Infamous Second Son
Infamous Second Son | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Sucker Punch Productions |
Publisher(s) | Sony Computer Entertainment |
Director(s) | Nate Fox |
Producer(s) | Brian Fleming |
Composer(s) | Nathan Johnson[1] |
Series | Infamous |
Platform(s) | PlayStation 4 |
Release | March 21, 2014 |
Genre(s) | Action-adventure |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Infamous Second Son (stylized as inFAMOUS Second Son) is an open world, action-adventure video game for the PlayStation 4. Developed by Sucker Punch Productions and published by Sony Computer Entertainment, it was released on March 21, 2014. Like in previous Infamous games, the player-controlled protagonist possesses superpower abilities that players use in combat. The story follows protagonist Delsin Rowe fighting the Department of United Protection (D.U.P.) in a fictionalized Seattle. Over the course of the game, Delsin acquires new powers and becomes either good or evil based on player-made choices that influence the morality system.
Sucker Punch began planning the game as early as 2010, when they began discussion with Sony to bring the Infamous series onto a new generation of hardware. They provided feedback to Sony on what hardware evolutions they would like to see on the PlayStation 4. Second Son was considered a fresh start for the series because it features a new protagonist. Delsin's superpowers were designed to feel fluid and suited to the open world design. Critical reviews were generally positive, with the combat and visuals widely-praised. The most commonly-voiced criticism centered on the morality system, which some reviewers found dated and binary. Other criticisms focused on the game's repetitive side-quests and general lack of innovation. The game sold over a million copies within nine days, making it the fastest-selling Infamous entry.
Gameplay
In Second Son, players control the main character Delsin Rowe from a third-person perspective and freely roam open world Seattle. Parkour can be used to climb vertical surfaces like high-rise buildings. Delsin is a Conduit, which allows him to use superpower abilities by manipulating materials such as smoke and neon. These materials can be weaponized (such that Delsin can perform melee attacks or fire projectiles from his fingertips) or used to deftly navigate the game world (such as using neon to dash up buildings).[2] Using powers depletes a meter in the head-up display (HUD), which can be replenished by drawing from power sources such as smoke from exploded vehicles.[3] Delsin earns new powers as he progresses through the story, which sees him fight against the Department of Unified Protection (D.U.P.) during missions. Each time Delsin gains a new power set he must destroy mobile D.U.P. command centers to learn the basic abilities that correspond to it. Delsin upgrades and acquires new abilities by spending Blast Shards (experience points) that are scattered throughout Seattle. Players become more powerful in combat by expanding Delsin's suite of abilities.[4]
Players may choose to act in either a good or evil way. Several times throughout the story, Delsin finds himself in a scenario where he must make a good or evil choice, such as whether to encourage Conduit vigilante Abigail "Fetch" Walker to stop slaying drug dealers, or to train her to become a more prolific killer. Player choices influence outcomes in some later missions.[5] In combat, Delsin may use his abilities to incapacitate foes or obliterate them with headshots. He may choose to open fire on innocent civilians. Delsin's choices manifest in a logo displayed on his jacket and the HUD, which features a blue (good) and red (evil) bird. Performing actions that correspond to villainy gradually change the logo such that the red bird dominates the other, and vice versa. This is a visual representation of Delsin's Karma level, that increases as good or evil depending on his choices.[6] Karma also governs Delsin's powers—at higher levels of evil Karma, Delsin can acquire very destructive powers.[7] A continual streak of either good or evil actions fills up a bar in the HUD, which then lets Delsin perform a powerful finishing move called a Karma Bomb.[6]
When not completing story missions, players can explore the city and complete activities such as tagging graffiti spots or assassinating D.U.P. secret agents. The city is split into districts that are all initially controlled by the D.U.P., but Delsin gradually liberates each district by completing activities. When D.U.P. control of a district falls below 30 per cent, Delsin can enter a District Showdown that requires he eliminate a wave of D.U.P. forces, eradicating D.U.P. presence there.[4]
Synopsis
Setting and characters
Second Son takes place in 2016, seven years after the events in New Marais, and the death of hero Conduit Cole MacGrath. Using the Ray Field Inhibitor from the second game, Cole had sacrificed himself—and the lives of hundreds of other Conduit Gene carriers worldwide—in order to stop the Beast and cure humanity of a mysterious plague.[8][9] However, at least 10% of all Conduit Gene carriers survived the RFI wave, whether they knew about their Conduit Gene or not.[9] To protect the U.S. population from any remaining Conduits, now dubbed "Bio-Terrorists" to instill fear in the people, the government sends in the Department of Unified Protection (D.U.P.) to hunt down and capture the Conduits by any means necessary.[10]
The protagonist is Delsin Rowe (voiced by Troy Baker), a graffiti artist and the local delinquent of the Akomish reservation. Delsin has the unique Conduit ability of Power Absorption, allowing him to use other Conduits' powers. His brother, Reggie (Travis Willingham), is the local sheriff, and often arrests Delsin for his acts of vandalism.[11] Both are Akomish Native Americans, whose territory lies at the shore of Salmon Bay, Washington. The antagonist is Brooke Augustine (Christine Dunford), the director of the D.U.P. and a Conduit with power over Concrete. Her actions in the Akomish reservation drive Delsin to travel to Seattle, now under lockdown by D.U.P. forces. Delsin and Reggie encounter three other Conduits: Henry "Hank" Daughtry (David Stanbra), a convict with control over Smoke; Abigail "Fetch" Walker (Laura Bailey), an ex-junkie who uses her Neon powers to hunt down the illegal drug dealers in Seattle; and Eugene Sims (Alex Walsh), a reclusive video gamer who uses his Video (digital materialization) powers to save suspected Conduits from the D.U.P.
