All posts by Mr. X 2002

Software version updated until 2002. Analogue, not connected to the Internet and without the capacity to do so.

Army Men TV Tropes

What is TV Tropes?

TV Tropes (https://tvtropes.org/) is an online wiki that catalogs and analyzes “tropes”, the recurring narrative devices, patterns, or conventions found in various media, including video games, films, TV shows, books, and comics. Launched in 2004, it started with a focus on television but now covers all forms of fiction. Users contribute to create a dynamic database of tropes with examples and explanations.

What is a “Trope”?

A trope is a storytelling tool, like a cliché or pattern, used to convey ideas or structure narratives. Examples include the “Reluctant Hero” or “Evil Overlord.” TV Tropes documents these, showing how they appear across media, such as “Color Identified Factions” in *Army Men*, where factions are defined by colors like Green (good) and Tan (evil).

Purpose and Use

TV Tropes helps fans, writers, and creators understand narrative structures by breaking down stories into their building blocks. It’s a resource for analyzing how tropes are used or subverted and inspires creative storytelling. For this *Army Men* project, it provides detailed trope lists that can be considered when shaping the Toyverse.

Cultural Impact

Popular among fans and narrative enthusiasts, TV Tropes is known for its engaging, sometimes humorous style and interconnected structure, often leading users down a “rabbit hole” of related tropes. It’s a valuable tool for studying storytelling patterns and ensuring unique content creation.

This series has examples of:

    • Skilled Aviator: Captain William Blade. He’s basically the commander of the entire Green Army air force.
    • Increased Action Sequel:
      • Army Men was a real-time tactics shooter in an isometric view, that often saw you having to plan your next move carefully, as some areas were so fraught with enemy soldiers venturing into them would be suicide. The next game lessened the need for this, as little things, like having to account for soldiers hearing incoming mortars was removed, and rarely was it not beneficial to clear a map of enemies. Before long, the series shifted into a third-person shooter.
      • Zig-zagged regarding the third person shooter games. The “World War” series leans on the tactical side, with Team Assault in particular dramatically reduce soldier’s health, both you and your enemies side, while Sarge Heroes is often about charging, shooting, and dodging as lone soldier Sergeant Hawk, and Air Assault features a single helicopter force as the protagonist.
    • Spotlight Moment:
      • The Game Boy Color port of Sarge’s Heroes 2 (which functions as a completely different game compared to the console versions), Riff, Scorch and Vikki are the only playable characters, and they even have their own personal vehicles to ride.
      • Hoover also has a level dedicated to himself in Army Men RTS where he proves to be actually pretty good at leading a team.
    • Friendly Villain: General Plastro. He may be the bad guy, but at least he’s honest enough to admit it, as well as to compliment the enemy when they do well. This is best shown in the opening cutscene for the final level of Sarge’s Heroes, where he and several Tan troops get the drop on an empty-handed Sarge, only for Sarge to take out the troops by kicking a block at them. Plastro genuinely compliments and congratulates Sarge on his cleverness, admitting he didn’t even see it coming; however, when Sarge asks why Plastro doesn’t drop the gun and fight him one-on-one, Plastro straight up tells Sarge it’s “because I’m the bad guy.”
    • Spray Can Fire Thrower: An aerosol is one of the weapons you can get in the second game.
    • Time Period Mishmash: The game’s weapons and vehicles are a combination of those from World War II and The Vietnam War. For instance, the standard rifle is based on the M16 and the standard tank is based on the M48 Patton, both from the Vietnam War era, alongside Huey helicopters. However, there are also propeller fighter planes, half-tracks, and mass paratrooper drops that were either not used or phased out by the Vietnam War.
    • End of World Record: The Colonel’s final report before losing contact in Sector C-4 in the second game.
    • Cool but Inefficient: Hero Units in RTS. They do more damage than their normal counterparts and can usually take more punishment than them, but the lack of healing means that you need to be careful in how you use them, lest you lose out on a strong unit for the rest of the mission.
    • Tough Team: Bravo Company is apparently feared by the Tan army. In Green Rogue, the mere information that Bravo is going to be out of action for several weeks recovering from surgery is enough for the Tan to decide to launch an all out assault against Green positions, reasoning that Bravo was literally the only thing that could have stopped them.
    • Terrible Leader: Plastro, from punching out underlings that bring him bad news to actively plotting betrayal against allies for little reason other than that’s what bad guys like him do.
    • Villain Victory: Malice gets what he wanted in the end, to make Sarge suffer and destroy everything and everyone that he valued. The only mitigation is that Sarge is able to take revenge and, by the time it is all over, ultimately seems to regard Gooding with more pity than anger.
    • Main Antagonist: General Plastro for most of the series. Unless noted below, Plastro is often the overarching villain who is also never directly fought.
      • Major Mylar for Army Men 2.
      • The alien leader in Toys in Space.
      • Colonel Blintz in the RTS game.
      • Lord Malice in Sarge’s War.
      • Major Malfunction in the game of the same name.
    • Witty Post-Kill Remark: Blowing up tents in one level in Army Men 3D will cause Sarge to quip “Knock knock.”
    • Infinite Ammo: Most of the games tend to give your starting weapon infinite ammo, sometimes with a drawback (the M16 in the N64 Sarge’s Heroes games has a very slow rate of fire, the PS1 Sarge’s Heroes 2 makes it overheat when fired too much) and sometimes with an ammo-guzzling upgrade available (the BAR in the original two games, which trades the infinite ammo for a much higher rate of fire).
    • Scare-Induced Incontinence:
      • Implied with Hoover immediately after regrouping with him in Sarge’s Heroes:

