Radix: Beyond the Void

Radix: Beyond the Void is a 2.5D First-person shooter with behind-person front view, developed by Canadian studio Neural Storm Entertainment and published by Epic MegaGames for DOS in 1995.[1][2]

Radix: Beyond the Void
Developer(s)Neural Storm Entertainment
Publisher(s)Epic MegaGames
Union Logic Software Publishing, Inc.
Platform(s)MS-DOS
ReleaseJuly 1, 1995
Genre(s)First-person shooter, shoot 'em up
Mode(s)Single-player, Multi-player (max 4)

Plot

In the 22nd century, humanity has achieved world peace. The United Earth Space Alliance (UESA) was able to fully concentrate on space exploration. In the year 2147, the first colony ship was launched towards the asteroid Theta-2. However, the second vessel, carrying the colonists, encountered a terrifying disturbance in space. Alien ships emerged from what later became known as "The Void", and attacked the colony ship; the subsequent fate of ten thousand people on board was unknown. Humans constructed the inter-dimensional starfighter Radix, and sent it through The Void, in a desperate attempt to face the alien threat.

Gameplay

In the mid-1990s, the popularity of Doom led to many shareware "Doom clones", with Radix being one of the few first person shooters which takes place in a zero gravity environment and where the player controls a ship rather than a human. In some sense, Radix is superficially similar to Descent. However while Descent had full 3D maps with six degrees of motion, Radix uses the earlier 2.5D map designs of Doom clones. These are characterized by flat levels with no rooms over rooms, albeit with slopes of various degrees. Despite being a spacecraft, freedom of motion is limited - it is impossible to turn fully vertically upwards or downwards, nor fly upside down.[3]

In version 2.0 patch called Radix REMIX, controls were significantly reworked, which allows player's vehicle to hover, with right mouse button acting as an accelerator, which no longer uses any energy.

Reception

Jon Mavor claimed the game did not make any money.[4]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.