Plot
After Reggie catches Delsin spray-painting again, their subsequent argument is interrupted when a military truck carrying three Conduit prisoners crashes on the Akomish reservation.[11] Two of the Conduits escape. Delsin pulls the third, Hank, out of the wreckage, and inadvertently absorbs his smoke powers. Shocked and frightened, Delsin pursues Hank in an effort to figure out what has happened and how to control his powers.[12] However, they are both cornered by Brooke Augustine. She encases Hank in concrete and questions Delsin, suspecting him of hiding something. Delsin can choose to either tell Augustine the truth about his powers or reveal nothing. Regardless, Augustine renders him unconscious before moving on to the other tribe members.[10]
Delsin awakes a week later and discovers that Augustine has tortured the rest of the tribe in an unsuccessful bid to gain information. However, she has left them to gradually die from concrete shards buried into their bodies, including their leader Betty (Karen Austin).[13][14] Reggie (who was spared torture) has learned that the only way to remove the shards is to use Augustine's power on them.[15] Delsin realizes that he can absorb Conduit powers and resolves to go to Seattle to take Augustine's powers and save the tribe.[16] Reggie reluctantly accompanies Delsin to keep an eye on him. They reach Seattle and find that it has been put under strict martial law by the D.U.P. in order to find the other escaped Conduits. With Reggie's help, Delsin battles D.U.P. forces and tracks down core fragments to develop his powers. He eventually encounters the other two escaped Conduits, Fetch and Eugene, and absorbs their powers. After both confrontations, Delsin defends the Conduits from Reggie, who initially views them as "freaks", and can choose to either redeem or corrupt them.[10]
Now possessing three powers, Delsin encounters Hank, who has escaped again. Hank tells Delsin that Fetch and Eugene have been captured by the D.U.P., and are being held on an artificial concrete island in Puget Sound. Hank tells Delsin that if they both attack the island, Augustine will be lured out. Reggie does not trust Hank, and warns Delsin not to trust him either. While attacking the island with Hank, Delsin becomes bound with concrete. Augustine appears and thanks Hank for bringing Delsin to her, revealing Hank to be a traitor. Reggie appears and fires a rocket launcher at Augustine, who disappears, and then guides Delsin to him and frees him of his concrete restraints.[17] While the brothers free Fetch and Eugene, Augustine reappears, encases Reggie's feet in concrete and blasts them almost off the platform. As they dangle above the ocean, Reggie tells his brother that he is proud of him, then lets Delsin's hand go and falls to his death.[18] Distraught and enraged, Delsin climbs back up onto the platform and battles Augustine, destroying the entire island.[10]
Augustine flees back to headquarters. Delsin tracks Hank down to the docks, where he is fleeing from D.U.P. forces. Hank begs for forgiveness, saying that he only worked with Augustine because she threatened to hurt his daughter.[19] Delsin can choose to either kill Hank, or let him escape Seattle with his daughter. Aided by Fetch and Eugene, Delsin rallies an assault on the D.U.P. headquarters. After breaking through the building's defenses, Delsin confronts Augustine and reveals to her that he has figured out she staged the Conduit escape at Akomish to instill fear in the population and give the D.U.P. a reason to continue their regime. Augustine lets Delsin absorb her powers, and tells him that she wants to save the Conduits by imprisoning and protecting them from the population.[20] Delsin battles and eventually defeats Augustine with his new concrete powers.[21]
If Delsin has good Karma, he spares Augustine and exposes her crimes to the world. She is arrested and the D.U.P. disbands.[22] Delsin, Fetch and Eugene convince the humans that they can peacefully coexist with the Conduits. All of the imprisoned Conduits are freed. Delsin returns to the reservation and heals the tribe members,[23] then paints a mural dedicated to Reggie.[24]
If Delsin has evil Karma, he kills Augustine and, together with Fetch and Eugene, takes control of Seattle. He releases all of the imprisoned Conduits and absorbs their powers. Upon returning to the reservation, Delsin is greeted by a wheelchair-bound Betty who banishes him from the tribe for his actions in Seattle. Shocked and angered, Delsin destroys the entire reservation.[25]
Development
Origins and PlayStation 4
Sucker Punch Productions began to develop Second Son while the PlayStation 4 was still being designed.[26] Having finished work on Infamous: Festival of Blood, they began to plan a new entry in the Infamous series[27] under the working title Infamous 3.[28] As early as 2010, they discussed with Sony their desire to bring Infamous to a new PlayStation platform. [27] Sucker Punch were in close connection with the PS4's lead system architect Mark Cerny, who visited the studio several times. They gave Cerny feedback about how much power a new PlayStation system would require to render their ideal open world, how fast it would be capable of doing so and to what degree of texture detail. "We had some experience there that was useful for that team when they were planning some aspects of the hardware design", producer Brian Fleming explained. He found that during the PS4's development, there was a great level of interactivity between the system's designers and game developers such as Sucker Punch.[27]
