Jump to content

Lost Patrol (video game)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by AlbertTheSmart (talk | contribs) at 05:31, 19 December 2020 (External links). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Lost Patrol
Cover art by Bob Wakelin[1]
Developer(s)Shadow Development
Astros Productions (DOS)
Publisher(s)Ocean Software
Designer(s)Ian Harling
Simon Cooke
Programmer(s)Simon Cooke
Nick Byron
Artist(s)Ian Harling
Composer(s)Chris Glaister
Jonathan Dunn
Platform(s)Amiga, Atari ST, DOS
Release1989[1]
Genre(s)Action role-playing game
Mode(s)Single player

Lost Patrol, also known as The Lost Patrol, is a survival action role-playing game with strategy elements developed by the team Shadow Development and published by Ocean Software for the Amiga and Atari ST computers in 1989. A DOS version was also created by Astros Productions.

Gameplay

The game is set during the Vietnam War in 1966,[1] when a U.S. helicopter returning troops from a R&R break in Saigon crashes in a remote area of the Central Highlands. Seven American survivors of the crash have no radio and face the task of trekking across 58 miles of harsh terrain infested with booby traps and enemies and make their way to the nearest U.S. military outpost at Du Hoc.

The player assumes the role of Sergeant Charlie Weaver, who takes charge of the survivors (one or more of whom can be randomly injured from the crash). The player must learn the characteristics of the team, as completing the mission may hinge upon character reactions to the player's decisions, and then try to keep the group's morale high (or risk desertions or even being fragged) and fatigue low, managing the dwindling resources (food rations, ammunition, hand grenades and Claymore mines) and fending off the enemy. The game also features several types of action sequences:

  • Hand-to-Hand - Designated scouts at times encounter lone VC guerrilla guarding an arms or supply bunker. The player must defeat the opponent in unarmed combat, using a choice of keyboard or joystick controls. If the player fails to defeat the opponent before a timer expires, that soldier is assumed missing in action and is no longer available.
  • Battle Sequence - The player mans an M60 machine gun against a group of the VC assaulting his position in a ruined farmhouse, trying to be neither killed nor overrun. Hand grenades may be also used against the enemy.
  • Grenade Section - The squad encounters one or more entrenched machine gun nests of the NVA in a rice field. The player must eliminate them by hurling hand grenades from the first-person perspective.
  • Sniper Section - The squad is pinned down by enemy sniper fire from a cluster of huts, requiring the sniper(s) to be located and disposed of. The player can choose which member of the team will assume the role of the shooter, with skill levels varying. To locate the position of the sniper(s), a magnified view of the terrain is visible through the scope of the player's rifle, which he must use to locate the flashes of enemy fire.
  • Minefield - The squad must cross mine fields laid by enemy forces to defend an entry to a bunker. Mine fields are visible on the map, but the booby traps are not (the only solution is to move slowly in an areas that may be mined). To successfully navigate the mine field, the player must choose a member of the squad to crawl through the minefield, stabbing at the ground along the way to check for explosives, before time limit runs out.

The player may always try to retreat from each encounter, but this is risky, too. The group may also encounter local Vietnamese and Montagnard (in the mountains) civilians, including while entering villages visible on the map. A range of options is then available, from searching area to killing one or even all of civilians. The player may also attempt to communicate with the locals (in a friendly talk or a hard interrogation) using the key words typed from keyboard (for example, typing "VC" to ask for enemy forces).

Some of the soldiers have special traits. Richard Bachman is a highly proficient marksman and thus useful for the sniping sections of the game. William Blom is useful in the hand to hand sections due to his background as a martial artist. Juan Gomez is invaluable in the game as he is more likely to detect booby traps in the map if made a pointman, and is also the only one capable of checking an enemy tunnel if one is discovered.

Development and release

"Development took over a year, but the main stumbling block was Ocean themselves. The problem was that they were bringing out games like Batman that were strongly arcade titles and trying to get us to mould Lost Patrol to that kind of arcade structure. We on the other hand wanted a deep, realistic game that echoed some aspects of early text-based adventures and required that you interact constantly with your team and those you met. It was always a struggle and we came in months late on completion because of trying to resolve the way we saw the game and the way that Ocean did. A day in my life at the time was split between going to the library, watching war films and buying research books and doing the actual drawing. Each screen took about 3 days to complete, 12-14 hours a day, a pixel at a time."

