DEFCON (video game)

DEFCON
Developer(s) Introversion Software
Publisher(s)
Designer(s) Chris Delay
Gary Chambers
Composer(s) Alistair Lindsay and Michael Maidment
Platform(s) Windows
Mac OS X
Linux
Release Windows
  • WW: September 29, 2006 (Steam)
  • NA: March 26, 2007
  • EU: June 15, 2007
OS X
April 19, 2007
Linux
December 11, 2012
Genre(s) Real-time strategy
Mode(s) Multiplayer

DEFCON (stylized as DEFCOИ and sometimes subtitled Everybody Dies in the North American version and Global Thermonuclear War in the European version) is a real-time strategy game created by independent British game developer Introversion Software. The gameplay is reminiscent of the "big boards" that visually represented thermonuclear war in films such as Dr. Strangelove, Fail-Safe, and especially WarGames.

The game has been available by download since September 2006 through Introversion's web store and Steam. On April 5, 2007, US publisher Encore announced they would be publishing the game in the United States, and had ordered an initial 50,000 copies of the game for retail.[1] In the UK it was released for the high street shops on June 15, 2007 and for a limited period included the developer's first game Uplink.

Gameplay

Players are given a 1980s vector graphics computer-themed world map, a varied arsenal of nuclear and conventional weaponry, and a primary objective: destroy as much of the enemy's population as possible while having as little of one's own population destroyed as possible. A typical game will see civilian casualties numbering in the millions (megadeaths) while players try their hand at annihilating their opponents.

In most games, all sides take heavy losses, but the player with the highest score wins. Players' scores are determined according to one of three schemes: Default (gain 2 points for 1 megadeath caused, lose 1 point for 1 megadeath suffered), Survivor (gain 1 point per million survivors in your territory) or Genocide (gain 1 point for each megadeath caused); though functionally identical in a one-on-one conflict, each scoring scheme suggests large differences in strategy in larger multiplayer conflicts.

The in-game map.

Gameplay time can be varied by configuring the speed at which events progress from real-time (1 second in-game:1 second out-of-game) to 20* real-time. Most games last 30 to 40 minutes while real-time gameplay can last more than eight hours, depending on the mode of scoring. There is also an "Office" mode of play in which the game is permanently real-timed and can be minimised to run in the background of other computer activities, allowing the player to check in only when important events take place, and only for so long as it is necessary to modify the standing orders of each of the player's assets.

The game offers six territories that may be selected by a player or assigned to an AI opponent. These include:

All territories have a population of 100 million by default.

Pacing and DEFCON levels

DEFCON is a streamlined real-time strategy game, with no unit production (except for automatic fighter regeneration), resource collection, or technology tree upgrades. Players choose and position their forces at the beginning of the game. A countdown system prevents games from disintegrating prematurely. Gameplay begins at alert level DEFCON 5 and counts down to DEFCON 1 (the highest alert level). Each upgrade in alert level brings more possibilities.

DEFCON
level
Status Reached
5 No hostile action. Players may place units and fleets and units can move into international waters. Game start
4 No hostile action. Radar coverage will provide information on units within range. Players may continue to place units and fleets and move units into international waters. 6 min.
3 Conventional naval and airborne combat is authorized. Units and fleets can no longer be placed (those that were not placed are treated as if they were lost). 12 min.
2

No effective change from DEFCON 3. This is the final stage before nuclear weapons are available. Combat becomes more aggressive.

20 min.
1 The use of nuclear weapons is authorized. Intercontinental ballistic missiles, submarine medium-range ballistic missiles, and bomber short-range ballistic missiles are available. 30 min.

Once DEFCON 1 is reached, the game proceeds until a certain percentage (80% by default) of the total number of nuclear missiles available to all players have been launched or destroyed. Once this occurs, a victory countdown begins (45 game minutes by default) and the final score is announced when this countdown runs out.

Multiplayer and alliances

A DEFCON game can host up to six human or AI players. Alliances can be formed, broken, or renegotiated at will with human players. Alliances with CPU controlled players can only be set at the start of the game. Allied players share radar coverage and line of sight, but there is no allied victory and there is only one winner. This means that almost all alliances are broken by the end of the game. Lead designer Chris Delay explains:

We've seen alliance members shooting overhead friendly planes down because they believed the planes were scouting the area for targets in preparation for a strike. This results in arguments in the chat channels, followed by skirmishes at sea, followed by retaliation, before finally the whole alliance collapses and everyone starts nuking the hell out of each other. It's awesome.[2]

The chat system features a public channel, in which all players may communicate, as well as channels private to specific alliances, and direct player-to-player private messaging.

DEFCON also features local multiplayer capability, i.e. on LAN.

