Tech News on G4BioShock an art deco punk atmospheric triumphNov 19, 2008By Adam Swimmer - G4 Canada |
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If you're a fan of shooters but have got tired of killing terrorists, monsters and members of the Axis of Evil, BioShock might be a nice change for you.
As Jack, you explore the city and try to find a way to stop Andrew Ryan and his creations. In addition to the splicers, creatures called Big Daddies wander around the city. Genetically enhanced beings in antique diving suits with drill-bits and guns for hands, Big Daddies are often seen offering protection to Little Sisters, who are little girls whose genetic makeup were altered. The splicers ttack Big Daddies as they want to drain these Little Sisters of their life force and harvest their ADAM, a mutagen the splicers can use to enhance their own genetic makeup. Big Daddies generally leave you alone unless you attack them first. But if you kill them, you can also harvest these Little Sisters and use the ADAM you receive to alter your genes and give you special abilities at a machine called the Gatherer's Garden. You can procure a variety of enhancements here, from simply increasing your maximum health, to adding “active plasmids” that give you the ability to electrify things, set them on fire, freeze them etc.
Other vending machines in the game will offer you such things as health, weapons and EVE hypos which you can use to recharge your plasmids. In case you missed all of the religious references so far, Ryan was trying to create a new Eden. His Gatherer's Garden offers up genetic manipulation using a piece of ADAM while EVE is needed to maintain it. And the city is called Rapture, which of course, is when God judges the world and brings all the truly worthy up to heaven but people like Kirk Cameron wonder why there were left behind. Granted, the religious significance here is more to show the classic insanity of a mad scientist playing God than actually alluding to God Himself. Still, ADAM and EVE seemed to have destroyed the new Eden as they have driven the inhabitants crazy.
But when you take that and the strange narrative away, it's not much more than your garden variety first-person shooter. Despite giving the impression there may be some puzzle-solving involved in the gameplay, the only puzzles to solve are when you try to hack machines. You can reduce the cost of items in vending machines, reprogram security bots and gun turrets, crack safes etc. To successfully hack something, you have to complete the path from one piece of pipe to another using pieces you uncover from the screen before the flow of onrushing water spills out in what is an homage/rip-off of the old computer game Pipe Dream. If you fail to complete the pipework in time, you electrocute yourself and lose health. But you can usually buyout the hack with enough money or use an auto-hacking tool if you have one instead.
Then again, it's kind of fun acting like a monster in a horror movie as I would interrupt splicers in mid conversation and they would go all out, shooting me with machine guns and the like. Then I'd casually walk over to them and bash their heads in with my trusty wrench. Betcha Solid Snake and Sam Fisher couldn't do that. BioShock |
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G4 Canada (formerly TechTV Canada) launched in September 2001. G4 is the one and only television station that is plugged into every dimension of games, gear, gadgets and gigabytes. Owned Rogers Media Inc., the channel airs more than 24 original series. G4 is available on digital cable and satellite. For more information, see www.g4tv.ca.
