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Destroy All Humans! | |
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Genre(s) | Action-adventure |
Developer(s) | Pandemic Studios(2005–2006) Locomotive Games(2008) Sandblast Games (2008) Black Forest Games(2020) |
Publisher(s) | THQ(2005–2013) THQ Nordic(2013–present) |
Platform(s) | PlayStation 2, Xbox, Wii, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Microsoft Windows, Stadia |
First release | Destroy All Humans! June 21, 2005 |
Latest release | Destroy All Humans! Path of the Furon December 1, 2008 |
Destroy All Humans! is an open worldaction-adventure video game franchise that is designed as a parody of Cold War-era alien invasion films. Destroy All Humans! is available for the PlayStation 2, Xbox, and Xbox One game consoles, Destroy All Humans! 2 is available for the PlayStation 2 and Xbox game consoles, Destroy All Humans! Big Willy Unleashed is available for the Wii game console, and Destroy All Humans! Path of the Furon is available for the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 game consoles (in Australia and Europe). The first game has been ported to PS4 being upscaled to 1080p, along with Destroy All Humans! 2.[1]
The two main protagonists of the series are voiced by J. Grant Albrecht and Richard Steven Horvitz, with the exception of the game Big Willy Unleashed, in which actors Sean Donnellan and Darryl Kurylo portray the characters. The musical score for the series is performed by composer Garry Schyman.
Setting[edit]
The games take place mostly on Earth where the Furon Cryptosporidium, also known as Crypto, is tasked by his superiors to gather Furon DNA locked inside human brain stems in order to save his race from cloning themselves to extinction. In Destroy All Humans!, Crypto's objectives also include investigating what happened to his previous clone. Destroy All Humans! 2 features Crypto hunting for revenge, after the KGB try to assassinate him and successfully destroy the mothership and his mission officer, Orthopox, as well as exterminating the Furons' enemy from the Martian War, the Blisk. Destroy All Humans! Big Willy Unleashed involves Crypto protecting Pox's new fast food chain using a giant robot mech disguised as the restaurant's mascot, called 'Big Willy'. Destroy All Humans! Path of the Furon is available on Xbox 360 (and PlayStation 3 only in Australia and Europe), and involves Crypto seeking enlightenment to help him stop a conspiracy that threatens the Furon empire. Destroy All Humans! takes place in 1959; Destroy All Humans! 2 takes place in 1969; Destroy All Humans! Big Willy Unleashed takes place in 1975; Destroy All Humans! Path of the Furon takes place in 1979.
Games[edit]
2005 | Destroy All Humans! |
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2006 | Destroy All Humans! 2 |
2007 | |
2008 | Destroy All Humans! Big Willy Unleashed |
Destroy All Humans! Path of the Furon | |
2009 | |
2010 | |
2011 | |
2012 | |
2013 | |
2014 | |
2015 | |
2016 | |
2017 | |
2018 | |
2019 | |
2020 | Destroy All Humans! (2020) |
Game | Metacritic |
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Destroy All Humans! (2005) | (Xbox) 76[2] (PS2) 74[3] |
Destroy All Humans! 2 | (PS2) 74[4] (Xbox) 74[5] |
Destroy All Humans! Big Willy Unleashed | (Wii) 53[6] |
Destroy All Humans! Path of the Furon | (X360) 34[7] |
![Destroy all humans path of the furon part 6 movie Destroy all humans path of the furon part 6 movie](http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-_XfkRprWwOI/Ulaa8mcHY5I/AAAAAAAAB6M/GPhSr_bzpLQ/s1600/Destroy+All+Humans+Path+of+the+Furon+Part+8+(Time+0_34_04;21).png)
Destroy All Humans! (2005)[edit]
In 1959, Cryptosporidium 137 first arrived on Earth to investigate the planet and search for his predecessor clone, Cryptosporidium 136, who disappeared in 1947 after Orthopox 13 sent him to Earth on a similar mission. Pox sends Crypto on a mission to harvest human brain stems (which contain Furon DNA due to an encounter between Furon warriors and humans in ancient times) to prevent his species from going extinct. To accomplish his mission, he must defeat Majestic, a shadowy government organization led by a black-clad figure named Silhouette. After accomplishing this, Crypto takes over the United States by posing as the President.
