Wing Commander III (video game)
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''Wing Commander III: Heart of the Tiger'' is the third main game in Chris Roberts' '' Wing Commander'' science fiction
space combat simulation A space flight simulation is a genre of flight simulator video games that lets players experience space flight to varying degrees of realism. Common mechanics include space exploration, space trade and space combat. Overview Some games in the g ...
video game series, developed and released by Origin Systems in December 1994. It was a departure from previous games in the series in that it uses extensive live action full-motion video to add an
interactive movie Across the many fields concerned with interactivity, including information science, computer science, human-computer interaction, communication, and industrial design, there is little agreement over the meaning of the term "interactivity", but mo ...
-style presentation to the space combat gameplay, emphasized by its advertising slogan, "Don't watch the game, play the movie!". The game's more than two hours of video featured a number of prominent movie stars including
Mark Hamill Mark Richard Hamill (; born September 25, 1951) is an American actor and writer. He is known for his role as Luke Skywalker in the ''Star Wars'' film series, beginning with the original 1977 film and subsequently winning three Saturn Awards f ...
as Colonel Christopher "Maverick" Blair, Malcolm McDowell as Admiral Tolwyn, John Rhys-Davies as James "Paladin" Taggart and Thrakhath nar Kiranka, and Tom Wilson as Todd "Maniac" Marshall.


Gameplay

Wing Commander is a
space combat simulator A space flight simulation is a Video game genres, genre of flight simulator video games that lets players experience space flight to varying degrees of Reality, realism. Common mechanics include space exploration, space trade and space combat. ...
intercut with live action cutscenes. Gameplay involves completing missions and destroying enemy craft. Wing Commander III dispensed with the issuing of medals after such missions and relied more on cutscenes to drive the story along, making much more use of CD technology. As the man giving the orders,
Blair Blair is an English-language name of Scottish Gaelic origin. The surname is derived from any of the numerous places in Scotland called ''Blair'', derived from the Scottish Gaelic ''blàr'', meaning "plain", "meadow" or "field", frequently a “ba ...
often gets to choose what ship he will fly, what missiles it will carry, and what wingman (wingmen) he will take with him. As in '' Wing Commander'', some wingmen can be killed permanently in combat. Blair's own call sign remained customizable.


