How nice to see you again, Agent 47

I’ve played pretty much all of the Hitman games (including Hitman Go the mobile game: It’s really, really good), the series featuring bald Agent 47 who has a barcode tattooed on the back of his head.

The last Hitman game, Absolution, was pretty good, and there’s a new game coming in the next year called Hitman (just Hitman, it seems), which features a younger looking Agent 47 than the one that appeared in Absolution. I’m not sure whether it’s set in his early days or developer IO Interactive just felt he needed a facelift but the game is said to bring us an Agent 47 when he was at the prime of his assassinating career.

Anyway, SquareEnix (the publisher) has released a new game play trailer from the game’s Showstopper mission, set to the backdrop of a Paris fashion show. It’s alpha footage and looks good to me and is said to give players to assassinate key targets a variety of ways (although I’m always amused with things like a character strolling around with a huge ass sniper rifle hanging across his back. Doesn’t anyone notice that sort of thing?)

What do you think?

 

My most anticipated games for E3 2015

Ten years ago this month, I went to my very first E3 gaming convention.

It was 2005, and I’d managed to convince my bosses at the metropolitan newspaper that I worked at in Christchurch, New Zealand, that  video games were a big thing and if the company was serious about keeping up with trends it needed to send me to E3, the huge three-day gaming show in Los Angeles.

It worked and after a few months of planning I jetted off to what would end up being a memorable experience, perhaps not so much for the games – I can’t actually remember much from that show – but for the memories:

  • Catching a taxi from the hotel I was staying at – The Standard in Hollywood (which was really quite average actually but one afternoon I saw actor Forrest  Whittaker milling about the lobby)  – with Alex Garden, the founder of Relic Entertainment. I didn’t realise it was him until he handed me his business card.
  • The incredibly sore feet after three days of running from hall to hall after realising that I should have left more time between appointments.
  • Seeing the game Stubbs the Zombie in action at a hotel near the LA Convention centre.
  • Chatting to Peter Molyneux and being swept away by his enthusiasm for the industry (it was to be the first of three interviews I did with him over the years).
  • Walking what seems like miles with James Burnett from Gameplanet in 2010 after we just decided to walk from Hollywood to somewhere. I can’t remember where we were going but a shop assistant was flabbergasted that we were contemplating walking rather than taking a taxi.

I ended up going to E3 two more times: In 2009, once again as correspondent for Fairfax NZ and The Press,  and in 2010 as part of the team for NZ gaming website Gameplanet, and each time I have fond memories of what happened and what I did probably more than the games.

Looking back on my trips to E3, part of me misses the noise, the buzz, the flash, but mostly I don’t. It’s a lot of hard work, especially if it’s just you, and frankly, a lot of the games on show are in a state that is quite different from the finished product. Besides, I’m too old to attend major gaming shows now.

This year, I don’t have a lot of anticipation for many games at E3 and I don’t know how really relevant it is any more, given that leaks are common place and one of this year’s major games, The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt is already out.

Maybe I’m cynical, but I think that the gaming industry is in some sort of stagnation at the moment where re-masters are all the rage and the easy option for publishers.

That said, there are probably three games that I’m particularly keen to learn more about (and one that I hope will be announced). Here they are, in precise, particular order in terms of most anticipated.

Deus Ex: Mankind Divided (Eidos)

What: Mankind Divided is the sequel (of sorts) to 2011’s DX Human Revolution, an action/stealth/RPG game set in a cyberpunk universe where human cybernetic implants and augmentations are all the rage. Set two years after Human Revolution, Mankind  Divided sees the return of gruff-voiced hero Adam Jensen.

Likelihood: It’s already been confirmed. We just need to see it in action

Mass Effect 4 (Bioware)

What: This game hasn’t been confirmed or officially announced (I don’t think) so this one is pure conjecture on my part, but [hopefully] Mass Effect 4 will be the sequel to one of the best series in the last  gaming generation, pitting the male/female Commander Shepard against a domination hungry race called the Reapers.

Why: I loved my time with Mass Effect 1 through to 3 [although, I must confess I didn’t actually have the stamina to finish ME1] and ME3 had some genuine contemplative moments where the fate of characters you’d interacted with for three games depended on your decisions. The ending [s] of Mass Effect 3 had gamers up in arms because it didn’t gel with decisions that they’d made but I didn’t have a problem with it. Rumours circulating the web indicate that ME4 will move away from the Shepard story arc, which will be welcome, but I really  hope ME4 tells us what happened to the Reapers.