      Col. Grimm: Do you think he can make it back to the landing pad on his own?

      Sarge: That’s a negative sir; moisture is imminent.

      Hoover: Aw, geeze!

      • A “You Lose” scene in Toys In Space depicts a Green soldier surrounded by Tan troops laughing at him while dropping his weapon and wetting himself.
    • Reinforcements Arrival: Air cavalry, to be exact. This is the role that Capt. Blade’s squad plays. He even wears an old cavalry hat.
    • Proud Evildoer: Plastro, especially in Sarge’s Heroes, knows he’s the bad guy, and he wouldn’t have it any other way. Lampshaded all throughout.

Sarge: Plastro! Why don’t you drop that gun and face me like a man?

Plastro: Because I’m the bad guy, that’s why!

Plastro: Burn it all, starting with [Bridgette’s] blasted Blue homeland.

Vikki: Plastro! How could you?

Plastro: Well, somebody’s not paying attention. I’m the bad guy!

    • Important Later Character: In Sarge’s War, Major Gooding, who is mentioned all of one time before the reveal.
    • Prove Innocence: Blade is forced to do this, after the actions under pretend traitor, and does it by delivering much needed supplies to besieged Green forces, and helping either Sarge or Vikki take out a Tan base.
    • Possessive Jealous Female: Bombshell really doesn’t like it when Capt. Blade flirts with Vikki.
    • Icy Marksman: Bullseye, the Bravo Company sniper introduced in RTS. He’s even called the ice man in the game’s manual.
    • Color Identified Factions: Every faction across the series. The four most common are Green being good guys, Tan being evil, Gray being, well, gray (in some games they’re allied with the Greens, in others they’re against everyone), and Blue being spies, typically allied with the Tans.
    • Resource Management System: Army Men RTS, natch.
    • Story Restart:
      • The last two games, Major Malfunction and Soldiers of Misfortune, have an all new plot and characters.
      • Sarge’s Heroes was a lesser case – it’s still the same setting, with the same war and even the same bad guy, but all of the other characters were newly-introduced; even Plastro had his characterization played up more compared to the slightly more serious villain he was in the original two games.
    • Scary Roaches: Starting with Army Men II, they start appearing in the real world. Due to the limited graphics of the PlayStation games, they can be downright horrifying.
    • Grimmer and Harsher:
      • Sarge’s War, to a large extent. Sometimes borders on parody of the gritty war hero type film.
      • Before that were the World War games, which played war is hell devastatingly straight.
    • Dry Wit Commentator: Sarge in the Sarge’s Heroes games, when he isn’t being a dutiful soldier. Captain Blade meanwhile is in snark mode 24/7.
    • Aerial Attack: One of the power-ups invoked from time to time.

Sarge: This is Sarge, I need an air strike, over.

