with a text login prompt when the game started, and had to take it from there.


    Bob

    --
    Science, like Nature, must also be tamed, with a view turned towards its preservation.
  8. Download the Demo from fileplanet.com by tabman · · Score: 4, Informative

    Here's a link to Fileplanet.com.. A lot easier..

    http://www.fileplanet.com/index.asp?section=0&fi le =80967

  9. Similar games that are online (and likely better) by MasterOfErm · · Score: 4, Informative

    The whole "play hacker" thing has been going on for some time, so this isn't really that new. However, if you're into games that somewhat emulate challeges a hacker would face, at least in style, you should look into the many online hacking challenge sites. The challenges range from breaking encryption, reverse engineering, simulated exploits, to the more mundane logic puzzles. A few I recommend:

    http://aspect.l8nite.net - Storyline based set of challenges that require alot of "outside the box thinking".
    http://www.slyfx.com - Non-storyline sequential tour of computing challenges.
    The Game - Java reverse engineering.
    +Ma's Reversing - Reverse engineering.
    http://home.cyberarmy.com/w0lfie/ - a bunch of links to others here.