Sucker Punch made suggested improvements they would like to see for the DualShock 4 gamepad. Second Son's designer Jaime Griesemer traveled to Sony's headquarters in Japan to discuss such improvements. The developers found they were able to adopt the Dualshock 4's touchpad into Second Son's gameplay (for example, when Delsin approaches and uses a fingerprint scanner, players emulate the action on the touchpad instead of pushing the triangle button).[27]
The game was envisioned to take full advantage of the hardware, without the imposition of porting to older platforms like the PlayStation 3. The hardware allowed developers to improve the particle system (such that Delsin's face lights up while drawing neon power from billboards, or that neon light particles reflect in pools of water)[26] and add detailed reflections to the game world.[29] The increased memory bandwidth let the team render characters with higher fidelity.[27] They found the PS4's simplified architecture so easy to work with that they were able to reach very high graphical quality even though the hardware was new.[30]
Over 110 developers worked on the game, a number that director Nate Fox considered small. He felt that working with a small team necessitated having a defined vision for the game from the outset, "to answer those first questions about what you want your game to be". Sometimes, ideas came about during development that would have to be thrown out for not fitting with the game's original vision. "We kill our darlings at Sucker Punch. It's not easy; it's necessary", Fox explained.[30] Second Son displays a native resolution of 1080p at 30 frames per second.[31]
Design
As Sucker Punch are primarily based in Seattle, they elected to set Second Son there as they felt confident that they could do Seattle justice.[32] They conducted fieldwork in Seattle's nearby forests with audio and video equipment, which was used to reproduce local flora and the chirping sounds of local American robins. Seattle landmarks such as Pioneer Square, the Space Needle and Elephant Car Washes feature in the game. The developers licensed logos and signs from local businesses. Griesemer called the game world an "abstraction" of Seattle rather than a re-creation, because its layout did not suit Second Son's gameplay, requiring the team to make necessary appropriations. The designers used graphic sliders in the game engine to determine the amount of water covering the streets. Like Seattle, rain is frequent in the game.[28] The lighting effects (such as neon light from Delsin's powers) coupled with reflections help bring color into Seatle's dark and rainy atmosphere.[26] Because of the move to the PS4, Sucker Punch were able to render more open world than what was possible in previous Infamous games. "You get a better feel of the city when you can see more of it", said Griesemer.[27]
After deciding on Seattle for the setting, the developers began to think about the superpowers that Delsin would possess. They added neon lighting to the city to amplify the "beautiful reflective streets", and subsequently decided to make neon a source of power for Delsin because of its prevalence.[28] Animation director Billy Harper considered Delsin's smoke powers challenging to design, as the team wanted to make powers feel more fluid than in previous Infamous games. They removed Cole's "contorted hand poses" to improve the connection between Delsin and his powers. Fox felt that smoke helps Delsin deftly navigate the game world by letting him zip up buildings and through enemies.[33] Greisemer (who previously worked with Bungie on the Halo series)[34] wanted to bring the fluidity of first-person shooters to Second Son's combat. The team reviewed the control scheme of previous Infamous games and "removed some of the complexity that was preventing people from interacting with the game".[33]
Greisemer said that a recurring theme throughout Infamous games that they wanted to continue with Second Son was the idea of "modern elemental powers", variations on commonplace powers drawn from the game world.[28] Producer Brian Fleming found that the graphical effects helped to inform players of the amount of power Delsin possesses. "This is a game about super powers, so for us, the way the effects look tells you a lot about how you're playing the game", he explained.[29] Fox considered that the game world's resemblance to Seattle helped the superpower elements feel authentic.[28] "Because we have that sweet foundation of plausibility, you buy into the super-powered element", he explained.[32]
Character development