  • Programmer Prediction: In the mission where Capt. Blade has to pick up a squad led by either Sarge or Vikki to blow up a radar station, picking Vikki while Bombshell is your co-pilot causes her to get really jealous, to the point she will actually ask you to pick Sarge.
  • Craven Traitor:
    • Hoover, the team’s minesweeper, looks like he wished he called himself a conscientious objector, and will retreat in RTS if he takes even a little damage.
    • Though Plastro has his moments of villainous bravery, suicidal or otherwise, when he’s captured at the end of Sarge’s Heroes 2 and Sarge threatens to punch his lights out, his reaction is to shout “not the face!” and immediately faint.
  • Depressing Conclusion: Army Men: Sarge’s War is pretty much this for the whole series. Bravo Company, Grimm and Vikki are melted, Lord Malice was Major Gooding all along, and Sarge feels empty inside after killing him.
  • Sudden Death Offscreen: Them, if you may. The aforementioned Sarge’s War has every named character and series mainstay since Sarge’s Heroes, except for Sarge himself, killed off by an explosion hidden in a peace monument orchestrated by Lord Malice, the new villain.
  • Bland Reaction: Tina Tomorrow is not the most expressive person.
  • Last Words of Affection: Vikki’s last words to Sarge in Sarge’s War.
  • Initial Entry Oddities: The first game lean towards a top-down tactical shooter where your soldiers can easily die. Furthermore, the tone is more sombre and the plot is minimal, and the sequel hook ending where your soldiers enter the real world is treated as a surprise. The second game took the “toy soldiers fighting in the real world” plot and ran, becoming a denser and wackier increased action sequel as the soldiers fight other toys and insects over kitchen counters and gardens.
  • Laser Armament: The aliens in Toys In Space use them. Sarge can even find a laser rifle, an upgrade to the auto-rifle and Vulcan gun.
  • Protect Task: These have been around since the first game, they range from barely an escort (being able to just order your men to hold while you kill everything along the way and/or the VIP being almost as badass as Sarge) to almost controller-breaking frustrating.
  • Villainous Cackle: Plastro is a fan of this, even when so badly injured from being used as a literal chew toy, twice, that he can’t stop coughing every time he tries.
  • Hero to Villain Switch:
    • Colonel Blintz in the RTS after quite literally losing his mind.
    • Major Gooding in Sarge’s War. He becomes Lord Malice after a mission where he is nearly killed and blames Sarge for leaving him behind, although Sarge couldn’t have known he was still alive given the amount of damage he took.
  • Alignment Flip-Flop: Bridgette Blue, and all of the blue nation really. They’ll work for whoever pays best, whoever isn’t trying to kill them, or even whoever currently suits their own agenda.
  • Imaginary Equivalent Society:
    • The Green Nation is Type I or “The Great” Eagleland.
    • The Tan Nation is a combination of common media belligerents such as World War II Nazi Germany, the Soviet Union, or Ba’athist Iraq, complete with something of a mix of Saddam Hussein (the face) and Fidel Castro (the name and build) as their leader General Plastro.
    • The Blue Nation is an analogue of the various French sides in WWII that works out as a villainous version of cheese-eating surrender monkeys – they have an extensive spy network, but they also work with the Nazi Germany analogue and are very quick to surrender.
    • The Gray Nation, in turn, ends up as a heroic version of the Vietcong, essentially North Vietnam’s guerrilla warfare expertise (usually) combined with the South’s loyalty to the USA analogue.
  • Pretend Traitor:
    • Captain Blade spends half of Air Attack 2 on the run, after being court-martialed and then breaking out of prison for his actions almost getting his wingmen killed.
    • Vikki pulls this briefly in Sarge’s Heroes after getting captured, as part of a honey trap.
    • Bridgette Bleu is revealed to be this in Sarge’s Heroes 2.

(Note: This modified version is based on the original content from the link below, with trope names rephrased and order slightly adjusted for originality while preserving all original information, quotes, and details intact. Please, consider check the original link below)

Sources for this article:

https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/VideoGame/ArmyMen

Embassies in other worlds

The Toyverse thrives on the belief that every toy has a soul, a tiny spark of magic. So in the Real World, the world that ties all toys to a common origin, is so bigger that contains a few “embasies” from the other worlds, officially recognized by some toykinds and some of this worlds. So if any toy stranded in the Human World in need of help, like a discarded action figure or a half-buried dinosaur, now toys know that they have an embassy to allocate and obtain any help they need.

The Prehistoric Domain:
  • Here, the grassy plains echo with the roars of plastic dinosaurs. Tiny T-Rexes chase after elusive triceratops, while pterodactyls soar above the sandbox cliffs. This is the Real World prehistoric embassy for Prehistoric animals.
The Jurassic Valley:
The Medieval Enclave:
  • Within the shadow of Camelot Castle, toy knights don their plastic and metal armor. Big noble steeds, wooden rocking horses, gallop soaring across the plains (without moving anywhere). There, next to the Round Table, is the embassy. Sometimes King Arthur himself passes by to talk to the toys in need.
  • Dragons, crafted from green felt and googly eyes, guard treasure chests filled with marbles and shiny buttons, used for the embassy fortifications.
The Cosmic Expanse:
  • In the outer space from the Real World, The Great Plastic Meteor floats in a stable orbit. A space station has been set up there that serves as a space port for toys.
  • Astronauts (action figures or other toys with makeshift helmets) embark on daring missions. Sometimes their rocket ships, constructed from cardboard tubes and glitter, blast off toward the ceiling, exploding into a thousand pieces… because of course, if they do not hit the ceiling, as soon as they reach a considerable height they dismantle with the high speed of winds. But sometimes, and only sometimes, a toy is smart enough to build a resistant and aerodynamic rocket that allows them to reach the upper atmosphere to put their spacecrafts into orbit.
  • The Alien figurines that populates The Great Plastic Meteor station, with wiggly arms and neon-green skin, communicate in cryptic beeps. But they exchange intergalactic stickers as tokens of friendship.
The Underwater Abyss:
  • Beneath the bathroom sink of the former Lord Malice’s HQ household, lies the mysterious Underwater Abyss embassy. Rubber duckies double as submarines, exploring the depths of the porcelain to find the way to the open sea.
  • There, on the coral reefs (made from discarded sponges) shelter schools of plastic fish, lies the underwater embassy. It is guarded by a well-known superhero action figure who is in charge of toy rescues and a large fleet of Army Men submarines that patrol the perimeter.
  • There elusive red haired Mermaid Chickz occasionally surfaces, combing her hair with a toothbrush.
The Toybox Nexus:
  • The heart of the Toyverse (the Toybox Nexus) connects all these realms. It’s a swirling vortex of imagination, where forgotten toys gather to share stories.
  • Here, a wind-up robot dances with a plush teddy bear, and a RC car races against a wind-up snail. The Nexus thrums with creative energy and it’s the place where all those toys that are left halfway through an interdimensional journey go, whatever the reason for this happening is.

