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Ingress (video game)

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Ingress
Developer(s)Niantic Labs
Publisher(s)Google
Platform(s)Android, iOS[3]
ReleaseClosed beta
November 15, 2012
Open beta
October 30, 2013
General release
December 15, 2013[1]
iOS Release
July 14, 2014[2]
Genre(s)Augmented Reality, MMOG

Ingress is an augmented reality massively multiplayer online role playing GPS-dependent game[4] created by Niantic Labs, a startup within Google. The game was originally exclusively for Android devices,[5] and was made available for Apple's iOS on July 14, 2014.[2] The game has a complex science fiction back story with a continuous open narrative.[6][7]

The gameplay consists of establishing "portals" at places of cultural significance, such as public art, landmarks, monuments, etc., and linking them to create virtual triangular "control fields" over geographical areas. Progress in the game is measured by the number of "mind units" (MUs) captured via such control fields, i.e. people nominally controlled by each faction (as illustrated on the Intel Map).[8][9] The necessary links between portals may range from meters to kilometers or hundreds of kilometers in operations of considerable logistical complexity.[10] International links and fields are not uncommon, as Ingress has attracted an enthusiastic following in cities worldwide[11] amongst both young and old,[12] to the extent that the gameplay is itself a lifestyle for some, including tattoos.[1]

Setting

The game makers' framing device for the game is as follows: Alongside the discovery of the Higgs Boson by the physicists at CERN in 2012, it has also been discovered that the Earth has been seeded with “Exotic Matter,” or XM. This substance has been associated with the Shapers, a mysterious phenomenon or alien race which is neither described nor seen (and which thus functions as a MacGuffin). The in-universe motivation for the Enlightened faction is their belief that the Shapers are working toward a powerful enlightenment which will uplift all mankind. The Resistance believes that it is protecting humanity from Shaper ingression.[13] The factions have, however, been occasionally observed to ignore the back-story and to co-operate for the sake of real-life gameplay and game balance, for example by establishing neutral zones and rules of engagement.[14]

Gameplay

The Intel Map for Seattle, Washington, on December 2, 2012. Virtual portals (octagons with spokes) and control fields (colored spaces) overlay a map of real geographical and civic space via Google Maps; green represents the Enlightened faction, and blue the Resistance. The space controlled by the two factions is fairly evenly matched here.

A player using the mobile app is presented with a map representing the surrounding area. The map has a black background and is completely unmarked, except for unlabeled buildings and roads which are represented in grey. Visible on the map are portals, Exotic Matter (XM), links, control fields, and items that have been dropped from a player's inventory. Distances from the player to ingame locations are displayed in metric units, to avoid confusion between players.

Players must be physically near objects on the map to interact with them. The mobile client represents the player as a small arrow in the center of a 35-meter circle which represents the perimeter within which direct interaction is possible. The color of the arrow will correspond with the faction of the player, as will the XM storage.

Players are rewarded with AP (Access Points)[15] for actions within the game. Accumulating AP beyond certain thresholds grants you higher access levels, i.e. access to stronger items and capabilities. The access levels are numbered 1 through 16, with 16 being the highest, and the amount of AP required for each level is double the previous level requirement.[15] Niantic Labs introduced missions to the game in September 2014.

Factions

There are two factions to choose from. The Enlightened fight believing their actions will uplift humanity, and bring about the next chapter in human evolution, whereas the Resistance believes in preserving what freedom humanity has left. The Resistance is represented by blue and the Enlightened are represented by green. In some areas, the Resistance are jokingly referred to as "Smurfs". Similarly, the Enlightened are referred to as "Frogs" or "Toads", while the lower-level players are referred to as "Tadpoles". Portals are either grey (neutral), blue (Resistance), or green (Enlightened).[15]

Portals

In the game, Planet Earth has a large number of “portals”, made visible by the "scanner" (the mobile phone game app). They are colored green, blue, or grey, depending on whether they are controlled by the Enlightened, the Resistance, or currently unclaimed, respectively. A portal with no resonators is unclaimed, also called a "ghost" portal. Players acquire game items (resonators, weapons, etc.) by maneuvering themselves, typically by walking or driving, so that portals are within a certain radius of their physical locations and "hacking" them by selecting this option on their scanners. Any player can hack any portal and receive items, subject to limits on frequency.[16] Hacking a portal controlled by the opposing faction also earns the player AP at the risk of being attacked by the portal in the form of losing XM.