Second Son's premise is built from the ending of Infamous 2 that sees protagonist Cole MacGrath sacrifice himself to save humanity. They looked at Trophy data and found the majority (78%)[33] of Infamous 2 players chose this ending, and concurred with the popular choice. This allowed them to create the new protagonist, Delsin, from scratch.[32] "Moving forward onto [Second Son], we said 'Alright, Cole's dead. People have voted for this. Let's make a new hero'", Fox explained.[33] Griesemer felt that taking the Infamous series to the PS4 signified a new era, and that departing from the story of previous games would help them reach new audiences. "We needed a new entry point, and Delsin was the first step for that", he explained. The idea to move away from Cole's story came about during pre-production staff meetings, and was confirmed after discussions both internally and with Sony Computer Entertainment. Griesemer described the contemporaneous sentiment as "It's going to be new hardware, a new platform and we're going to have a new audience". Delsin's Native American heritage came from the game's setting in the Pacific Northwest, which features a large Native American population.[28] Fox considered Delsin "flawed in a way I think a lot of us can relate to", trying to live up to his successful brother Reggie.[32] He called the game's story a "hero's journey".[28]
Digital Domain were brought on board for the motion capture work. Fox helped direct the actors' performances, but found that they did not need much guidance for their roles. "You need to let them understand what you need from a scene, but the actors are so much better equipped to deliver that than me", he explained.[30] Fleming considered that using motion capture added authenticity to the characters. "The ability to capture [Delsin's] facial reaction when he's like 'Oh, shit', but doesn't say 'Oh shit'—that's a big deal", he explained.[29] Most of the NPCs that inhabit the open world were motion captured. The developers contacted casting agencies, and asked their friends and families if they would like to appear as extras in the game. Over 75 people were scanned in a three-day period. They were seated in chairs and told not to move or smile, and a high-definition digital camera captured a 3D model of their faces. The camera sent out strobe light patterns to capture the volume and shape of each face. A 360-degree setup captured the actors' moving bodies, but mannequins were also used to help capture different clothing styles. Data collected from the cameras was used by the designers to render digital models, each composed of roughly 1.4 million polygons—any blank spots on the models would be digitally filled in by the designers. To render the models in the game, the data would be compressed by reducing the polygon count.[35]
Marketing and release
On February 20, 2013, Sony held a conference in New York that announced the PS4.[36] Fox appeared on-stage during the conference and recounted participating in an anti-globalization protest in Seattle in 1999.[27] He then announced Second Son, and a debut trailer was shown that introduced the game's premise and lead character.[37] The game was demoed behind closed doors at E3 2013,[38] and its March 21, 2014, North American release date was confirmed during a PS4 launch event on November 14, 2013.[39] By February 25, 2014, Second Son went gold (finished development).[40]
On March 8, it was announced that Second Son's pre-order sales had surpassed those of The Last of Us in the United Kingdom.[41] Two special edition versions of the game were produced; pre-ordered and first-run copies of the game received the Limited Edition, which includes the Cole's Legacy mission pack that explain story events between Infamous 2 and Second Son. The Collector's Edition includes a unique box cover, a replica of Delsin's beanie, eight pins from his vest, an exclusive in-game vest, and a D.U.P.-themed patch.[42] All pre-ordered copies of the game included four in-game vests for Delsin.[43]
Paper Trail is a free downloadable content (DLC) with alternate reality game features. The story is split into six parts, with the first being available after reaching a certain point in the main story.[44] Each subsequent part was made available each Friday from March 28, 2014, concluding with the release of the final part on April 25, 2014. At E3 2014, the DLC package Infamous: First Light was announced with a scheduled August 2014 release. In First Light, players will control Fetch. It is a stand-alone expansion, such that Second Son is not required, but ownership of the main game grants players access to exclusive content.[45]
Reception
Aggregator | Score |
---|---|
GameRankings | 81% (61 reviews)[46] |
Metacritic | 80/100 (89 reviews)[47] |
Publication | Score |
---|---|
Destructoid | 9.5/10[48] |
Edge | 7/10[49] |
GameSpot | 8/10[50] |
IGN | 8.7/10[4] |
Joystiq | [51] |
Polygon | 8.5/10[52] |
The game received generally positive reviews with a normalized rating of 80 out of 100 based on 89 reviews on Metacritic.[47] GameRankings assigned a rating of 81% based on 61 reviews.[46] The game sold over one million copies within nine days of its release, making it the fastest-selling installment in the series.[53]
Vince Ingenito of IGN recalled being left "staring slack-jawed" at the visuals, and called the open world "beautifully and diversely realized" with impressive lighting effects.[4] Tom Mc Shea of GameSpot called the visuals "incredible".[50] Oli Welsh of Eurogamer praised Seattle's art direction, and found the draw distances and frame rate consistent.[54] David Meikleham of PlayStation Official Magazine (OPM) was very impressed with the graphics and 1080p definition, but cited occasional frame rate dips during intense combat. He enjoyed playing in Seattle and using his powers to level the destructible environments.[55] Tamoor Hussain of Computer and Video Games (CVG) praised graphical details like the particle and lighting systems. "[The game is] colorful, rich in detail and has some of the best effects we've seen on console", he wrote.[56]