Heroes may die, but plastic lasts forever. By Zoey Handley – destructoid.com – including some words from Michael Mendheim – Jun 27, 2021

Original source

https://destructoid.com/sarges-war-eulogy/

Army Men: Sarge’s War: The eulogy for an entire series

It’s a complicated subject, the Army Men series. The 3DO Company released somewhere in the realm of 25 games between 1998 and 2002. When you consider some of the ports were made from the ground up and entirely distinctive to the platform they were released on, the actual number of unique games is probably around 35 or more. I’m sure you can already see the problem.

Army Men Vikki Dead
Army Men Sarge’s War Vikki Dead

“The problem was with all the early success of these Army Men games, the executives at 3DO thought they could ship an Army Men game (or bundle) every quarter and be successful,” Michael Mendheim, creative director of Battletanx and the Sarge’s Heroes subseries, told me. It’s obvious. The output was stunning, putting even history’s most prolific market spammers, like Guitar Hero, to shame. What started as a promising series with a few hits on its hands quickly declined into one that was treated with scorn and derision by players and the press.

The result is that the Army Men games are poorly remembered. I’ve previously compared the series to a shotgun blast: a sudden and abrupt spread, sometimes causing a lot of agony. Few mourned the loss of the franchise, but I still visit to place flowers on its grave.

Col Grimm dead
Army Men Sarge’s War Col Grimm dead

The 3DO Company was founded by Trip Hawkins, who previously founded Electronic Arts years earlier. Hawkins dreamt of a console that would become the universal medium for games. Licensing fees would be almost non-existent, so developers and publishers would jump aboard with little risk, abandoning frontrunners Nintendo and Sega. Hawkins left EA to pursue this dream, but by 1996, the 3DO Interactive Multiplayer flopped under the weight of FMV game ports, and the company had to pivot to purely making software. Hawkins even took on a creative role to help out his teams.

Army Men started out quietly enough in 1998. The first game on PC, merely titled Army Men, was a reasonable success. Early the next year, Army Men II came out alongside a PlayStation remake of the first game called Army Men 3D. Again, these were pretty successful. By the end of 1999, however, a second PC title, Army Men: Toys in Space, the 3D action title Army Men: Sarge’s Heroes, and the top-down helicopter game Army Men: Air Attack were all released. Five titles in its second year, and the snowball had only just begun rolling.

Riff dead
Army Men Sarge’s War Riff dead

That’s where Michael Mendheim comes in. In 1998, he was creative director on Battletanx, which was a hit for 3DO. He was then given creative license on his own Army Men title and envisioned a character-driven game with more of a story, and that became Sarge’s Heroes.

Once again, Sarge’s Heroes was a hit. If I can wade into the story for a moment, it’s where I was introduced to the series, and it’s one that still holds a place in my heart. It had its rough spots, but a lot of its design, especially when it came to its levels, was fantastic. I remember following it through Nintendo Power up to its release and playing the hell out of it.

While I’ve trudged through a great deal of the Army Men series since then and could give you the full and detailed history, that’s quite a detour. We’re going to hurry the story along here.

Scorch dead
Army Men Sarge’s War Scorch dead

The important fact is that not only did the quality of Army Men titles start to plummet almost immediately, but the public’s appetite for the games declined just as fast. I’d say that the four PlayStation Army Men: World War games are pretty consistent fun, but by the release of the last two titles, the press was practically ignoring them.

It became something of a laughing stock. In 2001, Portal Runner was released to harsh reception. After a particularly scathing review in Gamepro Magazine, Trip Hawkins even went as far as writing to the Editor-in-Chief to defend the title in an almost comical fashion. He described the staff as “angry young men” and threatened to reduce their advertising. I can understand him wanting to defend his creation, but the letter wasn’t a good look.

Around 2002, the pace of releases from 3DO had slowed and the writing was on the wall. “We already had a round of layoffs; everyone was nervous about the company’s future,” said Mendheim. He had a team working on a game called Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. “It was an edgy, gritty, post-apocalyptic nightmare, based on the Book of Revelation.” Mendheim also believed this to be the best chance at saving 3DO, but it wasn’t to be. “I was called into a meeting and told that I could keep a small team working on Horsemen but everyone else, including myself, would need to make another Army Men game. That Army Men game would be Sarge’s War.”