Destroy All Humans! 2[edit]
Ten years have gone by since Crypto defeated Majestic and took over the American government. Orthropox 13 has died after a Soviet nuclear missile destroyed the Furon mothership. Pox has downloaded his consciousness into a personal holographic projector designed to communicate between Furons on Motherships and planet surfaces. Pox's unit, dubbed a HoloPox, allows him to communicate with, advise, and vex Crypto down on Earth. Crypto 137 has died of unknown causes, but appears in Big Willy Unleashed and Crypto 138, a clone with pure Furon DNA harvested from human brains, has taken his place as the President. Crypto 138 is the first Furon in millennia to possess genitalia, as his pure DNA has not been corrupted by radiation. When the KGB destroy the mothership and Pox, Crypto must find a way to stop them from destroying what he has worked so hard on to achieve. Along the way, he is supported by Natalya Ivanova, a rogue KGB agent whom he constantly hits on. He also comes across the Blisk, the dreaded enemy that the Furons thought they defeated in the Martian War.
Destroy All Humans! Big Willy Unleashed[edit]
Big Willy Unleashed takes place after Destroy All Humans! 2. Crypto and Pox start a fast food restaurant that serves human meat from all the people Crypto has killed harvesting more Furon DNA. Later, their rival restaurant, Colonel Kluckin' (a parody of Colonel Sanders), discovers their secret, whereupon Crypto must protect the restaurant with the Big Willy mascot mech.
Destroy All Humans! Path of the Furon[edit]
Using the money earned from the Big Willy fast food franchise that Orthopox started in Big Willy Unleashed, Pox and his destructive Furon warrior minion Crypto have opened a 'family friendly' casino with which they use to obtain a steady financial income and human DNA. Crypto has lost his motivation because of the death of Natalya, and has forgotten what it means to destroy humans. He drinks too much alcohol, watches too much television, and has ultimately become lazy. Later Crypto is attacked by mysterious cyborgs called Nexosporidium Warriors, who arrive from his own planet, which frightens both Crypto and his commander Pox. Soon Crypto finds himself face-to-face with a conspiracy from his own homeworld that, if not stopped, could destroy his entire race. In the midst of all the chaos, Crypto hears a voice in his head, telling him to go to the city of Shen Long. Later, Crypto, while in Sunnywood, is shot in the neck, faints, and then wakes up in a Kung Fumonastery where he is greeted by a Furon martial arts expert known as The Master. The Master beseeches him to submit to his tutelage, and train in mind and firepower, to help him defeat these new threats. Now Crypto is about to go down the path to enlightenment, shape his own destiny, and uncover who is behind this frightening conspiracy.
Destroy All Humans! (2020)[edit]
The franchise intellectual property (IP) holder, THQ, went bankrupt on December 19, 2012 and its many IPs were subsequently sold off. On April 22, 2013, it was announced that in a $4.9 million deal with THQ, Nordic Games purchased the rights to Destroy All Humans! among other IPs.[8] On their official Twitter account the company claimed: 'We are thinking about what to do next with it.'[9] In June 2016, Reihard Pollice, Nordic Games' product development director and executive producer, stated, 'there are a few options we are evaluating now. Hope to get started on one of these soon.'[10] In late 2016, Destroy All Humans! and Destroy All Humans! 2 were ported to PlayStation 4 and upscaled to 1080p.[1][11] In 2018, Destroy All Humans! was ported to Xbox One in their backward compatibility catalog.[12] On June 7, 2019, THQ Nordic announced a remake of Destroy All Humans!, set for a release in 2020 for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One. The remake is in development at Black Forest Games and will feature content that was cut from the original release.[13][14]
A remake of the original game is set to be released in early 2020 for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 4 and Xbox One.[15] On June 7, 2019, a trailer was released for the remake at E3. The announcement was in the form of a music video of 'Ich will', a song by Rammstein released in 2001. In this video, the main character, Cryptosporidum 137 is shown hypnotizing and terrorizing the residents of Earth while singing the aforementioned song. Since then, gameplay trailers have been released, along with the official pages for the Destroy All Humans! franchise along with the web page for THQ Nordic updating to reflect the announcement of this remake. The official website links to Steam Gamestore and Amazon for purchase of the game. Amazon has listed prices, though, they are subject to change. The price for the standard edition is listed as $39.99, the DNA Collector's Edition is marked at $149.99, and the Crypto 137 edition is marked at $299.99. This will be the first appearance for the series on PC and is a reoccurring game for Xbox and PlayStation. The development team has spoken briefly on the game so far, stating that they want to keep this classic game close to its roots while updating it to a more modern feel. They are doing this by largely keeping the world space the same, and leaving all of the missions and main voice acting as it was in the original. They are, however, greatly improving the abilities, save system, combat, and overall gameplay experience. There is no set release date aside from the year 2020.