Likelihood: Possibly but nothing has been confirmed. It would be nice, though.

[And one totally out of left field] A new Hitman game

What: The Hitman games are the ultimate for fans wanting to pretend they are an elite assassin. Featuring the bald-headed Agent 47, the Hitman games are well known  for giving gamers the ability to complete missions in a number of ways, using the environment to take out a target.

Why: I love Agent 47. He’s one of my most favourite game characters and while Hitman Absolution had flaws, I still played it  through to the end There are rumours that developer IO Interactive are planning a new Hitman game sometime this year [or announce one] so my anticipation levels are high for this one.

Likelihood: Nothing has been confirmed that it will be shown – yet – but IO Interactive have hinted that it’s working on a new game. I have high hopes.

While I was writing this I thought to myself “Oh, there will probably be more games as I watch the press conferences that I’m interested in” (I’m mildly interested in Fallout 4, but I didn’t like the previous games) but these are one that I’m really, really excited about and two that I hope happen.

Tell me what you’re most anticipated about from E3 this year.

Stealth in the dark: Agent 47 Absolution trailer

Here’s the latest trailer and a new screen shot from IO Interactive’s Hitman: Absolution.

It’s got everything you would want in an assassination trailer, to be honest: lots of shadows, blurry movment, muffled voices, takedowns, smashed objects, glimpses of a firearm – and partial nudity (don’t tell me you didn’t notice the woman taking the shower? It was the first thing you saw, I bet). So it might be Safe for Work, it might not be: depends on your work, I suppose.

If  I’m being completly honest, I’m pretty amped about this next game in the Hitman series as I loved Blood Money to bits. Not literally, but I loved playing it to bits, I mean. It would seem a bit weird loving a video game to bits wouldn’t it?

Anyway, the game’s out on several platforms next year, I believe. Watch the trailer (several times if you want, I don’t mind. I only looked at it once, though: I’m at work), look at the screen shot. Start the countdown for the game. I hope it’s good. I’ll be gutted if it isn’t.

 

 

 

Baldy’s return is a welcome one

Agent 47, who is obviously the main character in the Hitman games,  has always come across to me as a complete badarse. I mean, he’s got a barcode tattooed on the back of his head for god’s sake. That’s not the sort of thing that someone who goes to bed early during the weekend and has toast for breakfast does. Really, it’s not.

He’s genetically engineered, too. which obviously makes for a good assassin-type person and this week, Square Enix announced that he’s coming back in a new Hitman game called (drum roll please) Hitman Absolution.

I’m quite excited by this, actually. I’ve played two Hitman games in my gaming life: Hitman: Silent Assassin (PC) and Hitman: Blood Money (PS2): both are bloody good games but Silent Assassin is starting to show its age a little. I’ve reinstalled it and I can’t help laughing when I see Agent 47 dragging a naked corpse along the ground, the arm he’s dragging them from sticking out in a funny angle.

According to the blurb that’s on the Hitman YouTube channel, Agent 47 faces his most dangerous contract yet in Absolution: “Betrayed by those he trusted and hunted by the police, he finds himself at the centre of a dark conspiracy and must embark on a personal journey through a corrupt and twisted world, in his search for the truth.” So I guess that means he’s going to garotte people then steal there clothes.

The trailer is tantalysingly brief and while it reveals very little about the game itself, there could well be some information hidden within it that points to when we’ll find out more information.

There’s  a snake wrapped around what appear to be Agent 47’s favoured silver baller pistol (is it entwined in the shape of the hitman logo?) and a simple barcode. But wait? Are they just random numbers at the bottom of the barcode or are they some clever code? The numbers are: 110706, seemingly random if read left to right, but read them right to left and you get: 06/07/11 – June 7, 2011 (if read the American format which is month/date/year) – which is the week of this year’s E3 Expo in Los Angeles. Has Square Enix hidden the date for more information in the barcode itself? Yes, I think they have.

If Hitman Absolution has brilliant moments like Blood Money’s sequences where Agent 47 had to make his way through the throng of people in New Orleans (I said throng, not thong) then the game’s already a winner in my book.  I love that part of Blood Money.

Should Sam Fisher, another hardarse stealthy type,  have anything to fear from Agent 47? I bloody think he does.