To claim a portal for a faction, a player equips, or deploys, at least one resonator on it. If a portal is claimed by the enemy, the player must first neutralize it by destroying the opponents' resonators and mods by firing "weapons" called XMP ("eXotic Matter Pulse") Bursters, the principal means of attacking a portal. In the lore, XM comes in two polarities, and the XM of one faction's polarity annihilates the other's.

A portal may be equipped with up to eight resonators from one faction, determining the level and the color, or faction alignment, of that portal. A portal with no resonators will be grey, requiring players to equip a portal with at least one resonator to claim, or capture, it for his or her faction. Resonators have levels, ranging from L1 to L8. A player can deploy resonators only up to his or her own level, with additional restrictions regarding how many of each level resonator an individual can deploy on a given portal.[17][18] The game mechanics reward teamwork by limiting the number of high-level resonators a single player can deploy; up to eight players working together can create a far higher-level portal than any one player can create individually, and eight players are required for a portal to reach the highest possible level.[19][better source needed] Furthermore, resonators decay spontaneously over time, and must be recharged in order to maintain control of the portal. This can either be done on site, or remotely through the use of a portal key and XM reserves.

A portal may also be equipped with up to four modifications, or "mods". Six types of modification are available: Shields, Force Amplifiers, Link Amplifiers, Multi-hacks, Heat Sinks, and Turrets. These have effects such as making the portal more difficult to attack, increasing the intensity of the portal’s response to attackers, and increasing the yield of hacking the portal.[20] Players are limited to placing no more than two mods per portal.

Portals are typically associated with buildings and landmarks of historic or architectural significance such as sculptures and other public art, libraries, post offices, memorials, places of worship, public transit hubs, parks and other recreational or tourist spaces.[21] Players may submit requests for the creation of new portals,[22] and the number of portals has increased steadily over the lifetime of the game. The density of portals correlates with population density, thus the central areas of cities typically contain the highest concentration of portals.

Two portals that have all eight resonators deployed and are controlled by the same faction can be linked by a player from that faction who stands within range of one and has a portal key, obtained by hacking, for the other. The maximum possible length of a link depends on the average resonator level around the portal – the higher the level, the longer the link that can be created. However, one cannot create a link that crosses a pre-existing link from either faction. Both portals need to be kept at or above a minimum energy level to maintain the link. The opposing faction can destroy the link by attacking one or both portals so that the energy level falls below the critical level.

When three portals are linked in a triangle, they create a control field, claiming the Mind Units (MU) within that field for their faction. Portals within a field cannot originate links, but can be linked from the portals on the perimeter. The opposing faction can destroy a control field by destroying one or more of the links that comprise it.

Anomalies

XM Anomalies are periods of unusually high XM (Exotic Matter) concentration where players from both factions compete to control clusters of portals in order to win points for their team. Anomalies usually occur over the course of several weeks, with different events located in major cities around the world. Anomaly sites are divided into two categories: Primary and Satellite locations. Niantic Labs employees, as well as characters from the Ingress story, often attend events at Primary anomaly locations. More points are awarded to the prevailing faction at Primary Sites than at Satellite sites. The outcome of XM Anomalies often influence future events in the Ingress backstory.

Recursion was the first anomaly series for which players were awarded badges, occurring from February 15, 2014 to March 29, 2014. However, there were anomalies prior to this, such as #13MAGNUS, which started on 12 October 2013 and Operation Cassandra, which took place in August 2013.

Interitus was the second anomaly series for which players were awarded badges that was held in April, May, and June 2014.[23]

Helios was the third anomaly series for which players were awarded badges. The event sequence was held in July, August and September 2014 with a primary event located in Minneapolis.

