Fallout: Brotherhood of Steel 2 (lost build of unfinished PlayStation 2 action role-playing game; 2000s): Difference between revisions
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|title=<center>Fallout: Brotherhood of Steel 2</center> | |title=<center>Fallout: Brotherhood of Steel 2</center> | ||
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|imagecaption=Cover for the design document. | |imagecaption=Cover for the design document. | ||
|status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span> | |status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span> | ||
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'''''Fallout: Brotherhood of Steel 2''''' was a cooperative Action role-playing game that was being developed by Interplay Entertainment for the PlayStation 2 in 2004.<ref name="style"/> It was the sequel to ''Fallout: Brotherhood of Steel''. | '''''Fallout: Brotherhood of Steel 2''''' was a cooperative Action role-playing game that was being developed by Interplay Entertainment for the PlayStation 2 in 2004.<ref name="style"/> It was the sequel to ''Fallout: Brotherhood of Steel''. | ||
==Plot | ==Plot== | ||
[[File: | [[File:FalloutBrotherhoodOfSteel2-TexasMap.jpg|thumb|285px|right|Map of the area progression of the game.]] | ||
The game, set in Texas, follows a war waging between the Brotherhood of Steel and a raider group known as The Cyphers. The Cyphers are polar opposites to the Brotherhood; driving to destroy technology and stop the Brotherhood's preservation efforts. The Cyphers have come into possession of a G.E.C.K (Garden of Ethan Creation Kit). Miles Reese, who discovered the device, intends to use it to destroy human life and create a new world overrun by vegetation. | The game, set in Texas, follows a war waging between the Brotherhood of Steel and a raider group known as The Cyphers. The Cyphers are polar opposites to the Brotherhood; driving to destroy technology and stop the Brotherhood's preservation efforts. The Cyphers have come into possession of a G.E.C.K (Garden of Ethan Creation Kit). Miles Reese, who discovered the device, intends to use it to destroy human life and create a new world overrun by vegetation.<ref>[https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/fallout/images/f/fd/FOBOS2_design_document_20.jpg/revision/latest?cb=20100122011500 Page #21 of the design doc.]</ref> | ||
==Gameplay== | ==Gameplay== |
Revision as of 02:44, 14 March 2020
Fallout: Brotherhood of Steel 2 was a cooperative Action role-playing game that was being developed by Interplay Entertainment for the PlayStation 2 in 2004.[1] It was the sequel to Fallout: Brotherhood of Steel.
Plot
The game, set in Texas, follows a war waging between the Brotherhood of Steel and a raider group known as The Cyphers. The Cyphers are polar opposites to the Brotherhood; driving to destroy technology and stop the Brotherhood's preservation efforts. The Cyphers have come into possession of a G.E.C.K (Garden of Ethan Creation Kit). Miles Reese, who discovered the device, intends to use it to destroy human life and create a new world overrun by vegetation.[2]
Gameplay
The gameplay was inspired by games such as Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance, Diablo 2, Fallout Tactics, and the two original Fallout games.[1]
Like the original title, the player was restricted to only picking from a range of per-created potential protagonist characters, each having a respective skill set.[3]
In addition to a new stealth system, the game incorporated a reputation system that would progress the story based on the player's morality throughout their playthrough.[3]
"Stage Bosses" would've have been battled to mark the end of every segment of the game.[4]
Development
An observation by ProgrammingAce of the Game Of The Art forum, who leaked the design document by Brian Freyermuth, is that the predecessor was merely a source of funds for the sequel, hence its poor quality. [5]
The game's development began before the original,[6] allowing for the Dark Alliance engine, which had been used for the original, to be revised.[7] Quest structure would've been designed reminiscent of the style of the original Fallout.[1] Like many games of the franchise, the game's style drew influence from the Mad Max series and films from the 1950s.[1]
Cancellation
The game was canceled when Interplay laid off the majority of their employees.[6] The game was never publicly announced.
Availability
The design document for the game was leaked in 2009, constituting almost all of the available information, filled with in-game photographs. Minus page 5, the entirety of the document is available. No gameplay footage has surfaced.