Atomic Heart

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Atomic Heart
Atomic Heart cover.jpg
Cover art
Developer(s)Mundfish
Publisher(s)
Director(s)Robert Bagratuni
Producer(s)Oleg Gorodishenin
Designer(s)Maxim Kolesnikov
Programmer(s)Andrey Dyakov
Artist(s)Artem Galeev
Writer(s)
  • Alexander Romashkov
  • Robert Bagratuni
  • Artem Galeev
Composer(s)
EngineUnreal Engine 4
Platform(s)
ReleaseFebruary 21, 2023
Genre(s)First-person shooter
Mode(s)Single-player

Atomic Heart is a single-player first-person shooter developed by Mundfish and published by Focus Entertainment and 4Divinity. The game was released for the PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Windows, Xbox One, and Xbox Series X/S on February 21, 2023. The game received generally positive reviews upon release. It has been the subject of controversy over its Russian links, following the country's ongoing invasion of Ukraine.

Gameplay

Atomic Heart is a first-person shooter video game with role-playing elements.[1][2][3] The combat consists of shooting and slashing with improvised weapons. A wide variety of enemies are featured, which may be mechanical, biomechanical, biological, and some of which are airborne. A crafting system allows the player to piece weapons together from metal parts that can be detached from robots or taken from household appliances. Weapons can be upgraded via a mechanic called "casettes". Ammo in the game is scarce, and there is a stealth option. Quick-time events are featured in the game.[4] The player wears a special glove, the Polymer Glove, which grants powers such as telekinesis, freezing, and electricity to defeat foes. Its powers can be combined with both melee and ranged weapons.

Ammunition can be upgraded with various elemental effects using "canisters". These canisters can be looted and crafted, and equipped by the player on both melee and ranged weapons. If the canister depletes, it is discarded from the player's inventory.

Plot

Setting

Atomic Heart takes place on the grounds of Facility 3826, the Soviet Union's foremost scientific research hub in an alternate history 1955. In 1936, scientist Dmitry Sechenov developed a liquidized programmable module called the Polymer, sparking massive technological breakthroughs in the fields of energy and robotics in the USSR and freeing much of the populace from manual labor. When World War II broke out, the Soviets quickly gained the upper hand, but just before Nazi Germany was defeated in 1942 they unleashed the Brown Plague virus, leaving millions dead and creating an international demand for Soviet robots to compensate for the resulting worker shortage. As part of the Soviet Union's post-war reconstruction programme, Dr. Sechenov created a wireless, networked artificial intelligence called "Kollektiv 1.0" that linked his robots together for greater efficiency.

Most recently, Sechenov developed the THOUGHT neuroconnector, a device that integrates Polymer into the human body and allows humans to remotely interface with robots. THOUGHT is to be released alongside Kollektiv 2.0, and Sechenov boasts that it will usher in a true post-labor era for the entire world.[5] However, Kollektiv 2.0's official launch on 13 June 1955 goes awry, plunging Facility 3826 into chaos.

Synopsis

Agent P-3 is a WWII veteran with memory problems. He is invited to assist in the rollout of Kollektiv 2.0 at Facility 3826, but he finds that robots massacred most human personnel. Sechenov explains that Petrov sabotaged the Kollektiv 1.0 node and asks P-3 to apprehend Petrov. With his AI partner CHAR-les (nicknamed "Charles") attached to his glove, P-3 must confront homicidal robots and failed biomechanical experiments while dealing with growing mental instability.[6]

P-3 tracks down Petrov and finds out that he is working with Filatova. Petrov flees and is apparently killed by a robot. Meanwhile, the Politburo grows suspicious about what is happening. Molotov, a member of the Politburo threatens to shut down Sechenov's "Atomic Heart" project. Charles explains to P-3 that Sechenov and the Politburo are in a struggle over who will control Kollektiv. Sechenov orders P-3 to intercept Molotov, but once P-3 makes contact, he blacks out and wakes up to find Molotov murdered.

P-3 finds Petrov, who rants about how Sechenov plans to enslave the world. He tells P-3 that the rogue robots had a combat mode installed beforehand. Petrov then gives P-3 a pair of rings and commits suicide. When Sechenov asks about the rings, P-3 lies, and concludes that Sechenov and the Politburo's "Atomic Heart" project involves distributing combat robots disguised as civilian robots to seize nuclear power plants. P-3 takes Petrov's head to a lab to extract his memories, but Filatova destroys the machine and knocks P-3 out.