Darsana was the fourth anomaly series for which players were awarded badges. The anomaly series started on October 18, 2014 and ended on December 13, 2014.

Shōnin is the anomaly series that began on February 21, 2015 with primary sites in Florence and Austin and ended March 28, 2015 with primary sites in Pasadena, Hannover, and Kyoto.

Cast

Reception

A cross-faction portal hunt convenes in Washington, D.C., by the Smithsonian Castle on April 14, 2013.

Ingress was released in closed beta on November 15, 2012,[9][26][27][28] with an accompanying online viral marketing campaign. The latter was noticed as early as November 8, and other, earlier publicity efforts have been noted at events such as San Diego's Comic Con on July 12, 2012.[29] Google employees had been testing the game for at least six months. Ingress has exited beta and is available for download on Google's Play Store and Apple's App Store.[30] According to Alex Dalenberg of American City Business Journals, as of May 2013 there were about 500,000 players globally.[31] In an interview in August 2013 with the fan site Decode Ingress, Niantic Labs founder John Hanke said "There have been over 1M downloads and a large chunk of those are active."[32] Speaking with CNN, he said he didn't expect players to start talking to each other and forming clubs.[33] The game has received local media coverage,[34][35] and some players have attracted the attention of law enforcement, and hence commentary on the interaction of augmented reality games with real life.[36][37][38]

The opposing faction members at MIT arranged a campus-wide truce after the death of Sean Collier, an MIT police officer shot by the suspects in the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing, and placed their two respective portals side-by-side in a virtual cenotaph at the site of his death.[39]

Awards

Ingress won a "special mention" at the 2013 Android Players' Choice Awards.[40]

Similarity to Shadow Cities

The basic idea of Ingress is very similar to the older, now-defunct, augmented reality game, Shadow Cities.[41] Both have two factions which are fighting for the future of the world with smart phones. The games have similar game mechanics and look-and-feel.[42] There are clear differences, however. In the Shadow Cities players are in the virtual world, which is dynamically mapped around them, and can teleport within the virtual world, whereas in Ingress the portals are real world locations that players always have to actually move to in order to play.[43]