References[edit]
- ^ ab'Destroy All Humans! Game | PS4'. PlayStation. 2016-10-18. Retrieved 2017-01-16.
- ^'Destroy All Humans! Reviews'. Metacritic. Retrieved June 2, 2013.
- ^'Destroy All Humans! Reviews'. Metacritic. Retrieved June 2, 2013.
- ^'Destroy All Humans! 2 Reviews'. Metacritic. Retrieved June 2, 2013.
- ^'Destroy All Humans! 2 Reviews'. Metacritic. Retrieved June 2, 2013.
- ^'Destroy All Humans! Big Willy Unleashed Reviews'. Metacritic. Retrieved June 2, 2013.
- ^'Destroy All Humans! Path of the Furon Reviews'. Metacritic. Retrieved June 2, 2013.
- ^Hillier, Brenna (2013-04-23). 'Nordic, 505 Games make top bids for hot THQ properties'. VG247. Retrieved 2017-01-16.
- ^'Nordic Games on Twitter: '@Pro_CopperTail Yes, we own Destroy All Humans and we are thinking about what to do next with it.''. Twitter. Retrieved 2017-01-16.
- ^Arif, Shabana (2016-06-06). 'Nordic Games plans to 'get started' on a new Destroy All Humans! title'. VG247. Retrieved 2017-01-16.
- ^'Destroy All Humans! 2 Game | PS4'. PlayStation. 2016-11-29. Retrieved 2017-01-16.
- ^'More Original Xbox Games Coming to Xbox One Backward Compatibility'. Xbox. 2018-04-10. Retrieved 2018-04-26.
- ^McCaffrey, Ryan (7 June 2019). 'Destroy All Humans Remake Announced – E3 2019'. IGN. Retrieved 7 June 2019.
- ^Yin-Poole, Wesley (7 June 2019). 'The trailer for the Destroy All Humans! remake is certainly something'. Eurogamer. Retrieved 7 June 2019.
- ^Yin-Poole, Wesley (June 7, 2019). 'The trailer for the Destroy All Humans! remake is certainly something'. Eurogamer. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
External links[edit]
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Destroy All Humans! |
- Destroy All Humans! official website
- Destroy All Humans! series at MobyGames
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Destroy_All_Humans!&oldid=949939165'
.: December 1, 2008 (X360).: February 12, 2009.: February 13, 2009Mode(s),Destroy All Humans! Path of the Furon is an developed by American studio Sandblast Games and published. The game is set in the 1970s and is the fourth installment in the franchise. It was released December 1, 2008 in North America for the Xbox 360. Path of the Furon expands on the open world format of the previous Destroy All Humans! Games, with five open worlds on the ground and in the air to obliterate with weapons and alien powers.On November 26, 2008, the North American PlayStation 3 version was canceled citing 'development issues'.
However, the PlayStation 3 version was still released in Australia on February 12, 2009 and Europe on February 13, 2009 alongside the Xbox 360 release. Further information:Destroy All Humans!
