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Bioshock's Launch Aftershocks

It should come as no surprise that the level of hype BioShock reached in the last month has had some aftereffects. The game itself is really good; few are disputing that. There were, however, some problems. Next Gen has a few words with Ken Levine on BioShock's troubled launch looking at the broken Big Daddies, the allegations of a rootkit, and the 'widescreen issue'. There are other issues still floating around, of course: despite rumours Levine has now confirmed there will be no PS3 version of the game, and one problem may just be starting as big media finds out about the Little Sisters. 'The Boston Patriot-Ledger ... argues that BioShock is "testing the limits of the ultraviolent gaming genre with a strategy that enables players to kill characters resembling young girls." Despite the shock-inducing lead, the article goes on to give a more or less accurate description of BioShock's choice between saving and harvesting the creepy Little Sisters ... The conclusion tries to draw a link between BioShock's violence to a stabbing death allegedly inspired by Grand Theft Auto, but the connection is pretty weak.' To close on a good note check out 1up's profile of Levine's career, or download the BioShock score ... which is beautiful.

7 of 267 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Morality Shock by 1019 · · Score: 3, Informative

    ..I've not noticed anything "considerably" broken with BIg daddies. I believe they're referring to the Big Daddy figurines that came with the Special (Collectors?) Edition, many of which had the drill piece broken off in shipment.

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  2. Re:No bioshock for me by Decado · · Score: 5, Informative

    There is no rootkit you idiot, just some fool who didn't know how to use some rootkit detection utilities and mistook a single registry entry for a rootkit.

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  3. Re:Morality Shock by Rycross · · Score: 4, Informative

    There was more to the game than that. Rapture was, in essense, an experiment in unfettered capitalism and self-interest. As the game goes on, you get to see how that influenced Rapture.

    Also, I blasted through killing everyone, and later found out that I missed some items that I could have gained if I hadn't been so quick on the trigger finger.

    Theres more to it than that, but it involves certain plot points, and I wouldn't want to ruin it for anyone. Your post makes it seem like you're still relatively early in the game, so I hope you enjoy it.

    As far as the Big Daddy issue, that had to do with the figurines that came with the collectors edition, nothing in-game.

    I have to say that the game was excellent. I'm already tempted to replay it.

  4. Re:Well Don't That Beat All. by heinousjay · · Score: 5, Informative

    Except it's not a rootkit. Jeez, you people are really demonstrating the power of misinformation.

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  5. Re:No bioshock for me by Rycross · · Score: 5, Informative

    Its worse than that. When the guy who detected it was corrected in his comments, he stated that he would get better hits if he called it a rootkit and then went on to say that he'd let the readers decide if it was really a rootkit.

    The whole OMG ROOTKIT thing was nothing more than a publicity stuff. Yes its DRM, and yes it sucks, but its not a rootkit. And you don't get it if you buy it off of Steam either.

    Sadly, I've noticed that Slashdot is very VERY bad about spreading disinformation and hyperbole. It'd be nice if the stories could be substantiated and checked for accuracy, especially considering the number of people who take anything posted on Slashdot as The One and Only Truth.

  6. Re:Put it all to the side by MooseMuffin · · Score: 4, Informative
    This whole post is ignorant of the actual situation.

    I'm not interested in shelling out my cash for a game that could well turn into a paperweight (and a poor one at that) somewhere down the line when the activation server goes away. They have already said that this is strictly for early in the game's life cycle when its most at risk of being pirated. At some point in the future, the whole procedure will go away.

    Or when I've installed for the Nth + 1 time, or whatever. You have 5 installs. You use one when you install, you get it back when you do an uninstall. Inconvenience? Yes. A bit insulting? Yes. But it doesn't actually prevent you from installing it each of the 50 times you wipe your OS. Criticisms of copy protection as a matter of principle are entirely valid, but your specific gripes are simply not true.
  7. Re:Well Don't That Beat All. by MaineCoon · · Score: 4, Informative

    Except, it doesn't even do that. It's a pretty obvious service, that you can stop, set to Manual start, or even disable, and it is removed on uninstall. (Yes, the service itself is removed even if the registry keys got left behind).

    The ONLY reason it has been referred to as a 'rootkit' is because SecuROM used a NUL character in their registry key, which the MS-provided Rootkit scanner flags as suspicious. By the way, it also flags some keys for MS software as 'suspicious' on a clean install, so how is that for reliable?

    Stop perpetuating misinformation that you have heard second hand from unreliable sources. You look like an alarmist for doing it.

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