Plot

The
protagonist A protagonist () is the main character of a story. The protagonist makes key decisions that affect the plot, primarily influencing the story and propelling it forward, and is often the character who faces the most significant obstacles. If a st ...
of the previous two games is officially assigned a name, Colonel
Christopher Blair ''Wing Commander'' is a media franchise consisting of space combat simulation video games from Origin Systems, Inc., an animated television series, a feature film, a collectible card game, a series of novels, and action figures. The franchis ...
. Thrakhath nar Kiranka, Crown Prince of the hostile Kilrathi Empire, presides over the execution by disintegration of a group of Terran Confederation prisoners of war. One, however, is left alive: Blair's lover Colonel Jeannette "Angel" Devereaux, due to her status among the Kilrathi as a respected warrior. On the planet Vespus, Blair and Brigadier General James "Paladin" Taggart inspect the downed wreckage of the TCS ''Concordia''. The carrier is a total loss. It is the year 2669, and the Terran-Kilrathi War has been going for over thirty years, with no signs of stopping. Blair, by orders of Admiral Geoffrey Tolwyn, is transferred as Wing Commander to the TCS ''Victory'', a ''Ranger''-class carrier twice as old as Blair. Her captain,
William Eisen ''Wing Commander'' is a media franchise consisting of space combat simulation video games from Origin Systems, Inc., an animated television series, a feature film, a collectible card game, a series of novels, and action figures. The franchise o ...
, has been with her for many years, and is proud of his ship. There are a few old faces—Colonel Ralgha nar "Hobbes" Hhallas, and Major Todd "Maniac" Marshall, but all the other pilots and staff are people Blair has never met. Among those on board, Blair meets Lieutenant Robin "Flint" Peters and Chief Fighter Technician Rachel Coriolis. The ''Victory'' is assigned to the Orsini System, away from the front. Shortly after Blair's arrival, test pilot Major Jace "Flash" Dillon arrives on board the ''Victory'' with his prototype warcraft, the F-103A Excalibur heavy fighter. When Flash fails to respond to an attack on the ''Victory'', willfully napping through the crisis, Blair commandeers the Excalibur in defense of the ''Victory'' and, in an ensuing argument with Flash, accuses him of being a coward and repeatedly insinuates that he has no flying skills. This angers Flash who challenges Blair to a simulator duel. If Blair wins the duel, he forces Dillon to request reassignment to the ''Victory'''s flight wing. Immediately afterward the ''Victory'' is rerouted to the Locanda System, where the Kilrathi are deploying a potent pair of new weapons: the "Skipper" cruise missile, equipped with a cloaking device, and a genetically-engineered bioweapon for use against the Locanda colonies, the home of Flint. Blair and his wing are scrambled to defend Locanda against several of these missiles. Even if Blair destroys the missiles, Flint breaks formation and attacks the Kilrathi forces in an act of revenge. The player is given the option to follow her, though she returns safely in either case. Thrakhath appears with a squadron of Pakthan bombers and taunts the ''Victory'' over subspace radio, calling Blair "the heart of the tiger"; the Confed pilots gather the Kilrathi have bestowed this name on him as a sign of respect. Admiral Tolwyn rendezvouses with the ''Victory'', escorted by several destroyers. Tolwyn is responsible for the escort and defense of the TCS ''Behemoth'', an extremely large vessel (essentially a titanic particle accelerator with engines) capable of destroying a planet. Following a successful field test of the ''Behemoth'' in the Loki system, the ''Victory'' jumps to Kilrah and Tolwyn prepares to use the ''Behemoth'' on the Kilrathi home world. Thrakhath's forces attack the Behemoth. A traitor aboard the ''Victory'' has transmitted targeting data to the Kilrathi revealing the ''Behemoth's'' weakpoints, and the ''Behemoth'' is destroyed. Thrakhath then challenges Blair in single combat. He taunts Blair with a recording showing how he personally disemboweled Angel after her colleagues were disintegrated. Blair's instinct is to accept, but Lt. Ted "Radio" Rollins warns him that the ''Victory'' is leaving the system. When he returns to the Victory, the player chooses between getting drunk or talking to Rachel about his loss. If Blair gets drunk, he must then fly an emergency scramble drunk, with the game controls not responding reliably, making combat virtually impossible. After a retreat to the Alcor System, Paladin arrives. He reveals that before Angel was captured, she transmitted data indicating that the Kilrathi home world is seismically unstable. Paladin suggests a weapon called the Temblor Bomb which, if dropped in the right place, will cause the planet to shake itself to pieces. Before they can complete the bomb, Hobbes kills one of the ''Victory'''s pilots, Lt. Laurel "Cobra" Buckley, steals her fighter and makes for Kilrathi space with news of the planned T-Bomb attack. Blair has the choice of chasing him or letting him go. If he gives chase, he kills Hobbes, the carrier is attacked, and Lt. Mitchell "Vaquero" Lopez is killed in the fight. Either way, afterwards Blair finds Hobbes left a message locker, explaining that he was brainwashed long before he met Blair, and this brainwashing led him to defect to the Confederation. His original personality was reactivated by the code phrase "heart of the tiger", the Kilrathi name for Blair. Blair has the option to choose to initiate a romance with Flint or Rachel. Flint refuses to fly with him if he chooses Rachel, Rachel refuses to help him with his missile loadouts if he chooses Flint, and both are bitter with him if he chooses neither. Blair launches against Kilrah, with up to three wingmen of the player's choice. This attack comes just as the Kilrathi prepare for a massive and devastating strike against Earth, intending to finally force humanity into submission with the loss of their home planet. After successfully downing Prince Thrakhath above Kilrah (and Hobbes, if he was not killed earlier), Blair descends to the surface and delivers the bomb. The resulting explosion destroys Kilrah and wipes out nearly the entire Kilrathi armada assembled in orbit, but damages Blair's fighter as well; a surviving Kilrathi capital ship tractors him in. Morally devastated by the destruction of their home planet, the Kilrathi, commanded now by Thrakhath's retainer Melek nar Kiranka, surrender to Tolwyn. The surviving Kilrathi begin to colonize a new homeworld and now want to live in peace and harmony with humans while Blair and his romantic interest make plans to start their new lives together.


Cast

*
Mark Hamill Mark Richard Hamill (; born September 25, 1951) is an American actor and writer. He is known for his role as Luke Skywalker in the ''Star Wars'' film series, beginning with the original 1977 film and subsequently winning three Saturn Awards f ...
as Colonel Christopher "Maverick" Blair * Malcolm McDowell as Admiral Tolwyn * John Rhys-Davies as Thrakhath Nar Kiranka (voice) / James "Paladin" Taggart * Jason Bernard as Captain William Eisen * Tom Wilson as Major Todd "Maniac" Marshall *
Ginger Lynn Allen Ginger Lynn Allen (born December 14, 1962), known professionally as Ginger Lynn, is an American pornographic actress and model who was a premier adult-entertainment star of the 1980s. She also had minor roles in various B movies. ''Adult Vid ...
as Rachel Coriolis * Jennifer MacDonald as Lieutenant Robin "Flint" Peters * Courtney Gains as Lieutenant Ted "Radio" Rollins * François Chau as Lieutenant Winston "Vagabond" Chang * B.J. Jefferson as Lieutenant Laurel "Cobra" Buckley *
Josh Lucas Joshua Lucas Easy Dent Maurer (born June 20, 1971) is an American actor. He is best known for his roles in various films, including '' American Psycho'' (2000), '' You Can Count on Me'' (2000), '' The Deep End'' (2001), '' A Beautiful Mind'' (20 ...
as Major Jace "Flash" Dillon * Julian Reyes as Lieutenant Mitchell "Vaquero" Lopez * Yolanda Jilot as Colonel Jeannette "Angel" Devereaux *
Barbara Niven Barbara Lee Niven (née Bucholz; born February 26, 1953) is an American actress, writer and producer, best known for her performances in Hallmark and Lifetime movies, and for television roles in ''Pensacola: Wings of Gold'', ''One Life to Live'' ...
as Barbara Miles * Tim Curry as Melek Nar Kiranka (voice) * Alan Mandell as Emperor (voice) * John Schuck as Ralgha Nar "Hobbes" Hhallas (voice)