When P-3 wakes up, Filatova reveals to him that Kollektiv is a means to mind-control people. Shocked, P-3 works with Filatova to find out the truth from Sechenov. In the lab, P-3 discovers that Charles isn't an AI, but the mind of Chariton Zakharov, Sechenov's friend and a fellow researcher presumably murdered by Sechenov. Using Zakharov's security clearance, they uncover more of P-3's past. P-3 learns that in order to fix his brain injury, Sechenov installed a Polymer implant, erasing memories of his deceased wife Ekaterina (whose memories have been implanted into Sechenov’s robotic ballerina bodyguards called the Twins), and giving Sechenov the ability to control him. Furious, P-3 decides to confront Sechenov.

However, P-3 blacks out again and wakes up in the care of his mother-in-law. She reveals that P-3 had killed Filatova while blacked out. At this point, P-3 can either choose to leave Facility 3826 or confront Sechenov, resulting in different endings.

If P-3 refuses to confront Sechenov, he destroys Charles and slips out of Facility 3826 and disappears, allowing Sechenov to continue with his plans to activate Kollektiv 2.0. Charles is shown to still be alive as a small mass of living Polymer and he manages to escape as well.

If P-3 chooses to confront Sechenov, he goes to Sechenov’s office. P-3 and Zakharov argue with Sechenov briefly before Sechenov orders the Twins to kill P-3. After P-3 defeats Sechenov’s guards, Sechenov draws a pistol but P-3 uses his glove to snatch it from him and shoots Sechenov in the gut instead. While lying bleeding on the floor, Sechenov reveals that Zakharov used P-3’s Polymer implants to cause his blackouts, killing Molotov and Filatova. P-3, now furious at Zakharov, attempts to rip him from his glove, but Zakharov electrocutes and incapacitates him before he escapes the glove in a form of gray goo. Zakharov reveals his manifesto as he jumps into a vat of red Polymer, transforming it into a massive, black humanoid. Zakharov picks up the wounded Sechenov and breaks his neck, killing him before fleeing and disappearing while P-3 presumably dies from Zakharov electrocuting him. When P-3 reawakens, he finds himself in a fantasy land of candy before one of the Twins descends upon him with an outstretched hand.

Development and release

Atomic Heart is developed by Mundfish, which styles itself as an international studio headquartered in Cyprus[7] and has offices in Moscow and Saint Petersburg.[8]

The team has previously developed the VR game Soviet Lunapark, but ceased development and delisted the game in late 2018 to focus on Atomic Heart.[9] The studio uses Unreal Engine 4 and was advertised to support Nvidia RTX and DLSS technologies for the GeForce RTX graphics cards.[10] However, RTX has not been implemented in the release version of the game. Mundfish stated that they will add the feature "post-launch", without giving any further details.[11]

In February 2022 a story trailer showed that Atomic Heart will launch in "#######BER", suggesting the game's release some time in Q4 2022.[12] However, later in November, it was announced that the game will be released on February 21, 2023,[13] published by VK Play in the CIS, co-published by 4Divinity from Singapore-based entertainment marketing group GCL in Asia,[14] and published by French-based company Focus Entertainment elsewhere.

Soundtrack

The game's soundtrack was written by Australian composer Mick Gordon, famous for his work for such videogame titles as Doom, Prey and Wolfenstein (The New Order, The Old Blood, The New Colossus).

Along with the original tracks created solely for the game, Atomic Heart also features popular Soviet songs and their remixes, including Arlekino by Alla Pugacheva, Trava u doma by Zemlyane, Kosil Yas' Konyushinu by Pesnyary and more.[15]

Controversy

Atomic Heart developer Mundfish has been accused of harvesting data of users based in Russia and providing it to Russia's security services. The developer has denied the allegations.[16][17][18] While Mundfish itself has no direct ties to Russian president Putin, its publisher and some of its investors do.[19]

Notable amongst the shareholders of Mundfish is GEM capital, the founder of which served as a Gazprom division director.[20]

