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The Drowning (video game)

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The Drowning
Developer(s)Scattered Entertainment
Publisher(s)DeNA/Mobage
EngineUnity
Platform(s)iOS
Release
Genre(s)First-person shooter
Mode(s)Single-player

The Drowning is a 2013 first-person shooter video game developed by Swedish studio Scattered Entertainment and published by DeNA/Mobage for iOS. Version 1.0 of the game soft launched in the Australasia region on April 11, 2013.[citation needed] A more complete version of the game (Version 1.11) was released internationally on August 3.[1] The game is available under the freemium business model. An Android release was released in 2014.[2] The game's main selling points are its uniquely adapted touchscreen-specific control scheme and "console quality" graphics. Although the graphics were generally praised by critics, the game received mixed to negative reviews, with much criticism aimed at the in-app purchase system and repetitive gameplay.

Gameplay

The game offers two methods of control. The first, and the one upon which the game was primarily marketed,[citation needed] is a system developed specifically for the game and uniquely adapted for touchscreen devices. To shoot, the player taps the screen with two fingers and the player character fires at the middle point between the two taps.[3][4][5] To zoom, the player pinches and expands their fingers on the screen.[5] To move, the player taps on the screen where they want to go and the character automatically moves around obstacles until he reaches the designated spot.[4] To strafe, the player swipes left or right on the screen using two fingers.[4] To look around, the player swipes in any direction with one finger, although there is also a shortcut button for instant 180 degree turns.[4] To switch weapons, the player taps on the character's weapon. A more traditional touchscreen first-person shooter setup is also available, with two virtual joysticks, one for moving, one for shooting.[6]

Each level in the game features two types of play mode; attack and defend.[4] Game progression is based upon a crafting system, which also offers upgrades for the character's weapons.[3] As the game advances, certain levels can only be played if the player has crafted the correct item. For example, to craft the car, which is necessary to get to the third section of the game, the player needs a lug nut, which is only found in "The Shore" level. However, "The Shore" can only be played after the player has crafted a weapon capable of zooming. Such a weapon can only be crafted after the player has collected necessary components, which are randomly awarded on various other levels. The items necessary to upgrade and craft new items are randomly awarded to the player at the end of each level, based upon the number of stars they have achieved. Operating on a five star scale, scoring one to three stars results in "common" items, while scoring four or five stars results in a "rare or better" item.[4][7]

Pictured is the player character fighting an enemy in the game's post-apocalyptic world.

The game uses multiple currencies. Energy (in the form of "Gas cans") is necessary to play the game. Each time the player plays a level, their gas total drops by one. When there is no gas left, the player can no longer play, and can either buy more gas using Gold or must wait until their supply has automatically replenished.[3] "Black" is necessary for crafting new items and upgrading weapons, and is awarded at the end of each level. If the player does not have enough Black to craft an item necessary for advancing the story, they must play previous levels, or purchase Black using Gold.[1] "Flares" can be used at the end of each level to raise the player's score by one star. Flares can be randomly awarded during the game or purchased using Gold. "Silver" is necessary to activate "Charlotte's Bounty", which randomly awards a single prize in the form of an item, a weapon, a gas can, a flare or more silver. Silver is awarded randomly at the end of a level. "Gold" can be used to purchase any of the other currencies, and is only available using real-world money.[6]

Plot

The game is set in 2021. Ten years prior to the opening of the game, 3,000 blackbirds fell out of the sky in Beebe, Arkansas. As scientists proved at a loss to explain how or why the birds had died, similar phenomenon began to occur all over the world. People began to panic, fearing Armageddon was at hand. Several months later the "Black" came. A thick black oil washed in to coastlines, turning anyone who came into contact with it into zombie-like creatures whose goal is to drag the living down into the Black.[8]