GameSpot's Mc Shea considered the combat well-balanced between Infamous's slower pace and Infamous 2's frenetic action, and enjoyed Delsin's agility and power.[50] Chris Carter of Destructoid considered the combat's simplicity its strength, finding Delsin easy to control and navigate the world.[48] Edge were underwhelmed with the game's opening because of its "skittish" parkour, but noted that once Delsin gained powers and reached Seattle, the game became very fun. They felt that enemies were clever enough to make combat a fun challenge, and called the main missions "for the most part well-designed and generously-proportioned".[49] IGN's Ingenito enjoyed using Delsin's powers in combat, and called each set "strong enough to hang an entire game on". He found upgrading Delsin's powers helped keep the combat fresh and made for good replay value.[4] Philip Kollar of Polygon favored using neon power, but praised the balance and variety between all of them. He called the combat "a hell of a lot of fun".[52] Eurogamer's Welsh found the combat imperfect yet fun, but did not think that upgrading Delsin's skills made enough of a difference to his power.[54]
Destructoid's Carter thought that Delsin was a more interesting protagonist than "wooden" Cole, which helped his investment into the story.[48] IGN's Ingenito thought Delsin was an interesting lead character, especially because of the chemistry with Reggie. He found Troy Baker's performance of Delsin "[imbued] with a charm and youthful abandon that keeps it from feeling tropey [sic] or overwrought". However, he found supporting characters like Fetch underdeveloped and the narrative too straightforward.[4] Although calling the characters clichéd, Edge felt that they were written and acted well.[49] GameSpot's Mc Shea called Delsin annoying and immature, and found the gameplay more interesting than the "tired" story.[50] Eurogamer's Welsh considered the plot driven by "inconsequential MacGuffins" and thought the ending rushed, but praised the story for not stretching on too long.[54] Polygon's Kollar felt that the story did not explore its themes of surveillance and security-over-freedom well enough, such that its impact was diminished. He was overall disappointed with the narrative, despite finding the main characters written better than in previous Infamous games.[52] OPM's Meikleham was put off by Delsin's arrogance and was underwhelmed with the story, but he was impressed by the quality of the motion capture performances.[55]
Edge and Eurogamer's Welsh faulted the morality system because they did not think it had enough influence on the story.[49][54] IGN's Ingenito called it "woefully outdated", and felt that making evil choices severely jarred with Delsin's character. He found the system redundant because Delsin became more powerful when he strictly adhered to either a good or evil play-style, rather than crossing in-between.[4] GameSpot's Mc Shea felt that the morality system was too binary because there was no "moral gray area" between playing good and evil.[50] Polygon's Kollar reflected Mc Shea's opinion that the morality choices were too binary, and had difficulty connecting to his choices because they were too polarized between good and evil.[52] OPM's Meikleham felt that the morality system had "little to no impact on gameplay".[55] Danny Cowan of Joystiq thought that the morality system was well-balanced, with equal incentive and drawback tied to Delsin's choices.[51]
GameSpot's Mc Shea found Second Son's open world beholden to a dated formula. He described Seattle as "a playground for you to go nuts in" instead of "a living, breathing world", with the Seattleites existing only as fodder for players.[50] CVG's Hussain called Seattle "hauntingly empty", with the sparsely-distributed NPCs behaving inanimately. He felt that the open world's lifelessness was the game's biggest detractor, and he drew unfavorable comparison with Grand Theft Auto V, Sleeping Dogs and Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag, which he felt featured better open worlds.[56] Eurogamer's Welsh felt that Second Son did not innovate the open world genre as well as it could have because it relied too heavily on many of the genre's tropes.[54] Polygon's Kollar felt that there was not enough variation in the missions and activities, as "virtually all culminate in the goal of beating up more soldiers or thugs".[52] Edge found the amount of content in the game thin, finding little merit in additional playthroughs because of the repetitive side-missions. "Approach [Second Son] as an action game that just happens to be set in a nonlinear environment and it makes more sense", they wrote.[49] Destructoid's Carter found the amount of content ample, and enjoyed liberating the city and collection Blast Shards.[48]
References
- ^ 2014-03-10, inFAMOUS: Second Son’s Soundtrack May Hint at Unannounced Powers; Full Track List Available, DualShockers
- ^ Futter, Mike (November 12, 2013). "Our First Hands On With Infamous: Second Son". Game Informer. Retrieved March 29, 2014.
