Marathon Eternal version 1.3 Preview 6 Walkthrough Level 2
Level name: Deja Vu All Over Again
Two secrets.
I have been playing the Marathon games since 1995.
Eternity awaits...
Picking up from the end of the Marathon trilogy, you find yourself suddenly ninety-four years in the future, in the year 2905. You are on the S'pht moon K'lia, hanging in orbit over a desolate and ruined Earth. Clearly all is not well with this future, and once again you are the last hope for mankind. The people of this time say that nobody really won in the war with the Pfhor; but now, thanks to recovered Jjaro technology, a plan has been devised to make things right.
Paired with another sort of hybrid creature, the former Battleroid known as Hathor, you have been selected to venture back across time, one hundred and eleven years in the past to the U.E.S.C. Marathon. There, you and Hathor are to set in motion a plan that will alter the course of history and bring true victory to mankind. But things don't always go according to plan, and what begins as a mission to right history turns into an epic pursuit which spans not only the stars but also the centuries...
Somewhere In The Heavens... They Are Waiting
---
Bungie's Marathon was a landmark first-person shooter first released for the Macintosh in 1994 that introduced many new features and concepts to the genre, including vertical aiming in mouselook; dual-wielded and dual-function weapons; friendly NPCs; and a deep, intricate narrative. Bungie released the sequel, Marathon 2: Durandal, in 1995. It improved on the engine technologies, greatly expanded the scope of the series, and added further innovations to the genre, including actively panning ambient sounds; liquids and swimming; and versatile multiplayer modes such as King of the Hill, Kill the Man with the Ball, and cooperative play. In 1996, Bungie ported Marathon 2 to Windows 95 and released Marathon Infinity for the Macintosh, which included a new scenario using a modified Marathon 2 engine and, perhaps even more importantly, the tools used to build it: Forge and Anvil.
In the year 2000, Bungie released the source code to the Marathon 2 engine, and the Marathon Open Source project began, resulting in the new Marathon engine called Aleph One. Finally, in 2005, Bungie authorized free redistribution of the entire Marathon trilogy and all related files. This means that the entire trilogy can now be legally obtained for free and played on nearly any computer.
Негізгі бет 02. Deja Vu All Over Again
Пікірлер