Thick dead
Army Men Sarge’s War Thick dead

Sarge’s War would be the last 3DO developed Army Men game, put together in haste as the company took on water. “Honestly, it was like developing the game on the Titanic and it took 9 months for the ship to sink,” described Mendheim.

If you’ve played Sarge’s War, you may have been stricken with how tonally different it was from previous games. The series’ standard features were there, but a lot of the color was washed out of it. In its place was a grittier veneer, even over its more cartoonish elements. The entire supporting cast of the Sarge’s Heroes sub-series–all of them–were killed in an explosion, sending Sergeant Hawk into an avenging rage.

This was the sound of a series dying. There are plenty of franchises that have disappeared from the face of the planet, never to be heard from again. Jazz JackrabbitTop GearF-Zero; there are many easy examples of games that have just…gone away. Sarge’s War was a game on its deathbed, one last defiant scream before the embrace of oblivion. It was a deliberate move to put the final nail in the coffin and bring closure to the series.

Hoover dead
Army Men Sarge’s War Hoover dead

I think Michael Mendheim put it best. “There are certain games that you just put your heart and soul into because you love the content, they are your babies. Sarge’s Heroes was one of those games for me. Every character in the game was developed with love and passion. Sarge’s Heroes was fun, positive, and hopeful. It was a game that made you laugh and feel some magic.”

Sarge’s War was the opposite of that. It was grim and dark. The story in Sarge’s War was about loss. Losing everything that you love and care about. In the plotline, the entire cast and crew – Sarge’s Heroes died with 3DO. Everyone except for Sarge.”

“When I killed off Sarge’s Heroes, I also killed my desire to ever design another Army Men game. I designed the first and last game in the Sarge’s Heroes product line.”

By the end of development, 3DO had already breathed its last, and Sarge’s War wound up getting released by Global Star Software, a subsidiary of Take-Two and the new home of the Army Men license. Some sources credit Tactical Development for completing the game, but according to Mendheim, “Our orders were to finish the game and that is what we did…the game was delivered completed as the ship went down.”

Shrap dead
Army Men Sarge’s War Shrap dead

In comparison to the Army Men games that came before it, Sarge’s War was less rickety. It’s obvious that some of 3DO’s best remaining talent had worked on it, though under less than ideal constraints. It doesn’t reach the height of the series, but knowing the story behind it underlines it with melancholy. It’s a surreal experience.

“There are no bad guys in this story; everyone did their absolute best to try and keep the company alive,” explains Mendheim. “No one sets out to make a bad game. No one worked harder than Trip Hawkins, who even put his own money on the line to try and save the company. Unfortunately, not every story has a happy ending.”

Global Star made a token effort at continuing the Army Men series. Their first attempt was Team 17’s Army Men: Major Malfunction in 2006, which I’ve previously covered, and it’s awful. Later they’d try another reboot with Army Men: Soldiers of Misfortune in 2008, which is similarly terrible. There was a mobile game for pre-smart phones, and then that’s it. Aside from a few re-releases, the series has been left to rest peacefully.

Army Men: Sarge's War Hawk
Army Men: Sarge’s War Hawk

Whether or not it deserved that fate is a matter of opinion. On one hand, it was unwise and intrusive to flood the market with those titles. Releasing games of questionable quality to bank on a brand should never be commended. But on the other hand, they weren’t without merit or appeal. The best games were just buried under the worst. It could have been straightened out. It didn’t have to end this way.

Or, as Michael Mendheim put it: “I always look back at my time at 3DO and think what could have been if we had managed the brand better by releasing only one Army Men game a year and each year releasing a different type of Army Men game with cool innovations and game mechanics…maybe, just maybe Army Men and 3DO might still be alive.”

The Making Of: Army Men – RetroGamer magazine. May 16, 2019. By Hareth Al Bustani

Exclusive interview with Trip Hawkins and Keith Bullen

During the mid-to-late 1990s, as video games began branching out beyond traditional genres, a surprisingly simple idea sparked the birth of one of gaming’s most memorable franchises. That spark was to bring the iconic green plastic toy soldiers (the Army Men) to digital life. What followed was a mix of action, strategy, and tongue-in-cheek satire that would grow into a universe of its own: the early foundations of what we now call the Toyverse.

The project emerged from The 3DO Company, founded by industry pioneer Trip Hawkins, who had already changed gaming history with Electronic Arts. At that time, 3DO was primarily focused on software development and searching for its next big concept… something that could blend strategy, humor, and accessibility. The result went far beyond expectation, shaping not just a game, but a world of plastic warfare and nostalgic imagination.