Diplomacy mode

All players start as members of a single alliance, and attempts to stay on top as the alliance disintegrates. The score is determined not by the enemy population killed, but by which territory has the highest percentage of survivors at the end of the game.

Office mode

In office mode, the game runs in real time and cannot be sped up. The game can be quickly forced to the background making the computer available for other use. While the game continues to run in the background, a system tray icon will notify the gamer of certain events as they occur. The office mode hotkey, sometimes referred to as the boss key, is activated by striking the escape key twice in rapid succession. A game in office mode lasts no more than six hours. The boss key is available in all game modes, but it is designed for this mode in particular.

Units

DEFCON uses a real-time line of sight system common to traditional RTS games, where only enemy units within radar coverage may be seen. However, a nuclear missile launch from a silo or submarine is automatically detected by all players (though the missile itself is not, and must be detected by radar), which reveals the location of the unit launching the missile. A nuclear missile launch from a bomber, however, does not reveal the location of the bomber.

Most units have several operating modes for different functions, and require several minutes to switch modes. For instance, ordering a missile silo to switch from offensive launches to missile defence will leave it inoperative while it switches.

Ground units

Ground installations are immobile, and can be destroyed by nuclear attack.

  • Radar dishes provide broad radar coverage (though most units have some radar capability), but can be destroyed by a single nuke. They enhance other defense installations; for instance, a missile silo's firing range far outstrips its radar range. A radar dish can be destroyed if a fighter or bomber runs out of fuel or is shot down directly over it.
  • Missile silos have two modes: launching nuclear missiles or shooting down incoming missiles and planes. In the attack mode, a silo has ten ICBMs that may be fired at any target in the world, though doing so alerts all players and reveals the silo's position. On defence, a silo automatically fires surface-to-air missiles effective against enemy planes and missiles—however, the limited rate of fire means the silos can be overwhelmed by many incoming missiles. Unlike most units, silos are hardened against nuclear strikes, taking three hits to destroy, although each strike eliminates half (rounded down) of the silo's nuke stockpile.
  • Airbases house bombers and fighters plus a complement of five spare SRBMs to reload bombers that have launched their missiles. They launch planes and provide a landing point for aircraft, and also build new fighters automatically throughout the game. However, fighters are only built if there are less than 5 fighters already in the airbase, and the airbase can only hold a maximum of ten fighters and bombers each. Airbases take two hits to destroy; on the first hit, half of the airbase's currently landed aircraft and missiles are destroyed.

Ships

Naval units are organized into fleets of up to six ships which move and fight together. Fleets must be placed in territorial waters at the beginning of a game. Ships may move through the ocean, albeit slowly.

  • Carriers act as mobile airfields, scrambling fighters and nuke-equipped bombers, along with four spare SRBMs to rearm empty bombers. They are also the most powerful anti-submarine warfare escorts, armed with sonar and depth charges that quickly sink nearby subs. With no surface guns, they are helpless without their complement of planes.
  • Battleships are tough and carry powerful guns effective against surface fleets and aircraft. They are vulnerable to sub and bomber attacks, so are safer with carrier escorts.
  • Submarines carry torpedoes and an arsenal of five nukes. Sub attacks are dangerous against enemy ships, though subs are easily killed by carriers. Subs are invisible to radar but carry no radar of their own (unless surfaced to launch their missiles); they may use active sonar to pursue other naval units, at the risk of exposing their position. Their real power comes from their missiles, which can devastate coastal cities, or quickly hit defences before a full-scale strike. Subs must surface to fire nukes, leaving them open to counterattack before they can fire all their missiles; the launch also alerts all players to the sub's location.

Aircraft

Aircraft are launched from other ground and sea units. Typically they operate autonomously after launch, but bombers and fighters can also be controlled while airborne.

  • Fighters are light and fast, making them good at reconnaissance and interception. They are most effective against other aircraft, though they can attack ships as well. They have a fairly short range, forcing them to return to a base or crash for lack of fuel.
  • Bombers carry a single SRBM missile that may be fired at a nearby target. Bombers have a long range to deliver this payload, but are vulnerable during the trip. Unlike silo- and submarine-based nukes, firing the missile does not alert everyone to the launch, making it a stealthier option. They also have a conventional attack that does heavy damage to ships.

Nuclear missiles

  • Nuclear missiles deliver a devastating payload. A direct hit on a city will kill half of the current living civilians. Between one and three hits are required on the hardened buildings that players place to destroy them. Missiles can only be shot down by silos in defense mode, which have a small random chance of hitting the missile with any given shot—a hit will cause a limited detonation in the missile, yielding minor casualties if a city is directly beneath, or damaging or destroying a facility if one is below. Once launched from a silo (ICBM), submarine (called MRBM, although technically an SLBM), or bomber (called SRBM, although technically an ALBM), missiles cannot be retargeted, though they can be disarmed in mid-flight. Missiles can also target sea-based units and will destroy any aircraft caught in their blast radius.