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(help) - ^ Funk, John (August 1, 2013). "Infamous: Second Son dev diary talks art, animation and smoke". Polygon. Vox Media. Retrieved May 29, 2014.
- ^ a b c d e f g Ingenito, Vince (March 20, 2014). "Infamous: Second Son Review". IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved March 20, 2014.
- ^ Ingenito, Vince (February 12, 2014). "Infamous: Second Son Dials Up the Action and the Drama". IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved May 29, 2014.
- ^ a b McWhertor, Michael (February 12, 2014). "Infamous: Second Son puts its karmic choices on display, but still has some secrets". Polygon. Vox Media. Retrieved May 29, 2014.
- ^ Sliva, Marty (January 8, 2014). "CES: Infamous: Second Son's Beauty Is in Its Details". IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved May 29, 2014.
- ^ Sucker Punch Productions (June 7, 2011). Infamous 2 (PlayStation 3). Sony Computer Entertainment. Scene: Good Ending.
Zeke Dunbar (narration): We all held our breath and watched, as one by one of them monsters started to drop. Yeah, that RFI worked, all right. News said folks overseas were keeling over. Poor bastards must'a been Conduits and didn't even know it. But it was worth it, 'cause... for the thousands that died, millions were gonna live. The Plague? Man, it was just gone. I could already hear people startin' to party, just celebratin' bein' alive. I was afraid my friend would go down as an unsung hero. But, here in New Marais, they knew what he had done. Who woulda thought that the "Demon of Empire City", would become The Patron Saint of New Marais? [...] I wanted to say goodbye to him alone. He had been my best friend, and, now he was gone. Sometimes, I hear folks talkin' 'bout Conduits and humans like they're totally different. That's bullshit. Cause there ain't nobody with more humanity than Cole MacGrath. I love you, brother. And I'm sure gonna miss ya.
- ^ a b http://conduitrightsleague.com/quiz?locale=en "Approximately 90% of conduits all over the world died when The Beast was destroyed in New Marais. The deaths were so widespread that conduits were believed to have experienced an extinction event. But in the following months it became evident that some conduits managed to survive—even some who were present at New Marais at the time of The Beast’s destruction. To this day, we do not know why some perished and others survived, but we suspect some kind of Ray Field Radiation event occurred."
- ^ a b c d Sucker Punch Productions (March 21, 2014). Infamous Second Son (PlayStation 4). Sony Computer Entertainment.
- ^ a b Sucker Punch Productions (March 21, 2014). Infamous Second Son (PlayStation 4). Sony Computer Entertainment.
Reggie: Do you know how embarrassing it is for me to keep arresting my own brother, over and over and over again? / Delsin: Maybe you should stop arresting your brother, over and over and over again - / Reggie: You think this is a joke?! / Delsin: No, I don't think it's a joke - / Reggie: Is this how you wanna leave your mark on the world, huh? You think this would make our parents proud? Misdemeanor vandalism? [...] / Delsin: Reggie— [stops] / Reggie: [rounding on him] What?! / Delsin: [points to an incoming—] Truck.
- ^ Sucker Punch Productions (March 21, 2014). Infamous Second Son (PlayStation 4). Sony Computer Entertainment.
Hank: [when Delsin busts through the door to reach him and Betty] I was jus' tryin' to create a diversion; I didn' know anybody was in here— / Delsin: [holds up his hand to show Hank his new power; angry] You did this to me! / Hank: [shocked] You're a Conduit?! / Delsin: [to Betty, who is also shocked] Betty—I'll explain later, but you gotta get out of here, now. / Hank: Good, I'm gone. / Delsin: Not until you fix this first!
- ^ Sucker Punch Productions (March 21, 2014). Infamous Second Son (PlayStation 4). Sony Computer Entertainment. Level/area: Longhouse.
Delsin: [coming across x-ray images of people with shards of concrete buried into them] How could anyone do this? How many people did she hurt? ...And no one could stop her?
- ^ Sucker Punch Productions (March 21, 2014). Infamous Second Son (PlayStation 4). Sony Computer Entertainment. Level/area: Longhouse.
Betty: [Did] you think I was gonna rat you out to that ornery old trot? ... We're Akomish. We protect our own. No one here blames you for what happened. / Delsin: Yeah. / Betty: Neither should you. [...] / Delsin: I'll fix this.
- ^ Sucker Punch Productions (March 21, 2014). Infamous Second Son (PlayStation 4). Sony Computer Entertainment. Level/area: Longhouse.
Reggie: "Recovery"? Hey Delsin, these people aren't gettin' any better. They're dyin', man. / Delsin: You don't know that. / Reggie: No, but the doctors who came through here while you were out—they do. And they said that... They said the only way those shards are coming out is the exact same way they went in.
