Thief 3 Preview Shows Excruciating Detail, Insight
Thanks to EvilAvatar for pointing to an extremely in-depth preview of Ion Storm's PC/Xbox title Thief 3:Deadly Shadows, courtesy of fansite Thief: The Circle. The piece deals with some of the more controversial changes ("Loot glint is there whether you like it or not. It sort of clashed with the look/atmosphere to see this bright twinkling light across the room, but it aids in what has been one of the most frustrating elements in the earlier games: the loot hunt"), whether this is anything like Deus Ex 2 ("No. This game is actually finished at the time of its release") before concluding by noting: "Loot glint and arrow streaks mean exactly zip when you're actually... playing the game... and for once in the history of the series, the game actually looks GOOD." Update: 05/17 16:39 GMT by S : An anonymous reader also points to a detailed retrospective of the Thief series on the delightfully named FourFatChicks.com.
I remember when I first played a Thief 1 demo that came on a CD that came with some magazine. A friend and I decided to try out the game, and we were simply blown away by the (at the time) amazingly realistic AI.
When we shot a guard a couple of times, he actually realized he was losing and decided to run away, unlike every other grunt I've seen in every other FPS who just kept running at you. To make things worst, as he was running, he shouted "Help! Help! Thief." We knew we were screwed unless we could silence him, so we took out our sword and chased after him.
He ran into a door, and closed it behind him. This, in itself, was another impressive detail, but we our jaws dropped when we tried to open the door and discovered he locked it!
We stood around the door, not sure what to do when all of a sudden it flung open and five guards came running out and pummeled us to death.
This was the first time I had experienced actually intelligent behaviour from a computer controlled character.
When the original Thief came out (back in 98/99?), I spent a good 6 hours or so at it one afternoon, only to finish when I realized I was starving and everyone had left our dorm for dinner. I had just quit the game and was sitting in the dark, gathering my appetite to head for the cafeteria, when another student walked by in the hallway, scuffing their feet and whistling.
I froze. Then I realized I couldn't find my blackjack. I was, in fact, sitting in my dorm room, and no longer playing Thief. That was a very weird realization, and somewhat of a dissappointment, because that noisy student sure had it coming.
I can't wait for Thief 3.
I find games in the "stealth" genre excruciatingly boring. It's not because I don't like the idea of hiding or sneaking up on people and killing them and stealing there stuff. It's because the games are always so slow. What do you guys do in all that time it takes you to creep frome one shadow to another? Ponder the mysteries of the universe? Play another game at the same time?
Thief 3 purportedly uses the same Unreal-derived engine as Deus Ex 2 (with extra light/shadow and Havok physics goodies).
Hopefully this will mean it is map and mod-friendly like most Unreal engine games.
This is, arguably, a more important engine feature than raw rendering capabilities and performance are these days, at least in terms of a title's longevity. Witness Half-Life for example.
You nailed it on that one. My most favorite Thief moment (hell, probably my favorite *game* moment ever was sitting in the shadows at a dead end with a guard walking *straight towards me* and whistling. I was trying to win the level without killing anyone, so shooting him was out. I waited and waited and *waited* (long hallway, y'know) for him to see me, but he stopped *two feet away* and then turned to walk off. I was going to run after him and blackjack him when I realised that I was on tile and that he'd nail me instantly. There was carpet ahead that he was walking on, but he was almost to the very end! I had to stand, jump to the beginning of the carpet without moving on the tile, sprint to the end of the carpet, and blackjack him. Right as I connected with his head, my foot hit tile. He went "What?" and went down at the same time. It may not sound that exciting in print, but imagine going through all that process in the space of about three seconds.
*That's* what makes the slow stretches exciting. My heart was about to *explode* when I hit him.