Development

''Wing Commander III: Heart of the Tiger'' was developed and released by Origin Systems. Released in 1994 for DOS and Mac OS, in 1995 for 3DO and in 1996 for
PlayStation is a video gaming brand that consists of five home video game consoles, two handhelds, a media center, and a smartphone, as well as an online service and multiple magazines. The brand is produced by Sony Interactive Entertainment, a divisi ...
(a Sega Saturn version was also announced and advertised, but it was never released), ''Wing Commander III'' made the move from the Sprite (computer graphics), sprite-based graphics used in previous titles to software-driven texture mapping, texture-mapped polygon graphics, polygonal 3D computer graphics, 3D, and used full-motion video, FMV for cutscenes. ''Wing Commander III'' featured an entirely new line of ships and fighters, abandoning the technology of '' Wing Commander'' and ''Wing Commander II: Vengeance of the Kilrathi, Wing Commander II''. Terran Confederation craft were redesigned from "airplanes in space", while Kilrathi craft were totally redesigned into asymmetrical ships with prongs, barbs and fang-like surfaces. The new, blockier forms were made necessary by the then-primitive state of polygon graphics, as ''WCIII'' was released a few years before the first true 3D video cards and all 3D effects had to be calculated by the CPU. ''Wing Commander III'' ultimately cost between and to develop. Adjusted for inflation, this is equivalent to between today. A number of branching ("interactive") conversations allow the player to choose what response his character will give; the choice may affect the other person's attitude towards the character, or even the morale of the entire crew. As such movie content consumes a large amount of data storage, the game was packaged on four CD-ROMs instead of floppy disks, another emerging technology at that point. A Pentium (then a very high-end processor) was required to get optimum performance out of ''Wing Commander III''. Roberts said, "We're not afraid to lead hardware sales a little, and we believe that Pentium will soon be the standard." In June 1995, Atari Corporation realized a deal with EA to bring select titles to the Atari Jaguar CD, with ''Wing Commander III'' among the selected games. This port was never released due to the commercial and critical failure of the Atari Jaguar platform. A novelization by William R. Forstchen and J. Andrew Keith, Andrew Keith was published in 1995. A collectible card game adaptation was published in the same year by Mag Force 7 Productions, under the helm of noted science-fiction authors Margaret Weis and Don Perrin. The sequel, ''Wing Commander IV: The Price of Freedom'', was released in 1996. After the end of the official support by Origin the fan community began to provide support for the game themselves. For instance, the community developed several unofficial patches to enhance the compatibility with newer versions of Windows and newer PC hardware. In September 2011, the source code of ''Wing Commander III'' was handed to the fan community by a former developer for the purpose of Digital preservation, digital long-time preservation. On September 13, 2011 ''WC III'' was re-released on gog.com via Digital Distribution, digital distribution.


Version differences

A number of major changes were made in porting the game to the 3DO. These include: * Difficulty select was removed; the game can only be played at one difficulty, which roughly corresponds to "Veteran" in the PC version. * All stages set on planetary surfaces are cut, and replaced with Full Motion Video cutscenes. Staple mission audio clips (e.g. "Attack my target") are used for the dialogue in these scenes. * Manual takeoffs are similarly replaced by FMVs. The player starts each mission in open space. * The left VDU cannot be made invisible. * Several enemy types were removed, including all land-based enemies. * A new enemy was added, the gun platform. This enemy is stationary. * The ejection animation was cut, as was the option to retry the mission after ejecting. * The player must select a ship as a target in order to communicate with it. * The bug which prevents the player from accessing the cutscene explaining Hobbes' betrayal in the PC version is absent. * There is a new bug in the first Hyperion mission. Unless all enemies in the mission are destroyed, this mission will register as failed, regardless of whether or not the player successfully used the bomb prototype. * Only two of the three possible endings of the PC version are accessible. This is because the removal of the planetary sequence makes it impossible to fail the mission in which the Temblor Bomb is planted. * The scripted deaths of the pilots in the Temblor Bomb mission were cut. Thus, it is possible to complete the mission with all four wingmen remaining. * The cloaking device works on Hobbes and Thrakhath, and thus the Temblor Bomb mission may be completed without fighting either of them. The PlayStation version is much more similar to the PC version, though like the 3DO version it does not carry the bug which blocks off the Hobbes cutscene. Also, unlike either the PC or 3DO versions, it includes considerable load times when navigating the ''Victory''.