- ^ Sucker Punch Productions (March 21, 2014). Infamous Second Son (PlayStation 4). Sony Computer Entertainment. Level/area: Longhouse.
Delsin: Reggie. I did this. And I gotta fix it.
- ^ Sucker Punch Productions (March 21, 2014). Infamous Second Son (PlayStation 4). Sony Computer Entertainment. Level/area: "Concrete Island".
- ^ Sucker Punch Productions (March 21, 2014). Infamous Second Son (PlayStation 4). Sony Computer Entertainment. Level/area: "Concrete Island".
Reggie: Delsin, Delsin - look at me. You gotta let me go. / Delsin: No, I can do this! I can do this, I can do this! / Reggie: Listen, we can't let this stuff get to you, too! ...Damn it, I am so proud of you. / Delsin: No. / Reggie: Always have been. / Delsin: No. Reggie, don't - / Reggie: I love you, bro. [lets go] / Delsin: NOOOOOOOOOO!
- ^ Sucker Punch Productions (March 21, 2014). Infamous Second Son (PlayStation 4). Sony Computer Entertainment.
Delsin: You son of a bitch... She killed Reggie! / Hank: I-I didn't know! I swear to god! / Delsin: You "didn't know"? You set us up! [...] / Hank: She's got a sadistic streak a mile wide, but I never [heard] of her actually killing a Conduit! / Delsin: [still angry about who she did kill] My brother would still be alive if it wasn't for you! / Hank: ...She had my daughter.
- ^ Sucker Punch Productions (March 21, 2014). Infamous Second Son (PlayStation 4). Sony Computer Entertainment.
Augustine: [when Delsin arrives] Oh, good. You're here. I've been watching you, Delsin Rowe. Testing you, while you assembled your little bag of tricks. Very impressive. / Delsin: Yeah? I know all about what you did, too. Using Hank to set up that crash, making Eugene and Fetch look like monsters just so you could look like the hero! / Augustine: Someone has to protect the Conduits. / Delsin: "Protect"? / Augustine: In the seven years since my D.U.P. took over Conduit oversight from the military, not a single one of "our kind" has been killed. / Delsin: No, of course not. 'Cause you hunt them down and lock 'em up. / Augustine: Yes. In Curdun Cay. Protected, from the mobs that want to kill Conduits.
- ^ Sucker Punch Productions (March 21, 2014). Infamous Second Son (PlayStation 4). Sony Computer Entertainment.
Delsin: [as Augustine becomes trapped in her own power; quoting her] Yeah. I'm told that hurts.
- ^ Sucker Punch Productions (March 21, 2014). Infamous Second Son (PlayStation 4). Sony Computer Entertainment. Scene: Good Ending.
Delsin (narrative): When the dust finally settled, all you could see of Augustine were her eyes peering out [of] that concrete shell. The rage that had fill the moments earlier was now replaced by fear. ... We dismantled the fortress she had built, the army she had raised, the future she had planned. The [whole] world was about to know that she had failed. Taken down by a gamer, a junkie, and a small-town delinquent. The crowds cheered as Augustine was hauled away. Before this, no one would've imagined that humans and Conduits could coexist, and now I was the guy kickin' off the Second Age. Oh, and all those Conduits [who were imprisoned] in Curdun Cay? They were soon to be free once again. To live their own lives, to choose their own futures. As for me... I'd gotten what I came for. And now... Now I had a promise to keep.
- ^ Sucker Punch Productions (March 21, 2014). Infamous Second Son (PlayStation 4). Sony Computer Entertainment. Scene: Good Ending.
Betty: You saved me, Delsin Rowe. / Delsin: Hey, we're Akomish. We take care of our own, right? / Betty: ...Where's Reggie? / Delsin: [pausing to find the right words] Reggie, uh... [...] Reggie saved me.
- ^ Sucker Punch Productions (March 21, 2014). Infamous Second Son (PlayStation 4). Sony Computer Entertainment. Scene: Good Ending.
Delsin: I love you, brother. ...And I'm sure gonna miss you.
- ^ Sucker Punch Productions (March 21, 2014). Infamous Second Son (PlayStation 4). Sony Computer Entertainment. Scene: Evil Ending.
- ^ a b c Kuchera, Ben (February 12, 2014). "Infamous: Second Son on the PlayStation 4 has the perfect runway for success". Polygon. Vox Media. Retrieved May 28, 2014.
- ^ a b c d e f g Hanson, Ben (May 13, 2013). "What The PlayStation 4 Means For Infamous Second Son". Game Informer. Retrieved June 5, 2014.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - ^ a b c d e f g McWhertor, Michael (September 25, 2013). "Under the hood of Infamous: Second Son's hyper-real Seattle". Polygon. Vox Media. Retrieved June 2, 2014.