Ian Harling[2]

Lost Patrol began as an idea to make a game in the style of Cinemaware's 'interactive movie' titles but with more gameplay, and the designer and artist Ian Harling even sent a game concept to Cinemaware and six other companies but was rejected, until Ocean Software's Gary Bracey accepted it in early 1989 when they decided to move on to the 16-bit market.[1] Lost Patrol was originally intended by Ocean as a follow-up to their 1987's Platoon[3] and was thus initially subtitled Platoon II.[4]

Upon reading more about the atrocities of the Vietnam War, Harling decided to incorporate moral dilemmas into the plot. Several segments were changed or abandoned altogether due to technical limitations and other reasons, such as the tunnel sequence which was cut altogether. Harling created the graphics using Deluxe Paint II, scanned hand-drawn images with photographic references, and digitized Vietnam footage stills for the Amiga as the prime platforms. His original 32-color graphics were then downgraded for the Atari ST.[1]

The game was programmed by Simon Cooke, with whom Harling had previously worked on an unreleased game, Xenodrome. Nick Byron aided them with ideas and additional coding and also created the hand-to-hand sequence.[1] There was a widely pirated, leaked Amiga version of the game that was incomplete, buggy and prone to crash. Lost Patrol was also later ported to the PC DOS by Astros Productions. The main theme playing throughout the game was composed by Chris Glaister.

Reception

Lost Patrol sold very well and was in the UK's Amiga's top ten chart in late 1990.[10] The game received mostly positive reviews upon its release, including the scores of 85% from The Games Machine,[6] 73% from The One,[9] 79% from Amiga Format,[8] and 83% from CU Amiga.[7] Zero gave the Amiga version of Lost Patrol an overall score of 89%, while the ST version got 88%.[5]

Computer Gaming World's 1992 & 1994 surveys of wargames with modern settings gave the game zero stars out of five, criticizing the joystick controls as "so poorly done that the entire game is totally unplayable."[11][12]

According to Roberto Dillon's 2011 book The Golden Age of Video Games, it was "a unique game among military and combat simulations" that "offered a different perspective on war from any other game released before or since ... showing there is no glory in war but only pain and destruction."

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Minson, John. "Feature - The Immaculate Conception: Lost Patrol". Zero. No. 3. Dennis Publishing. pp. 30–33.
  2. ^ Veit, Matthias (2004). "Interview with Ian G. Harling". thelostpatrol.knagge.com. Retrieved 2015-06-08.
  3. ^ CU Amiga July 1989, page 11.
  4. ^ "TGM Previews - Ocean find The Lost Patrol". The Games Machine. No. 20. Newsfield Publications. p. 10.
  5. ^ a b c MacDonald, Duncan; Lakin, Paul (March 1990). "Review: The Lost Patrol". Zero. No. 5. Dennis Publishing. pp. 26–29.
  6. ^ a b Caswell, Mark (March 1990). "Reviews: Looking for... The Lost Patrol". The Games Machine. No. 28. Newsfield Publishing. pp. 32–33.
  7. ^ a b Patterson, Mark (March 1990). "Amiga Screen Scene: The Lost Patrol". CU Amiga. No. 1. EMAP. pp. 50–51.
  8. ^ a b Webb, Trenton (September 1990). "Screenplay: Lost Patrol". Amiga Format. No. 14. Future Publishing. pp. 60–61.
  9. ^ a b Whitta, Gary (February 1990). "Review: Lost Patrol". The One. No. 17. pp. 75–78. ISSN 0955-4084.
  10. ^ "Buyer's Guide - Amiga Chart". CU Amiga. No. 9. EMAP. November 1990. p. 72.
  11. ^ Brooks, M. Evan (June 1992). "The Modern Games: 1950 - 2000". Computer Gaming World. No. 95. Golden Empire Publications. p. 123. ISSN 0744-6667.
  12. ^ Brooks, M. Evan (January 1994). "War In Our Time / A Survey Of Wargames From 1950-2000". Computer Gaming World. No. 114. Golden Empire Publications. p. 205. ISSN 0744-6667.