Novelization

While mostly following the plot outlined above, authors Keith and Forstchen made a number of decisions and changes to increase the tension of the novel: * Blair's Gold Squadron flies Thunderbolts exclusively before transferring over to the new Excaliburs. Green Squadron runs the Longbows, Red Squadron has Hellcats (misprinted as Arrow Interceptors in the book) and Blue Squadron flies Arrows. * Flash arrives, not as a test pilot for the Excalibur, but from the Locanda system as a replacement contributed from a Home Defense squadron. He retains his "hotshot" mindset and rank of major, however. * Blair fails to save Locanda. * Forstchen-created character Kevin "Lone Wolf" Tolwyn makes an appearance as a courier, preparing the ''Victory'' for the admiral's arrival. Lone Wolf, now a major, declines to join Blair's wing only because it would pain his uncle. * Thrakhath's declaration that Blair is the "Heart of the Tiger" occurs while the pilots are in their cockpits, scrambling to defend the ''Behemoth'', instead of standing on the ''Victory'''s bridge. Flash, flying on Hobbes' wing, is killed in the ensuing fight. *Since Hobbes knows about the Temblor bomb project, there is no question of allowing him to escape. Hobbes uses voice recordings to impersonate Buckley, but when Vaquero (Cobra's wingman) hears what has happened, he engages Hobbes, as per Blair's orders, and is killed just as Maverick arrives. * Blair chooses Rachel. * Flint, Winston "Vagabond" Chang and Maniac, the only living Gold Squadron pilots at this point in the novel, fly with him to Kilrah. Vagabond is shot down on the second leg of the journey (though he survives through unspecified means to return in ''Wing Commander IV: The Price of Freedom''), Flint is killed in space above Kilrah, and Maniac is shot down in the planet's atmosphere. Maniac would also return in ''Wing Commander IV''.


Reception

''Wing Commander III: Heart of the Tiger'' was another major hit for the ''Wing Commander'' series, the PC versions alone selling over 500,000 copies. It sold over 700,000 copies in total. PC Data, which tracked computer game sales in the United States, reported that ''Wing Commander III''s computer version earned $15.9 million and sold roughly 400,000 copies by October 1999. A critic for ''Next Generation (magazine), Next Generation'' gave the 3DO version five out of five stars, chiefly praising the usage of big-name actors in the video cutscenes, which he argued makes the game more realistic and suspenseful and gives a sense that the FMV is enhancing gameplay rather than substituting for a lack thereof. While he noted that the 3DO version lacks the graphical sharpness of the PC version and is less challenging, he concluded that it "makes a more than acceptable alternative" for players who cannot afford the expensive hardware required to run the PC version at optimal settings. The four reviewers of ''Electronic Gaming Monthly'' focused their praise on the high quality of the FMV, which both Al Manuel and Sushi-X said was the cleanest FMV yet seen on either the 3DO or the PC. Ed Semrad and Sushi-X criticized that the control scheme is difficult to master. Reviewing the PlayStation version, a reviewer for ''Maximum'' praised the "intricate" plot but criticized that the combat is simplistic and dull and that the FMV sequences lack any interaction beyond the occasional multiple choice response. ''Entertainment Weekly'' gave the game an A.


Accolades

The editors of ''PC Gamer US'' nominated ''Wing Commander III'' for their 1994 "Best Action Game" award, although it lost to ''Star Wars: TIE Fighter, TIE Fighter''. In 1995, the game was awarded the 3DO Interactive Movie of the Year. In 1996, ''Computer Gaming World'' ranked it as the 54th best game of all time for its "thrilling space action in the first successful interactive movie", and the ninth most innovative computer game. In 2011, ''PC Gamer'' ranked it 72nd on the list of the 100 best PC games of all time.


References


External links

* Original Origin WC3 webpage from 1997 * EA product page of their re-released digital download version * {{Authority control 1994 video games 1995 science fiction novels 3DO Interactive Multiplayer games Cancelled Atari Jaguar games Cancelled Sega Saturn games Card games introduced in 1995 Collectible card games DOS games Full motion video based games Games commercially released with DOSBox Interactive movie video games Classic Mac OS games Novels based on Wing Commander PlayStation (console) games Science fiction video games Space combat simulators Video game sequels Video games developed in the United States Wing Commander (franchise)