The game begins with the unnamed protagonist on a boat, which is subsequently attacked by several oil creatures. He makes it ashore and is about to be overwhelmed by creatures, when he is saved by a woman named Charlotte. Together, they head to a nearby house where they find a note from the presumed-dead owner explaining how to turn the Black into fuel for vehicles.[9] They follow the instructions and get an old car working. Inside the car, they find another note from the man explaining he has left an old boat in a nearby fishing village.[10] They head there, and find another note in the boat. The man speculates that the origin of the Black may be an oil rig off the coast and they should get to his old speedboat on the next island.[11] In the speedboat, another note explains that the Black may be stopped if explosives are dropped down the borehole of the rig. To do so, however, they will need a helicopter, which they can find on the roof of a nearby hospital.[12] They get to the helicopter and head out towards the rig, spotting another helicopter flying away from the island. They tune in to its radio frequency and learn it is on a rescue mission but has reported no signs of life on the islands.[13] As they land on the rig, Charlotte reveals that the old man was her father. They fling the explosives into the borehole, but rather than sealing the spillage of Black, it opens the leak even more, and hundreds of oil creatures begin to scale the rig as an unmoving Charlotte watches them approach her.[14] Later that day, the narrator has returned to the old man's house. He sees a helicopter flying overhead, which drops a package containing a note. The note commends him on his attempt to seal the borehole, and promises to return and evacuate him once it has refueled.[15]

Development

"We believe that the touch system we've created is the future of controlling FPSes on smart devices."

—Ben Cousins[16]

The game was developed by Scattered Entertainment, led by Battlefield producer Ben Cousins.[17] With the aim of appealing to "hardcore players," the developers designed the control scheme specifically for use on touch-sensitive devices.[17] According to Cousins, "We were unsatisfied with the FPSes on mobile devices, and I think from our research, I think a lot of the potential audience who are really interested in the genre have a phone or a tablet, and they're not satisfied with what they've got out there. [We've developed] a control system which is designed for touchscreens that you can play with just one hand, with just two fingers in fact on one hand, and one that really fluidly fits in with the way that we hold these devices and the usage patterns of these devices. So we're really proud that we've created a control system which kind of unlocks the potential of this genre on the platform."[16] In January 2013, Game Informer's Matt Miller said the game was "one of the more ambitious mobile titles we've seen. I'm excited to see if the team can match its impressive visuals and narrative depth with equally enthralling gameplay."[18]

Some of the story elements in the game's prologue were based on a real incident which occurred in Arkansas in 2011, "when thousands of black birds fell from the sky."[19]

Reception

The Drowning received "mixed" reviews according to the review aggregation website Metacritic.[20]

Gamezebo's Joe Jasko was one of the few critics to give the game a positive review, praising the arena-based nature of the gameplay and the control scheme. Although he was critical of the energy system, writing, "the whole inclusion of this energy system just seems a bit archaic to the game's otherwise pretty fair and generous freemium model," he concluded positively with: "While other mobile FPS games might still be drowning in a sea of shoddy touchscreen controls, The Drowning offers just enough moments of ingenuity and potential insights to these traditional issues that gamers will always be able to keep coming up for refreshing breaths of air."[7]

148Apps' Carter Dotson's criticisms pertained to the integration of the IAP system into the gameplay, saying: "the actual game at the heart of The Drowning is largely a shallow free-to-play machine. The missions, involving both arena-based attack segments and defence missions a la CoD Zombies, are all about two minutes in length. They're friendly for pick-up-and-play gameplay, but are mostly just empty calories. The game is also always concerned with pressuring the player into obtaining more randomly-obtained items for crafting, trying to sell more MobaCoins to spend on gas cans to keep playing, and flares to get rarer items from levels where the maximum reward level is usually incredibly difficult to obtain. It's not really possible to actually enjoy The Drowning for what it is."[5]