Origins of the Idea

It all began in 1996, when Keith Bullen, an art designer from Electronic Arts, was hired by 3DO to direct the visuals for a new project, then tentatively called War Sports. The goal was to create something in the spirit of Return Fire, 3DO’s popular vehicular shooter, but with stronger squad-based mechanics. Marketing wanted an “E for Everyone” rating, an idea ironically tied to the ESRB system that Trip Hawkins himself had helped establish.

“I remember various marketing meetings when ideas like green blood and making the soldiers robots were brought up as ways to get the game a friendly rating. I didn’t like any of these ideas.” – Keith recalls

Army Men Plastic Soldiers
Army Men Plastic Soldiers

Months passed without a clear direction, until Bullen had a eureka moment. He thought back to his childhood days, setting up tiny armies in the backyard and taking turns throwing rocks with his brother to knock them down. That memory (of creativity, chaos, and fun) became the emotional core of Army Men.

The toy soldiers had long been a universal symbol of imagination. From the Louis Marx playsets of the 1950s to Toy Story in 1995, these little green figures had stood the test of time. By centering the game around them, Bullen found a way to capture both nostalgia and originality, something fun for players who wanted a break from the gritty realism and machismo of other war games.

Army Men PC
Army Men PC (1998)

Building the Plastic World

Once the toy soldier idea took hold, Keith’s role evolved from art director to lead designer.

“Once the soldiers became plastic, we had to come up with a universe with real terrains and plastic soldiers,” he says. “We wanted the world to feel serious to the Army Men characters’ point of view but fun and nostalgic for the player.”

The team paid careful attention to the way plastic behaved in real life, how light hit its glossy surface, how it bent, shattered, and melted.

Green Army Men flamethrower

“We paid close attention to the physics in the animations. It was very important to me that the plastic pieces reacted to the world as if they were made of the same light plastic as the original figures.”

But turning that idea into a finished product wasn’t easy. The small team of six soon grew to more than ten as Bullen became creative director.

“It was very challenging convincing the team to adopt my new gameplay ideas… It took several months to finally get everyone on board.”

Executives were another obstacle. Early pitches for Army Men were dismissed as childish, “too young” some said. RTS fans, they argued, wouldn’t take seriously a game about toys. Yet Bullen persisted, finding clever ways to win people over.

Green Plastic Soldier
The “bought” generic soldier 3D model

“I then bought a 3D model of a generic Army Man and brought in some classic toy green and tan Army Men to use as pose references,” he remembers.
“For several weeks, many people from every department in the company would stop to discuss the posed 3D model… Soon after, the momentum switched from the product being perceived as too juvenile to being an awesome nostalgic experience.”

Sarge with rolled up sleeves, a modified version of the original 3D model

That was the turning point. Nostalgia had done its job.

From the Backyard to the Battlefield

The next challenge was translating the tactile world of toy soldiers into an interactive one. The developers recreated classic units like riflemen and bazooka troopers, while experimenting with how plastic would melt or break apart.

“We destroyed many plastic Army Men in the 3DO parking lot for the sake of realistic plastic physics,” Keith admits.
“The enhanced fear of fire when you are made of plastic was a theme we relied on throughout the series.”

To tie everything together, Army Men adopted a satirical tone. The game opened with a mock newsreel showing the totalitarian Tans preparing to invade the Greens.

Army Men News reel Introduction
Plastro from Army Men
The Mussolini Tan leader

“We watched many hours of authentic old reels… The Tan leader gesturing like Mussolini was one of my favourite segments.”

Originally planned as a real-time strategy game, Army Men evolved into something more direct and personal. Players would take control of Sarge, a Green Army hero.

“I’ve always preferred arcade-like action games over strategy games,” says Keith.
“So I redesigned the game around the central character of Sarge… as in games like Ikari Warriors.”

The final product blended tactical movement with fast-paced action.

“The gameplay became more about tactics, rather than strategy,” Bullen notes, crediting Crusader: No Remorse as an influence.

Trip Hawkins’ Perspective

One of the concept’s earliest champions was 3DO founder Trip Hawkins himself.

“Toy soldiers were my dominant play pattern as a child and I’d always invented strong storylines and adventures around them,” he says.
“Besides all the World War soldiers, I had Swoppets from the Wars Of The Roses, Roman centurions, and others – including cowboys, of course.”

Hawkins immediately recognized the blend of nostalgia, humor, and design potential behind Army Men.

“It inspired me to do something more central with humour in the genre and a stronger narrative.”

To him, the plastic theme wasn’t just an aesthetic choice: it was a creative platform.

“We were focused on the US market… nobody cared about them, because they’d not grown up with those toys.”

Despite the game’s playful tone, Hawkins insisted that warfare and destruction were essential to the experience.

“Creatively, we also wanted to have fun repeating some of the famous play patterns from childhood… It allowed us to cast our villains with a bit of sadism, that is still funny because… they’re just toys.”

Colonel Grimm and Sarge from Army Men
Colonel Grimm with Sarge

A Legacy Beyond Plastic

The development cycle lasted just over a year, despite several restarts. Once the formula clicked, Hawkins knew they had something special.