Mods

Users can modify texture, sound, localization, etc. files that are found in the game's program files. The source code used to be available for purchase on Introversion's official store, however it has been removed in September 2016 and hasn't been available since then.

A mod forum is available on the official forum, and a user-made list (open domain) is listed on the official website.

Reception

Reception
Aggregate score
AggregatorScore
Metacritic84/100[3]
Review scores
PublicationScore
1UP.comA[4]
Edge7/10[5]
Eurogamer8/10[6]
GamePro[7]
GamesMaster80%[8]
GameSpot8.1/10[9]
IGN(Alex) 8.8/10[10]
(Steve) 8.5/10[11]
PALGN8/10[12]
PC Gamer (US)83%[13]
VideoGamer.com9/10[14]
The A.V. ClubB+[15]
The New York Times(positive)[16]
Awards
PublicationAward
PC GamerTop 100 PC Games July 2008 (# 59)
Way of The RodentBest Involuntary Yelp
Way of The RodentBest Sound

DEFCON received "favorable" reviews according to the review aggregation website Metacritic.[3]

1UP.com said, "This just may be the finest piece of 'budgetware' ever produced, with every bit as much to offer strategywise as RTS games three times its cost," praising the "elementary" interface and calling the strategic depth "enormous." 1UP also praised the visuals, calling it "one of the best-looking PC games all year."[4] Edge said DEFCON was "worth it for the presentation alone."[5] Eurogamer commented that it was "the least ambitious of Introversion's games in terms of design," and "its limitations are ones of the game's basic scope," while praising DEFCON "as pure and direct a game as its inspiration."[6]

The editors of Computer Games Magazine presented DEFCON with their 2006 "Best Budget Game" award. It was a runner-up for their list of the year's top 10 computer games.[17] It also won PC Gamer US's 2006 "Best Indie Game" award.[18]

See also

References

  1. "Defcon Bombing US Retail". Next Generation. Future US. April 5, 2007. Retrieved April 1, 2010.
  2. Williams, Gareth (September 5, 2006). "DEFCON: Global Thermonuclear War Interview". VideoGamer.com. Resero Network.
  3. 1 2 "DEFCON: Everybody Dies for PC Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive.
  4. 1 2 Peckham, Matt (October 7, 2006). "DEFCON Review". 1UP.com. Ziff Davis. Archived from the original on October 19, 2012. Retrieved November 22, 2008.
  5. 1 2 "DEFCON: Global Thermonuclear War". Edge. No. 168. Future plc. November 2006. p. 90.
  6. 1 2 Gillen, Kieron (October 2, 2006). "Defcon". Eurogamer. Gamer Network. Retrieved November 22, 2008.
  7. CSL (October 6, 2006). "Review: DEFCON: Everybody Dies". GamePro. IDG Entertainment. Archived from the original on November 4, 2006. Retrieved March 28, 2018.
  8. "DEFCON: Global Thermonuclear War". GamesMaster. Future plc. December 2006. p. 84.
  9. Davis, Ryan (October 10, 2006). "Defcon: Everybody Dies Review". GameSpot. CBS Interactive. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
  10. Simmons, Alex (September 14, 2006). "DEFCON Review". IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
  11. Butts, Steve (October 20, 2006). "DEFCON". IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
  12. Marrow, Mark (October 24, 2006). "DEFCON Review". PALGN. PAL Gaming Network. Archived from the original on February 24, 2008. Retrieved March 28, 2018.
  13. "DEFCON: Everybody Dies". PC Gamer. Future US. December 2006. p. 78.
  14. Young, Andy (October 11, 2006). "DEFCON: Global Thermonuclear War Review". VideoGamer.com. Resero Network. Retrieved March 28, 2018.
  15. Dahlen, Chris (October 2, 2006). "DEFCON". The A.V. Club. The Onion. Archived from the original on October 25, 2006. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
  16. Herold, Charles (October 5, 2006). "Two Kinds of Combat: One Wacky, One Shooting". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
  17. CGM staff (March 2007). "The Best (and Worst) of 2006: The 16th Annual Computer Games Awards". Computer Games Magazine. No. 195. pp. 46–51.
  18. "The 13th Annual PC Gamer Awards Reveals The Best Of The Best For 2006". Future US. South San Francisco, California. February 2, 2007. Archived from the original on June 17, 2007.
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