Slide to Play's Tyler Feasel criticized the arena-based gameplay, and argued that a standard campaign mode would have been preferable. He was especially critical of the energy system, saying: "To wait 30 minutes to "earn" a few minutes of gameplay is deflating and leaves the experience with a sour taste." He concluded that "The Drowning doesn't feature a solid story or nuanced gameplay, but its solid arcade-shooting mixed with a nice amount of unlocks helps deliver a positive gameplay experience. Unfortunately this fun is crippled by an unbalanced timer system that limits game time in favor of an in-app purchase."[1] MacLife's Chris Pereira said: "While certainly enjoyable at times, The Drowning's free-to-play implementation hampers the game to an inexcusable degree."[23] Chris Carter of Destructoid was critical of the control system, writing, "the overly-simplistic layout does not work." However, his strongest criticisms were in relation to the IAP system, writing, "in the hands of another developer, The Drowning would have been something special. Without the energy mechanic and constant drip-fed weapon and item parts, I could easily see myself destroying an entire afternoon blasting apart zombies."[3] Eurogamer's Dan Whitehead was even more critical. He called the control system "a clumsy and unnatural way to play an FPS." He was also heavily critical of the IAP system's integration into the core gameplay, saying: "This is a game that cannot wait to start asking you to pay, and has at least four interlocked currencies designed to make you feel like you should. To assume that sort of aggressive monetisation isn't a factor in the game's obstructive, uphill design, which ekes out progress to non-paying players painfully slowly, is to be willfully blind to how this sort of thing works." He concluded that The Drowning "is a transaction machine first, a headline-grabbing control scheme second and an actual game a distant third."[4] Pocket Gamer's Peter Willington was equally critical, writing, "First-person shooters today are far more complex than The Drowning ever attempts to be. [...] Playing The Drowning is like travelling back in time to the Quake era - walk about a level and shoot everything until you win." He called the game "a failed experiment," writing: "The game ultimately fails at reinventing first-person shooter controls [...] fails at opening up the first-person shooter to the freemium model [...] fails at being a decent first-person shooter [...] It suffers from a paucity of enemy types, locations that barely change the way you play, minimal peripheral awareness, and some of the most rote shooting available on a touchscreen device."[6]