Path of the Furon has over 30-story missions, 20 side quests, and multiplayer modes. As with previous games, most story missions can be played in a non-linear order. Creative director Jon Knoles stated that the side quests would be related to the story, would also be creative, and 'epic'. Knoles added that the achievements are tied to statistic tracking in the game, and they are unique to the weapons and abilities found, allowing the player to experiment with different possibilities.
For example, noted that when the player takes the 'Sunny' off of the Sunnywood sign they get a cutscene and one of the more creative achievements. There are also challenges and mini-games that the player can return to repeatedly to better their score and collect more rewards. There are five new open-world locations based on ('Las Paradiso'), ('Sunnywood'), ('), ('), and the home planet of the Furons itself, The 4th Ring of Furon. Multiplayer This game features split screen offline multiplayer.
Most challenges are player versus player, although one is co-op. The maps are scaled down versions of their single-player counterparts. The games are Ion Soccer, where players use their ion detonators to shoot a ball into each other's goals, Brain-O-Matic, where players PK humans into a machine that will extract their brains for processing, and Abductorama, basically a competitive game of 'keep away', in which the goal of the game is to abduct the ball, and keep it out of the reach of the other player until the player color fills up the bar, or get the bar filled up more than the other player and keep it like that until time runs out. There are no co-op single-player missions, nor can the player play through the story with co-op.Plot After the events of, 138 (Crypto) (J. Grant Albrecht) crashed his old saucer into the Space Dust casino in while drunk, perishing in the crash. His cohort 13 (Pox) clones Crypto 139, and they take ownership of the casino, which they use to maintain a steady flow of cash and human DNA.
They discover that the local mob seeks to gather information on them. Crypto defeats the mob, destroying their profits and taking control of the city.Soon he begins hearing an etheric voice beckoning him to the path of. As Crypto begins to discover the potential of his powers, strange creatures arrive and attack. Pox identifies them as Nexosporidium warriors (Nexos), who are supposedly extinct. In an act of desperation, Pox orders Crypto to destroy all of Paradiso to erase any evidence of their being there. Crypto reluctantly does so, and the pair flee to.
In Sunnywood, the duo assume Curt Calvin , leader of the Lunarian Church of Alientology, to be another DNA harvesting Furon on Earth. They stage an alien landing to draw Calvin out. Crypto confronts the cult leader and demands he show his true Furon form. A Nexosporidium walker appears and steps on Calvin, revealing he is actually human. After defeating the walker, Crypto is shot in the neck with a dart and faints.
Crypto converses with The Master.Crypto awakens days later in a ran by a Furon known as The Master. He reveals that one hundred years ago imperial traitors marked Emperor Meningitis, ruler of the Furon Empire, for death. He stopped the assassination, but was in turn marked for death.
Fleeing to Earth, he crash-landed off the coast of near the town of. He soon realized could help him improve his mental abilities, and so immersed himself in their culture. He built an academy and passed on knowledge to followers.
His apprentice, Saxon , became power hungry, forming a to oppose him. When Crypto next returns to the monastery, he witnesses Saxon kill the Master. He interrogates the villain at gunpoint amidst the sudden appearance of Nexos, and Saxon dies in the confusion.
Pox deduces that the Nexos have been cloned on Earth, and only one organization could accomplish such. They then set off for, home of the Francodyne corporation.Crypto infiltrates Francodyne's CEO Henri Crousteau's (a parody of ) mansion, but Crousteau escapes. Pox and Crypto learn Crousteau intends to create a virus to destroy the Furon DNA within the human genome. Crypto sets out to destroy his Nexo manufacturing operation. He causes a riot between the workers and destroys the Nexo laboratory.
However, Crousteau still manages to create the virus and sends four Nexo walkers to distribute it into the river. Crypto destroys the walkers and defeats Crousteau in a final battle at the Belleville tower. He learns that Crousteau only wanted to destroy his own race to stop the planet from being polluted, that he was feeding the Nexos synthetic DNA, and that he wasn't responsible for the attack on the casino. The Nexos that attacked were rogues responding to a signal from the Furon homeworld.