The game has also garnered controversy in part due to its anticipated release date, which nearly coincided with the first year anniversary of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine and Defender of the Fatherland Day. Critics had questioned the timing of the release of a game featuring Soviet and Russian military themes. Mundfish claimed that the company is neutral in world affairs and "do not comment on politics or religion" and the studio is "is undeniably a pro-peace organization against violence against people".[16][17][18] The Ukrainian Ministry of Digital Transformation criticised the statement for its vagueness, saying "the developers of the game did not come out with a public statement condemning the Putin regime and the Russian invasion of Ukraine."[21]

Independent of this criticism, the game's music composer Mick Gordon released a statement condemning the war and donating his fee from the project to the Red Cross Ukraine Crisis appeal.[16][22]

Reception

Atomic Heart received "generally favorable" reviews for the PC version, while Xbox Series X and PlayStation 5 versions received "mixed or average" reviews, according to review aggregator Metacritic.[23][24][25]

IGN praised Atomic Heart for being "deeply ambitious, highly imaginative, and consistently impressive", though criticized its writing and "tedious" elements of gameplay, such as fetch quests.[2] PC Gamer called it "one of the oddest" AAA games. They felt it took primary influence from BioShock, but criticized its combat and progression system as inferior, while being conflicted towards the story and characters.[32] Similarly, Polygon felt that Atomic Heart failed to eclipse BioShock through its gameplay and attempts to tackle multiple themes at once.[35]