Film adaptation

On September 23, 2014 Deadline Hollywood reported that Radar Pictures had hired Olympus Has Fallen writers Creighton Rothenberger and Katrin Benedikt to adapt the game into a movie.[28]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Feasel, Tyler (August 5, 2013). "The Drowning Review". Slide to Play. Archived from the original on August 8, 2013. Retrieved December 16, 2022.
  2. ^ "Official website". The Drowning. Scattered Entertainment. Archived from the original on August 5, 2013. Retrieved December 16, 2022.
  3. ^ a b c d e Carter, Chris (August 3, 2013). "Review: The Drowning". Destructoid. Gamurs. Archived from the original on December 16, 2022. Retrieved December 16, 2022.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Whitehead, Dan (August 8, 2013). "The Drowning review". Eurogamer. Gamer Network. Archived from the original on December 16, 2022. Retrieved December 16, 2022.
  5. ^ a b c Dotson, Carter (August 7, 2013). "The Drowning Review". 148Apps. Steel Media Ltd. Archived from the original on April 7, 2014. Retrieved March 27, 2014.
  6. ^ a b c d Willington, Peter (August 12, 2013). "The Drowning". Pocket Gamer. Steel Media Ltd. Archived from the original on December 16, 2022. Retrieved December 16, 2022.
  7. ^ a b c Jasko, Joe (August 7, 2013). "The Drowning Review". Gamezebo. Archived from the original on December 16, 2022. Retrieved December 16, 2022.
  8. ^ Scattered Entertainment. The Drowning (iOS). DeNA/Mobage. Scene: A two-wheeled reminiscence. Narrator: It hit coastlines all over the world before anyone could react. The rescue workers changed first, swallowed by the Black. We didn't understand what they became. We still don't. All we know is they want us down there with them in the oil. The Drowned. Only a few of us survived. We scavenge what we can for now and wait for something new to arrive.
  9. ^ Scattered Entertainment. The Drowning (iOS). DeNA/Mobage. Scene: This was home...for now. Old Man: If you're reading this, I must be dead. Sorry about that. Now, in the basement, there's a still, which'll turn the black stuff into something that can power vehicles.
  10. ^ Scattered Entertainment. The Drowning (iOS). DeNA/Mobage. Scene: The old bucket of bolts. Old Man: "As you explore, you're gonna come to find out this is just one island in a series. I hid an undamaged boat in the fishing village. You should find it if you've gotten this far."
  11. ^ Scattered Entertainment. The Drowning (iOS). DeNA/Mobage. Scene: First sight of the rig. Old Man: Soon enough you'll see the rig. I think that's the source of the Black. Makes me angry, thinking we did this to ourselves. Anyway, if you're up for it and want to travel for more gear, my old speedboat is on the next island.
  12. ^ Scattered Entertainment. The Drowning (iOS). DeNA/Mobage. Scene: My old speedboat. Old Man: "I've been trying for years to get some explosives down the borehole of that oil platform. I think, I don't know, but I think it could stop the Black leaking out. Problem is, you'll need a helicopter to get there, and some powerful explosives. Good news is there's a chopper on the hospital roof on the next island."
  13. ^ Scattered Entertainment. The Drowning (iOS). DeNA/Mobage. Scene: Visual contact, strike alpha 3. Narrator: As I gained altitude I saw something; another helicopter in the distance travelling along the mainland coast, to the north. I turned on the radio to pick up their chatter: 'This is Strike Alpha 3. We're headed back to Vancouver Island Base. No sign of survivors, no friendlies, only drowned. Coming home, over and out.'
  14. ^ Scattered Entertainment. The Drowning (iOS). DeNA/Mobage. Scene: I didn't get an end. Narrator: I triggered the timer and chucked the explosive down the borehole. I don't know what I expected. An end maybe. For things to get better I guess. I didn't get an end though. Far from it.
  15. ^ Scattered Entertainment. The Drowning (iOS). DeNA/Mobage. Scene: Be prepared for evacuation. Narrator: That afternoon I saw the helicopter again flying over the house. It dropped me a package with a note. I'd be lying if I said I wasn't curious: 'We saw your work on the rig. A reasonable if predictable attempt at a sabotage operation. We are bingo fuel now, but be prepared for an evacuation at fourteen hundred on the first of February. Canadian interim government.'
  16. ^ a b Dotson, Carter (August 1, 2013). "The Drowning Launches Worldwide; Why Developer Ben Cousins Thinks His Studio Has Made the Best Mobile FPS Yet". 148Apps. Steel Media Ltd. Archived from the original on April 7, 2014. Retrieved March 28, 2014.
  17. ^ a b Miller, Matt (December 6, 2012). "The Drowning Announced For iOS". Game Informer. GameStop. Archived from the original on January 12, 2013. Retrieved January 15, 2013.
  18. ^ Miller, Matt (February 2013). "The Drowning (Preview)". Game Informer. No. 238. GameStop. p. 36.
  19. ^ Suzek, Mike (December 8, 2012). "The Drowning headed to iOS for free next year". Engadget (Joystiq). Yahoo. Archived from the original on December 11, 2012. Retrieved December 16, 2022.
  20. ^ a b "The Drowning for iPhone/iPad Reviews". Metacritic. Fandom. Archived from the original on May 1, 2013. Retrieved March 27, 2014.
  21. ^ "Review: The Drowning". GamesMaster. Future plc. November 2013. p. 79.
  22. ^ "Review: The Drowning". Hyper. Next Media Pty Ltd. October 2013. p. 78.
  23. ^ a b Pereira, Chris (August 6, 2013). "The Drowning Review". MacLife. Future US. Archived from the original on August 13, 2013. Retrieved December 16, 2022.
  24. ^ Minotti, Mike (August 6, 2013). "The Drowning's unique controls can't save a boring game (review)". VentureBeat. Archived from the original on December 16, 2022. Retrieved December 16, 2022.
  25. ^ Mckeand, Kirk (August 8, 2013). "The Drowning Review". VideoGamer.com. Resero Network. Archived from the original on September 10, 2013. Retrieved December 16, 2022.
  26. ^ Nichols, Scott (August 6, 2003). "Mobile reviews: 'Rymdkapsel', 'Breach & Clear', 'Pivvot', more". Digital Spy. Hearst Communications. Archived from the original on December 15, 2022. Retrieved December 16, 2022.
  27. ^ Sapieha, Chad (August 13, 2013). "What's on Post Arcade's phones and tablets right now". National Post. Postmedia Network. Retrieved December 16, 2022.
  28. ^ Yamato, Jen (September 23, 2014). "Olympus Has Fallen Scribes To Adapt iPhone Game The Drowning". Deadline Hollywood. Penske Media Corporation. Archived from the original on December 10, 2014. Retrieved December 8, 2014.