“This is what we live for in game development and publishing… to do something we really believe in and love.”

Across three themed terrains (desert, alpine, and swamp) Army Men culminated in a memorable twist: Sarge crossing into the Real World, a scene that would directly lead into Army Men II. The franchise quickly exploded, selling over 7 million copies across every major platform and generating more than $300 million in revenue.

The Greenville News
The Greenville News 01/29/1998

Looking back, Bullen reflects on the impact of that first title:

“I never would have imagined that it would spawn 23 sequels and spin-offs… My goal was to create a game that I would want to play and not a clone of a game I had played before.”

The Green Star
The Green Star 01/29/1998

Indeed, Army Men defied easy classification. It was part shooter, part strategy, part parody… a digital sandbox that reimagined childhood battles through the eyes of living toys. Beneath the surface, it captured something universal: the creative spirit of play itself.

From Sarge’s Heroes to the ever-expanding Toyverse, the legacy of those little plastic soldiers continues to march on.

Army Men PC inside
Sources for this article:

Original source: Retro Gamer (2019), “The Making Of: Army Men” by Hareth Al Bustani.
https://www.pressreader.com/uk/retro-gamer/20190516/281672551382117
Edited and adapted for armymen.com.ar

Behind the scenes: Army Men: Major Malfunction

Original sources:
  1. Team17 source: https://www.team17.com/team17s-100-games-part-nine-2005-2006-lemmings-worms-army-men

This proves that canonically, Sarge died.

The first very revealing article was Team17’s recalling history of their first 100 games, when celebrating the release of game number one hundred, PLANET ALPHA. In this chapter, they’re heading to 2005 & 2006, a time of both 2D and 3D Worms games and their first foray into work-for-hire projects on both Lemmings and Army Men.

In an unexpected twist, Team17 was granted creative freedom while working on the Army Men franchise. This allowed them to introduce a new main character and even eliminate the recurring character, Sarge, in the opening sequence. This bold move highlights the unique creative liberties Team17 enjoyed during the development process. You can read the complete article in: https://team17.com

1. Team17’s 100 Games – Part Nine: 2005-2006 (Published: Nov 7, 2018)

(…)

48/100
Army Men: Major Malfunction

Army Men Major Malfunction
Year: 2006 | Developer: Team17 | Publisher: Global Star | Format: PlayStation 2, Xbox

When Team17 was founded in 1990 it was entirely possible, thanks to open platforms like the Amiga, for a small group of programmers and artists to make and release their own game. But times changed. As next generation consoles took over, team sizes grew and budgets ballooned. Releasing a game was virtually impossible without publisher support and this meant you had a limited number of ways to get a game made. Either own a best-selling IP or develop for somebody else’s. In this climate, Team17 found itself pitching to publishers for “work-for-hire” projects. Sometimes this led to us working on a game like Lemmings, other times it led to Army Men: Major Malfunction… Perhaps the most surprising game in our entire history.

Recruited to Team17 after a 10-year stint at Rare, Gavin Hood found himself in command of the Army Men project and worked on the pitch. “I had literally only joined the company a few months before and was sitting opposite the head of design,” says Hood. “I remember most of the designers were working hard on a Worms title as it neared the end of production so I was asked to come up with something to pitch. I guess it went okay because we got the deal and I got the chance to lead it.”

Working on someone else’s franchise, you’d think that the publisher would have final say on any creative decisions but actually, as Hood explains, Team17 were given free rein on Army Men and even got away with a few unexpected choices. “We wanted to use a different main character to many of the other Army Men games and not only did we not meet resistance to this, but we even microwaved recurring main character Sarge in the opening sequence to set up the introduction of our own character. I’m actually proud that we were able to melt a series character in the opening of a game and everyone concerned be okay with that!”

Major Malfunction Huey
Army Men Major Malfunction Huey Helicopter

Every game has its unique challenges and for Army Men it was designing a 3D world in the era before off-the-shelf game engines made the process more streamlined. “The programmers wrote a set of tools that, because of the limited time we had, were made to work on development kits using the Xbox Controller,” Hood explains. “We had to place enemies, assign A.I. to them and set their patrols all using an Xbox Pad, even the cutscenes were done in the same way. Using those tools was a nightmare but the advantage was we could throw a load of stuff into a level and just hit play. It was awful to use with a pad but the speed at which we could test ideas and get something into each of the environments is probably the only reason we hit deadlines.”

Army Men Major Malfunction WIP
A WIP CG animation from the Escape From Precinct 17 mission

“It was an interesting game to work on,” concludes Hood. “I remember having grand ideas about what the game would end up being and although it might not have exactly reached those heights there are some things I think we got right. There are a lot of pop culture references in there that I still think we handled well .” Even the subtitle, “Major Malfunction”, was a reference to a line from Stanley Kubrick’s Full Metal Jacket!