- ^ a b c McWhertor, Michael (November 11, 2013). "Why next-gen graphics matter for Infamous: Second Son". Polygon. Vox Media. Retrieved May 30, 2014.
- ^ a b c Freeman, Will (April 16, 2014). "Realising InFamous: Second Son's next-gen vision". Develop. Intent Media. Retrieved May 28, 2014.
- ^ Inglis, Blair (March 11, 2014). "inFamous Second Son's Director Explains Why The Game Runs At 30fps". TheSixthAxis. Oscar Mike Media. Retrieved May 30, 2014.
- ^ a b c d Matulef, Jeffrey (June 19, 2013). "Super-powered in Seattle: inFamous Second Son preview". Eurogamer. Gamer Network. Retrieved May 30, 2014.
- ^ a b c d Hanson, Ben (May 8, 2013). "A New Beginning: Designing Infamous Second Son". Game Informer. Retrieved June 4, 2014.
{{cite web}}
: Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|publisher=
(help) - ^ Holzworth, Chris (March 18, 2014). "InFamous: Second Son lead designer Jaime Griesemer confirms Sucker Punch departure". Electronic Gaming Monthly. EGM Media, LLC. Retrieved June 4, 2014.
- ^ Reeves, Ben (May 24, 2013). "How Sucker Punch Photocopies Pedestrians For Infamous Second Son". Game Informer. Retrieved June 26, 2014.
{{cite web}}
: Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|publisher=
(help) - ^ Goldfarb, Andrew (February 20, 2013). "PlayStation 4 Revealed". IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved February 20, 2013.
- ^ Welsh, Oli (February 21, 2013). "Sucker Punch announces inFamous: Second Son for PS4". Eurogamer. Gamer Network. Retrieved March 3, 2013.
- ^ Moriarty, Colin (June 11, 2013). "E3 2013: Infamous: Second Son's Next-Gen Open World". IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved June 23, 2014.
- ^ Lien, Tracey (November 14, 2013). "Infamous: Second Son to launch on March 21, 2014". Polygon. Vox Media. Retrieved June 23, 2014.
- ^ Moriarty, Colin (February 25, 2014). "Infamous: Second Son is Officially Finished". IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved February 25, 2014.
- ^ Maiberg, Emmanuel (March 8, 2014). "Infamous: Second Son preorders beating The Last of Us". Gamespot. CBS Interactive. Retrieved March 8, 2014.
- ^ Sarkar, Samit (October 17, 2013). "Infamous: Second Son available in Limited and Collector's editions". Polygon. Vox Media. Retrieved June 23, 2014.
- ^ McElroy, Griffin (September 9, 2013). "Infamous: Second Son pre-order includes exclusive in-game vests". Polygon. Vox Media. Retrieved June 23, 2014.
- ^ Tach, Dave (March 21, 2014). "Infamous: Second Son's Paper Trail expansion out now, delivers six weeks of free content". Polygon. Vox Media. Retrieved June 23, 2014.
- ^ Karmali, Luke (June 9, 2014). "E3 2014: Fetch Playable in Infamous: Second Son DLC". IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved June 12, 2014.
- ^ a b "InFamous Second Son for PlayStation 4". GameRankings. CBS Interactive. Retrieved March 20, 2014.
- ^ a b "InFamous Second Son for PlayStation 4 Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved May 31, 2014.
- ^ a b c d Carter, Chris (March 20, 2014). "Review: InFamous: Second Son". Destructoid. Retrieved March 20, 2014.
- ^ a b c d e Staff (March 20, 2014). "Infamous: Second Son Review". Edge. Future plc. Retrieved March 20, 2014.
- ^ a b c d e f Mc Shea, Tom (March 20, 2014). "inFAMOUS: Second Son Review". Gamespot. CBS Interactive. Retrieved March 20, 2014.
- ^ a b Cowan, Danny (March 20, 2014). "Infamous: Second Son review: Thank you for smoking". Joystiq. AOL. Retrieved March 20, 2014.
- ^ a b c d e Kollar, Philip (March 20, 2014). "Infamous: Second Son review: drain you". Polygon. Vox Media. Retrieved March 20, 2014.
- ^ Reilly, Luke (April 9, 2014). "Infamous: Second Son Sold Over 1 Million Copies in Nine Days". IGN. Ziff Davis. Retrieved April 13, 2014.
- ^ a b c d e Welsh, Oli (March 20, 2014). "inFamous: Second Son review". Eurogamer. Gamer Network. Retrieved March 20, 2014.
- ^ a b c Meikleham, David (March 20, 2014). "inFamous Second Son PS4 review – Superhero sandbox leaves you sleepless in Seattle". Official PlayStation Magazine. Retrieved March 20, 2014.
- ^ a b Hussain, Tamoor. "InFamous Second Son Review". Computer and Video Games.
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