Game Population

In 2015 Niantic told Tom's Guide that they had 7 million players. The Top player is Enlightend Agent Morka from Paris, France. Morka has about 200 million AP. [44]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b 172 reacties. "Announcement on Google Plus". Plus.google.com. Retrieved 2014-04-07.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ a b "iTunes official App shop". 2014-07-14. Retrieved 2014-07-14.
  3. ^ "Brandon Badger reported to AllThingsD". Allthingsd.com. 2013-10-12. Retrieved 2014-04-07.
  4. ^ Gregory, Myk (2014-07-22). "Ingress: A Game, Lifestyle and Social Network in One!". When In Manila. Retrieved 2014-08-07.
  5. ^ "Ingress". Niantic Labs. Retrieved November 15, 2012.
  6. ^ "What is this "Niantic Project"? Posting what I find here". - An "in universe" web site by the in-game character Henry Richard Loeb aka P. A. Chapeau (a play on the French for "tin foil hat") - on hiatus as of October 1, 2013
    "Niantic Project". - Continuation after October 1, 2013 by a second in-game character with two pseudonyms: first "X" and later "Verity Seke"
  7. ^ "Ingress Lore".
  8. ^ "Initial Briefing - Ingress help". Niantic Labs. Retrieved June 12, 2013.
  9. ^ a b Gannes, Liz (November 15, 2012). "Google Launches Ingress, a Worldwide Mobile Alternate Reality Game". All Things D. Retrieved November 15, 2012.
  10. ^ "Operation Aurora Australis".
  11. ^ Gannes, Liz (November 15, 2012). "Google Launches Ingress, a Worldwide Mobile Alternate Reality Game". Google Launches Ingress, a Worldwide Mobile Alternate Reality Game - Liz Gannes - Mobile - AllThingsD. AllThingsD. Retrieved 2014-05-18.
  12. ^ Susan Richards (June 1, 2013). "Grandma plays Ingress". Pied Type. Retrieved Aug 27, 2013. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  13. ^ "Faction Choice". Retrieved 7 December 2012.
  14. ^ "Greater Boise Ingress community on Google Plus".
  15. ^ a b c Ingress. "Official Ingress Support's Vocabulary Briefing Glossary". Support.google.com. Retrieved 2014-04-07. Cite error: The named reference "Google & Ingress" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  16. ^ "Acquire Items via Hacking". Ingress Help. Google. Retrieved 25 August 2014.
  17. ^ "Sven's Portal Calculator". Retrieved 7 December 2012.
  18. ^ "Ingress Field Guide's Portal Calculator". Retrieved 7 December 2012.
  19. ^ "Hack portals acquire items not so random". Retrieved May 25, 2013.
  20. ^ "Ingress Agent Field Guide Glossary and Inventory Items". Google. Google. Retrieved 14 July 2014.
  21. ^ Ingress. ""Candidate Portal criteria". Retrieved 16 July 2013". Support.google.com. Retrieved 2014-04-07.
  22. ^ "New Portal Submissions". Retrieved 7 December 2012.
  23. ^ "Interitus".
  24. ^ Katy Townsend at IMDb - see "Other Works" section
  25. ^ Ingress Report at IMDb
  26. ^ Tracey Lien (15 November 2012). "Google launches Ingress, a mobile alternate reality game set in the real world". Polygon.
  27. ^ Elisabeth Cardy (16 November 2012). "Introducing Ingress: The MMO by Google". Massively by Joystiq.
  28. ^ "Ingress Preview, The Sphere of Weirdness explained". IGN Australia.
  29. ^ Andersen, Michael (November 12, 2012). "Google ARG Hints at Niantic Labs Conspiracy". Wired. Retrieved November 15, 2012.
  30. ^ "Ingress: Android-apps on Google Play". Google Play. Retrieved 2012-11-16.
  31. ^ Alex Dalenberg (May 24, 2013). "Ingress, Google's underground game, is being played all around you". Upstart Business Journal. Retrieved May 25, 2013.
  32. ^ Andrea Di Simone (August 19, 2013). "Interview with Niantic's John Hanke". Retrieved August 21, 2013.
  33. ^ Larry Frum (August 26, 2013). "At Google, apps to help discover (and conquer) the world around you". CNN.com. Retrieved August 26, 2013.
  34. ^ : http://www.azcentral.com/video/2645577114001
  35. ^ Idaho Brew Magazine
  36. ^ "Augmented Reality Game Gets Player Arrested the First of Many", Read Write Web, 11 December 2012.
  37. ^ Reddit user "Eheaubaut" (28 Nov 2012). "So I got arrested". Retrieved June 2, 2013. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  38. ^ Susan Richards (June 29, 2013). "Grandma playing Ingress stopped by cops". Pied Type. Retrieved August 27, 2013. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  39. ^ Scott Kirsner (April 24, 2013). "In Google's Ingress augmented reality game, a ceasefire at MIT and a memorial to slain officer Sean Collier". Boston Globe. Retrieved June 2, 2013.
  40. ^ https://play.google.com/store/apps/collection/promotion_300055d_players_choice_ctp?hl=en. {{cite web}}: External link in |website= (help); Missing or empty |title= (help); Missing or empty |url= (help)
  41. ^ http://massively.joystiq.com/2013/09/20/shadow-cities-closing-down-october-7/
  42. ^ Chris Priestman (November 27, 2012). "Google Accused Of "Blatantly" Ripping Off Grey Area Games' Shadow Cities". Indiestatik. Retrieved December 14, 2013.
  43. ^ Glen Tickle (January 15, 2013). "Inside Ingress, Google's Augmented Reality Android Game". Indiestatik. Retrieved December 14, 2013.
  44. ^ Rutherford, Sam. "Meet Endgame: Proving Ground - Google's AR Mobile Game". Tomsguide.com. Tom Guide. Retrieved 18 March 2015.