Crypto realizes that Emperor Meningitis is responsible. He and Pox set off for the Fourth Ring of Furon to confront the emperor.Upon arriving, Crypto immediately attacks the palace. Alchemy classic games. The emperor expels them from the city and erects a large shield. Pox and Crypto manage to deactivate it and re-enter the city. Pox reveals that since he once worked for the emperor, his biometrics are still in the system, allowing them to open the palace door.
Crypto and Pox download Pox's clone data from the imperial repository and clone Pox a new body, Orthopox 14. However the wrong mold is used, and Pox exits the machine with a appearance.
Pox informs Crypto they'll need a distraction, and to start a human riot in the artificial human habitat. As the riot ensues, Crypto confronts Meningitis, defeating him, but the emperor disintegrates from old age before he can be interrogated.The Master then reappears from the Jade Talisman Crypto inherited from him, revealing that he was the conspirator who set everything in motion and controlled the Nexos. The Jade Talisman was actually a cloning device used so that after Meningitis was defeated, he could become the new emperor. Crypto becomes infuriated and motions towards Pox to slam The Master against a wall, killing him.
Feeling defeated, Crypto tries a canister of synthetic DNA, but vomits at its horrible taste. Pox tells Crypto that as long as synthetic DNA cannot be stomached, their mission wasn't a sham. Crypto realizes that Pox is right, and decides to return to Earth. Pox then tells Crypto he isn't returning with him, and takes the throne. As Crypto walks out of the palace, the other Furons begin running in to greet their new emperor.Development The musical score is performed by composer. According to the game's creative director, Jon Knoles, there are approximately 15,000 lines of spoken dialogue in the game.
There is more back and forth banter between Crypto and Pox, interactive conversations, and more human minds to read. There are between 30 and 50 thoughts for each human in the game and about 2000 in total.Reception ReceptionAggregate scoreAggregatorScore34/100Review scoresPublicationScoreD3/103/102/104.5/104/10GameZone5/103/101/104.5/10Destroy All Humans! Path of the Furon received 'generally unfavorable' reviews, according to.Reviews of the in-game soundtrack fared generally better. GameZone said, 'The score still has that sci-fi feel with a heavy dose of '70s-styled and tossed in for good measure. Anthony, Gallegos (April 4, 2008). Archived from on July 18, 2012. Retrieved December 17, 2008.
Retrieved December 17, 2008. Goldstein, Hilary (February 2, 2007). Retrieved December 17, 2008. – THQ CEO Brian Farrell mentions work on the Destroy All Humans franchise for the 2008 fiscal year.
Gibson, Ellie (November 28, 2008). Retrieved November 29, 2008. Faylor, Chris (November 26, 2008). Retrieved December 22, 2008. Faylor, Chris (December 1, 2008). Retrieved December 22, 2008. Ahearn, Nate (April 4, 2008).
Retrieved December 17, 2008. ^ Goldstein, Hilary, Geddes, Ryan (April 1, 2008).
Retrieved December 17, 2008. Chester, Nick (April 7, 2008). Archived from on December 8, 2008. Retrieved June 25, 2008. Watters, Chris (April 4, 2008). Retrieved June 25, 2008.
^. Retrieved May 31, 2013. Hayward, Andrew (December 2, 2008). Archived from on January 9, 2014.
Retrieved January 9, 2014. Sterling, Jim (December 12, 2008). Retrieved January 9, 2014. 'Destroy All Humans!
Path of the Furon'.: 89. February 2009. Gibson, Ellie (February 13, 2009). Retrieved April 24, 2011. 'Destroy All Humans: Path of the Furon'. February 2009. Noble, McKinley (December 22, 2008).
Archived from on December 23, 2008. Retrieved January 9, 2014. Thomas, Aaron (December 9, 2008).
Retrieved January 9, 2014. ^ Valentino, Nick (December 9, 2008). From the original on December 18, 2008. Retrieved January 9, 2014. Geddes, Ryan (December 11, 2008). Retrieved January 9, 2014. 'Destroy All Humans: Path of the Furon'.
April 2009. Lewis, Cameron (December 1, 2008). Archived from on September 30, 2012. Retrieved January 9, 2014.
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