Software:Ultrakill

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Short description: 2020 first-person shooter video game
Ultrakill
Ultrakill cover.png
Developer(s)Arsi "Hakita" Patala
Publisher(s)New Blood Interactive
Producer(s)Dave Oshry
Designer(s)Arsi "Hakita" Patala
Programmer(s)
  • Arsi "Hakita" Patala
  • PITR
Artist(s)
  • Andrei Mishchenko
  • Francis Xie
  • Victoria Holland
Writer(s)Arsi "Hakita" Patala
Composer(s)
  • Arsi "Hakita" Patala
  • meganeko
  • Keygen Church
  • Health
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows
ReleaseSeptember 3, 2020 (early access)
Genre(s)First-person shooter
Mode(s)Single-player

Ultrakill is a first-person shooter video game developed by Arsi "Hakita" Patala[1] and published by New Blood Interactive. It was released on Steam through Early Access for Microsoft Windows on September 3, 2020.[2] It can also be played as a free demo.[2] The game uses retro-style graphics and movement capabilities reminiscent of 1990s first-person shooters such as Quake and Doom.[2]

Gameplay

Ultrakill's gameplay takes place in a series of levels heavily inspired by Dante's layers of Hell. The game is divided into a prelude and three acts. Each act has three layers, the first two layers of an act contain four levels each, and the last only having two. The prelude contains one more level for a total of five. The last level of the prelude and any given layer is focused on a boss. The main antagonist and boss in the last level of every act thus far is the Archangel Gabriel.

The player has access to six weapons: a revolver, shotgun, nailgun, railcannon, rocket launcher, and an arm. Each of these weapons has multiple variants, and some have alternate forms (such as turning the nailgun into a sawblade launcher, or a slower, more powerful variant of the revolver, known as the slab revolver). The player can perform combos or do other stylish actions in order to build a style meter through several ranks (ranging from D-ULTRAKILL) through earning style points, similar to games such as Devil May Cry.[3]

A key game mechanic in Ultrakill is the ability for the player to regain lost health by absorbing the fresh blood of damaged enemies,[4] done by damaging or killing enemies while near them or performing a parry on certain enemy attacks with the Feedbacker arm or a precise shotgun blast. However, certain other mechanics can prevent or affect this, such as enemies covered in sand not bleeding,[5] or water diluting blood when an enemy is killed underwater, making blood easier to pick up, but reducing the amount healed. The recovery of health can be diminished by taking what is referred to as "hard damage", which temporarily reduces the maximum amount of health the player can have.[6] The duration for which the "hard damage" remains can be reduced if the player is playing stylishly (i.e., they have a style rank of Supreme or greater).

At the end of each level, the player will earn a letter grade rank from D to S in various categories (time, enemies killed, and total style points), which are then averaged to give an overall level rank. Completing a level without dying or reloading back to a checkpoint, and with an S rank in all three categories, will award the player with a P rank. This is the highest possible rank that can be achieved.

Most levels in Ultrakill contain hidden collectibles in the form of soul orbs[7] and include a challenge. Completing the challenge, finding all soul orbs, and getting a P rank, will reward the player by making the level appear gold in the level select menu. Upon full completion of an entire layer or act, their respective backgrounds will become gold as well.

Ultrakill has secret levels. These secret levels can be found on certain normal levels through secret exits. These levels deviate from the traditional Ultrakill gameplay and opt for a spin or riff on other video games and video game genres, namely horror games, puzzle video games, dating sims, Crash Bandicoot, and fishing.

Getting a P rank on every level within an act and prelude and locating a secret entrance will allow the player to enter the act's Prime Sanctum, with the next sequential Prime Sanctum needing the previous one to be cleared beforehand. Each Prime Sanctum contains a "Prime Soul", a soul whose sheer willpower and prominence gave them a physical form that does not require a vessel to manifest.[8] These Prime Souls are contained in a type of organic prison needing to be fought beforehand to fight the Prime Soul. These prisons are created by angels to trap these souls.[9] Obtaining a P rank on the Prime Sanctums is not required to progress to the next one. Prime Sanctums contain one or more bosses that are a drastic step up in difficulty compared to the other levels within the act, with the second Prime Sanctum additionally containing a gauntlet of enemies before the bosses, contrary to the first exclusively containing two bosses for the player to fight.

Ultrakill also features an endless mode called "The Cyber Grind", where the player fights randomized waves of enemies over a floating arena that randomly transforms after each wave. This mode awards the player points upon completion, which can be used to purchase weapon mods and custom colors at yellow terminals. The Cyber Grind's arena patterns, textures, skybox, and music can be altered by the player. After clearing a set amount of waves, players can set the Cyber Grind to begin at a designated wave instead of starting over from the beginning (for example, clearing wave 20 allows the player to start at wave 10).[10]

Plot

In the universe of Ultrakill, God has disappeared.[11] This results in The Council taking over Heaven in God's stead as an emergency reaction to the chaos spreading across Heaven. In addition, humanity has been rendered extinct[12] an unknown amount of time after the end of The Final War and the beginning of The New Peace. Technological advancements allowed the creation of machines able to use blood as fuel, which became a standard due to the abundance of blood during times of war. The player takes the place of V1,[13] a machine that remained in its prototype stage with the unique ability to absorb blood through contact, contrary to other machines needing to refuel manually.[14]