References

  1. Notis, Ari (21 de February de 2023). «Atomic Heart is twice as fun on easy mode». Polygon. Vox Media. Archivado desde el original el 23 de February de 2023. Consultado el 23 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  2. 2,0 2,1 2,2 Reilly, Luke (20 de February de 2023). «Atomic Heart Review». IGN. Archivado desde el original el 20 de February de 2023. Consultado el 20 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  3. 3,0 3,1 Iwaniuk, Phil (20 de February de 2023). «Atomic Heart review – hand in glove». PCGamesN. Archivado desde el original el 20 de February de 2023. Consultado el 20 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  4. Horti, Samuel; Prescott, Shaun (1 de November de 2022). «Everything we know about Atomic Heart». PC Gamer. Archivado desde el original el 20 de October de 2019.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  5. «Lore». Mundfish. Archivado desde el original el 24 de February de 2022. Consultado el 2 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  6. «P-3». mundfish.com. Archivado desde el original el 21 de February de 2023. Consultado el 17 de January de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  7. Palumbo, Alessio (2 de January de 2023). «Atomic Heart Final Q&A Part I – Mundfish Head Talks About DLCs, Delays, and Team Geographical Distribution». wccftech.com. Archivado desde el original el 17 de January de 2023. Consultado el 17 de January de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  8. «Ukraine wants ban on game allegedly funded by Russians and set in glorified USSR». ArsTechnica. 22 de February de 2023. Archivado desde el original el 9 de March de 2023. Consultado el 22 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  9. Feltham, Jamie (17 de December de 2018). «Soviet Lunapark VR Cancelled As Dev Doubles Down On Atomic Heart». UploadVR. Archivado desde el original el 7 de September de 2022. Consultado el 7 de September de 2022.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  10. Palumbo, Alessio (14 de January de 2019). «Atomic Heart Developer Q&A on NVIDIA RTX/DLSS, PvP Regions, Simultaneous Console Release and DLC». wccftech.com. Archivado desde el original el 11 de February de 2021. Consultado el 20 de October de 2019.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  11. Archer, James (20 de February de 2023). «Atomic Heart, ray tracing poster child, won't support ray tracing for PC on launch». Rock, Paper, Shotgun (en English). Archivado desde el original el 25 de February de 2023. Consultado el 25 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  12. Warner, Noelle (10 de February de 2022). «BioShock-inspired shooter Atomic Heart gets a new trailer, release window». Destructoid. Archivado desde el original el 7 de September de 2022. Consultado el 7 de September de 2022.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  13. Romano, Sal (2 de November de 2022). «Atomic Heart launches February 21, 2023». Gematsu. Archivado desde el original el 2 de November de 2022. Consultado el 2 de November de 2022.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  14. Mr Toffee (16 de December de 2022). «ATOMIC HEART WILL BE PUBLISHED BY ASIAN COMPANY 4DIVINITY». KAKUCHOPUREI. Archivado desde el original el 25 de February de 2023. Consultado el 26 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  15. «Atomic Heart's authors presented the first part of the soundtrack». PlayGround.ru. 20 de February de 2023. Consultado el 5 de April de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |lang= ignorado (ayuda)
  16. 16,0 16,1 16,2 Nightingale, Ed (17 de February de 2023). «Questions remain over Atomic Heart developer's Russian origins». Eurogamer. Archivado desde el original el 5 de March de 2023. Consultado el 22 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  17. 17,0 17,1 Gerblick, Jordan (27 de January de 2023). «Atomic Heart developer denies claims that it's harvesting data for Russian authorities». GamesRadar+. Archivado desde el original el 4 de March de 2023. Consultado el 22 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  18. 18,0 18,1 Wolens, Joshua (17 de February de 2023). «Why are people arguing about Atomic Heart?». PC Gamer. Archivado desde el original el 4 de March de 2023. Consultado el 22 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  19. Avery, Elise (24 de February de 2023). «Explaining the Atomic Heart Controversy & How It Connects to Russia's War in Ukraine». The Escapist (en en-US). Archivado desde el original el 3 de March de 2023. Consultado el 2 de March de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  20. Purdy, Kevin (22 de February de 2023). «Ukraine wants ban on game allegedly funded by Russians and set in glorified USSR». Ars Technica. Archivado desde el original el 9 de March de 2023. Consultado el 23 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  21. Purdy, Kevin (22 de February de 2023). «Ukraine wants ban on game allegedly funded by Russians and set in glorified USSR». Ars Technica. Archivado desde el original el 9 de March de 2023. Consultado el 23 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  22. Jiang, Sisi (15 de February de 2023). «Doom Composer Donates His Atomic Heart Fee To Ukraine After Russia Controversy». Kotaku. Archivado desde el original el 17 de February de 2023. Consultado el 17 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  23. 23,0 23,1 «Atomic Heart for PC Reviews». Metacritic. Archivado desde el original el 20 de February de 2023. Consultado el 20 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  24. 24,0 24,1 «Atomic Heart for PlayStation 5 Reviews». Metacritic. Archivado desde el original el 7 de December de 2022. Consultado el 20 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  25. 25,0 25,1 «Atomic Heart for Xbox Series X Reviews». Metacritic. Archivado desde el original el 24 de December de 2022. Consultado el 3 de March de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  26. Andriessen, CJ (21 de February de 2023). «Review: Atomic Heart». Destructoid. Archivado desde el original el 21 de February de 2023. Consultado el 21 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  27. Trinske, Connor (21 de February de 2023). «Atomic Heart Review - A Red Rapture». Game Informer. Archivado desde el original el 21 de February de 2023. Consultado el 21 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  28. Ramée, Jordan (20 de February de 2023). «Atomic Heart Review - Crispy Critters». GameSpot. Archivado desde el original el 20 de February de 2023. Consultado el 20 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  29. West, Josh (20 de February de 2023). «Atomic Heart review: "A messy game with big ideas that are in desperate need of refinement"». GamesRadar+. Archivado desde el original el 20 de February de 2023. Consultado el 20 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  30. Cunningham, James (20 de February de 2023). «Review: Atomic Heart». Hardcore Gamer. Archivado desde el original el 20 de February de 2023. Consultado el 20 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  31. Bindloss, Will (20 de February de 2023). «'Atomic Heart' review: back in the USSR». NME. Archivado desde el original el 1 de March de 2023. Consultado el 20 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  32. 32,0 32,1 Stanton, Rich (22 de February de 2023). «Atomic Heart review». PC Gamer. Archivado desde el original el 21 de February de 2023. Consultado el 22 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  33. Talbot, Ken (20 de February de 2023). «Atomic Heart Review (PS5)». Push Square. Archivado desde el original el 20 de February de 2023. Consultado el 20 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  34. Erskine, Donovan (20 de February de 2023). «Atomic Heart review: Rage against the machines». Shacknews. Archivado desde el original el 20 de February de 2023. Consultado el 20 de February de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)
  35. Moosa, Tauriq (26 de February de 2023). «Atomic Heart could have been the next BioShock». Polygon (en en-US). Archivado desde el original el 2 de March de 2023. Consultado el 2 de March de 2023.  Parámetro desconocido |url-status= ignorado (ayuda)

External links

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