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Ecks vs. Sever

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Producer(s)
  
Tim Mawson

Genre
  
First-person shooter


Director(s)
  
Michael Merren

Initial release date
  
21 November 2001

Platform
  
Game Boy Advance

Ecks vs. Sever Ballistic Ecks vs Sever 2 EPatience ROM lt GBA ROMs Emuparadise

Designer(s)
  
Mark Frazer Jake May Robert Stevens Simon Handby William Greenough David Murphy Tim Mawson

Release date(s)
  
NA: November 21, 2001 EU: December 7, 2001

Developers
  
Crawfish Interactive, Zombie Studios

Publishers
  
BAM! Entertainment, Franchise Interactive

Modes
  
Single-player video game, Multiplayer video game

Similar
  
BAM! Entertainment games, First-person shooter games

Ecks vs sever ecks walkthrough 1


Ecks vs. Sever is a first-person shooter (FPS) video game for the Game Boy Advance handheld game console. It was developed by Crawfish Interactive. Based on an early script of the film Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever, it is the first video game developed and released before the film it is based on had begun production. It is followed by the sequel Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever, which having been released after the film, follows it more closely than the first game.

Contents

Ecks vs. Sever Ballistic Ecks vs Sever UVenom ROM lt GBA ROMs Emuparadise

Ballistic ecks vs sever game boy gameplay


Gameplay

Ecks vs. Sever httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumbc

At the beginning of the game, players choose which character, Ecks or Sever, they wish to control. Both characters' plots intertwine and are given different level designs for each of their missions.

Ecks vs. Sever Ecks vs Sever 2 gameplay video GBA YouTube

Gameplay is similar to other early FPSs such as Doom in that all of the graphics for enemies and weapons are 2D sprites in a 3D setting.

Development

Ecks vs. Sever was developed by Crawfish Interactive, which obtained the license to create the game based on an early rendition of a script for Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever, a then-upcoming action film which had not yet entered production. The close relationship between game publisher Bam! Entertainment and Franchise Pictures allowed for the option to develop games based on any of the film company's received scripts. Video game producer Tim Mawson explained that the decision to release the game prior to the film was based on the confidence by Bam! and Crawfish that Ecks vs. Sever was "a good enough game to stand on its own two feet". Mawson further stated that the creative team was "given free reign [sic] to a degree", allowing them mold a gameplay model around the base narrative, characters, and environments already provided. The team constantly referred to the film script during the early developmental phases "to ensure the gameplay elements were relevant to the license in terms of atmosphere, theme and content".

The Ecks vs. Sever video game was in development for about ten months. Because the game began production long before the release of the film, adjustments had to be made based on the changing screenplay. Most notably, the titular lead Sever was switched from male to female, forcing Crawfish to replace the graphical artwork for that character. Ecks vs. Sever utilizes a homebrew graphics engine, first showcased by Crawfish with the opening level of Doom II, leading up to the launch of the GBA. This "pseudo-3D" engine lacks sloping floors, rooms above rooms, and textured ceilings so the game can run quicker. Mawson admitted that building a proprietary, first-person engine for the GBA was very difficult, requiring much trial and error. Crawfish's 3D raycasting engine for Ecks vs. Sever was originally written in C, but was later optimized into machine code for higher processing speeds. Lighting effects and more sprites existed in early stages of the project's development, but were scrapped to maintain acceptable frame rates. Multiplayer levels were also adjusted to prevent engine slowdown. Bam! European developmental director Joe Booth felt that although the game's engine was meant to "push the GBA envelope" of environment interaction and background animation, its multiple game modes set it apart from other FPSs on the handheld.

Reception and legacy

Ecks vs. Sever received positive reviews, garnering aggregate scores of 76% on GameRankings and 80 out of 100 on Metacritic. IGN gave the game an "outstanding" 9.0/10 and an Editor's Choice award, calling it "the best GBA first person shooter to date" and "one of the best four player games made yet for the Game Boy Advance." The game received far more critical praise than the film on which it was loosely based, which is generally considered to be among the worst films ever made.

A PlayStation 2 version of Ecks vs. Sever was in development by Zombie Studios slated for release on November 2002. However, it was eventually cancelled.

References

Ecks vs. Sever Wikipedia


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