V1 descends through the layers of Hell in order to harvest the blood of the various creatures living there, driven by survival. Along the way, V1 battles deceased sinners known as Husks,[15] a variety of demons,[16] other machines also looking for blood, and a host of angels. Some angels were formed from human souls[17] (similarly to the Husks[18]), whereas others were born as angels[19] and are more powerful, such as Gabriel. V1 periodically duels a multitude of bosses, including V2, the successor of V1,[20] King Minos of the Lust layer encountered in the first Prime Sanctum of the Gluttony layer, and the Archangel Gabriel, appointed as the Judge of Hell.[21]

At the end of the first act, after his loss against V1, Gabriel is severed of his Holy Light[22] as punishment by the Council for a perceived lack of devotion. He is to be given back the Holy Light under the condition of proving himself worthy of it by killing V1. If Gabriel is unable to kill it, the absence of the Holy Light will kill him after 24 hours.

During the second act, V1 has a rematch against a grudgeful V2 in the Greed layer, finally killing its successor. It then battles both a Ferryman on his ship and the Leviathan, who sunk the aforementioned boat in Wrath. It then battles King Sisyphus of the Greed layer in the second Prime Sanctum of the Heresy layer.

Gabriel, now titled the "Apostate of Hate", faces V1 at the end of Act 2 but is defeated once again, experiencing an epiphany as to the nature of his faith, and leaving V1 with the promise of another rematch. Realizing the atrocities he had committed on their behalf and with only hours left to live, he kills the entire Council, sending a message to the people of Heaven. Act 2 concludes with Gabriel displaying the severed head of the last Council member to Heaven's occupants. The story is expected to be concluded in Act 3, with only the first of the last three layers having been released.

During the third act, V1 battles the Minotaur on its garden, and the Earthmover along with its defense system on a battlefield.

Reception

The game was praised for its movement mechanics and authenticity towards earlier arena shooters and first-person shooters.[3] Christopher Livingston of PC Gamer described Ultrakill as faster and "even more metal than Doom Eternal" and commended the game for its verticality.[23]

References

  1. Template:Cite twitter profile
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 "ULTRAKILL on Steam" (in en). https://store.steampowered.com/app/1229490/ULTRAKILL/. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 Walker, Alex (18 February 2021). "ULTRAKILL Is The Best Game You Should Definitely Be Playing" (in en-AU). https://www.kotaku.com.au/2021/02/ultrakill-is-the-best-game-you-should-definitely-be-playing/. 
  4. Tutorial (0-1): "Deal close range damage to douse yourself in FRESH BLOOD. THIS IS THE ONLY WAY TO REGAIN HEALTH."
  5. God Damn The Sun (4-2): "ENEMIES COVERED IN SAND WILL NOT BLEED"
  6. P-1: Soul Survivor Terminal (Tip of the Day): Parrying any enemy projectile or melee attack will fully replenish your health up to the Hard Damage limit.
  7. Tutorial (0-1): "Most levels have secret SOUL ORBS. Touch them to get a POINT BONUS."
  8. Minos Prime's Terminal Data. "A prime soul is an incredibly rare occurrence in which a soul amasses so much power that it no longer requires a physical form as a vessel to manifest physically."
  9. The Flesh Prison's Terminal Data. "Flesh Prison is an uncategorized organism created by the angels to imprison Minos' soul."
  10. Cyber Grind Terminal (Waves): "SELECT STARTING WAVE: (Highest reached wave must be at least twice as high)"
  11. Mannequin's Enemy Terminal Data: "During the departure of the angels after the Disappearance of God..."
  12. ULTRAKILL's tagline: "MANKIND IS DEAD. BLOOD IS FUEL. HELL IS FULL."
  13. ULTRAKILL's opening sequence: "MACHINE ID: V1"
  14. V2's Enemy Terminal Data: "The V model was built for war, with V1 boasting a new kind of exterior plating that allowed refueling through contact with blood rather than through a separate blood refueling process."
  15. Filth Enemy Terminal Data: "Husks are physical manifestations of the souls of the damned."
  16. Malicious Face's Enemy Terminal Data: "Demons are creatures born from the mass of Hell."
  17. Virtue's Enemy Terminal Data: "Lesser angels come from human souls, which are formed into abstract or animalistic shapes..."
  18. Virtue's Enemy Terminal Data: "The basis of a lesser angel's forming are quite similar to that of the Husks', wherein the physical manifestation of the soul is dependant upon its value..."
  19. Virtue's Enemy Terminal Data: "... making them distinct from the humanoid bodies of greater and supreme angels, who were created as such and are considered purer and placed higher on Heaven's societal hierarchy."
  20. V2's Enemy Terminal Data: "V1's planned production was cancelled and an updated model, V2, was developed instead..."
  21. Gabriel, Judge of Hell's Enemy Terminal Data: "...earning him the title of Judge of Hell after dethroning Minos and ending the Lust renaissance."
  22. In The Flesh (3-2) Cutscene: "Your treachery will not be tolerated. As punishment, the Father's Light shall be severed from your body. You have 24 hours before the last of its embers die out."
  23. Livingston, Christopher (13 June 2020). "Intense retro shooter Ultrakill is even more metal than Doom". PC Gamer. https://www.pcgamer.com/intense-retro-shooter-ultrakill-is-even-more-metal-than-doom/. Retrieved 23 August 2021.