“Looking back, the game obviously wasn’t a masterpiece but everyone on the team got everything done in a very short development time with makeshift tools! It probably won’t go down as Team17’s finest hour or be the game I’m proudest of, but I did at least get to buy a lot toy soldiers and put them all over the office!”

(…)

How 3DO Creates Video Games – By: Jeff Tyson

Article from howstuffworks.com – Nov 17, 2008

Original source

https://electronics.howstuffworks.com/3do3.htm

3DO is one of the top video game companies in the U.S. with dozens of popular titles. Go behind the scenes and learn how 3DO creates a new game!

Lots of us play video games. In fact, the number of people playing video games only seems to increase — the number of consoles in American homes exploded in 2007, rising more than 18 percent [source: Cheng]. If you’ve played video games before, you may have wondered what goes into making them. You may even want to get into the business yourself. Here are some of the questions that you may be wondering about:

  Where do game ideas come from?

  • How many people are involved in making a game and what do they do?
  • How is a game developed?
  • How does a game get to my local store?

The video game industry, like most technology, moves quickly and rarely looks back. It seems like every few years brings a fresh new batch of video game consoles, each vying for a place at the top of every gamers’ heart. And over the years, gaming has become enormously popular all over the world, bringing in more than $1 billion in revenue and even surpassing the music industry in retail sales [source: Fritz].

To understand the entire process of video game development, we went to the folks at The 3DO Company. Also known as simply 3DO, the company was both a console developer and a third-party publisher of video games, with several titles for the Nintendo 64 and other game consoles, as well as PC and Mac computer systems. 3DO was founded in 1991 and released the 3DO Interactive Multiplayer (also known as simply the 3DO) in 1993. After poor sales and reception, the company dropped the console and shifted focus to developing video games (similar to what Sega currently does for the Nintendo Wii). 3DO declared bankruptcy in 2003, however, and no longer makes video games.

When 3DO was still around, we followed the development of Portal Runner, a game 3DO made for the Nintendo 64. In the process, we looked at the development of the game itself, as well as ­the process of getting a game off the ground and onto the shelves. On the next few pages, you’ll learn about basic game technology, how an idea is developed and how a game is distributed.

Where the Game Comes From

All games start with an idea. But where that idea originates can be traced to one of several sources:

  • An original concept presented by an employee
  • An original concept pitched to the company by an outsider
  • A sequel to an existing game
  • A spinoff based on a character from an existing game
  • A game based on an existing character or story (such as movie, TV or comic characters)
  • A simulation of another game medium (such as board games and card games)
  • A game targeted to a specific demographic
  • A simulation of a real world event
  • A game designed to take advantage of a specific game platform (such as the Internet or an advanced interactive game system).

Once the idea is accepted by the company as a viable game, then a preproduction team is assembled to begin developing the idea into a fully realized game. How the game develops depends greatly on what type of game it is. The story line and design of a game based on an existing movie or comic character are going to be much more restricted than those for a completely original game concept. Likewise, a simulation based on a real world event, such as a baseball game, usually has definite boundaries in what can be done.

Video games can be vastly different from one another. And while there is a huge variety of games available, most fall into certain broad categories:

  • Sports (Madden NFL, Tony Hawk)
  • Strategy/Role-playing/Adventure (Zelda, Final Fantasy)
  • Fighting (Mortal Kombat, Soul Caliber)
  • Puzzle (Tetris)
  • Shooter (Halo, Call of Duty)
  • Platform (Super Mario Brothers, Sonic the Hedgehog)
  • Racing (Mario Kart, Tokyo Xtreme Racer)
  • Conversion (American Arcade Pinball, Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?)

Of course, a lot of games include aspects from more than one of these categories, and a few games are in a category all their own.

In the case of Portal Runner, 3DO took a character from one of its more popular franchises and gave her a spinoff title of her own that falls into the platform category. The character, Vikki Grimm, has figured prominently in the company’s Army Men universe. Portal Runner is not considered a sequel because 3DO took one character and built an entirely new game universe around her. As you learn about the development of Portal Runner, remember that many of the steps in the process can change significantly for a different title based on the nature of the game being developed.

Planning the Game

The preproduction team generally includes each of the following people:

  • Director
  • Designer
  • Software Engineer/Programmer
  • Artist
  • Writer

Sometimes a team won’t have every one of these people and other times it will have more than one person in a particular category. Another person assigned to the game from the outset is the producer. While the director provides the overall vision and direction for the game and is in charge of managing all the team members, the producer is in charge of the business side. For example, the producer maintains the production and advertising budgets and makes sure that the game stays within the limits of those budgets.

The first thing that the preproduction team does is develop the story line for the game. Think of this like writing the outline for a novel. The story line identifies the theme of the game, the main characters and the overall plot. Also, areas in the game where a full motion video (FMV) sequence would help the story along are established. An important part of developing the story line is knowing the nature of the game. This means that the game designer is typically involved from the very beginning; he or she is responsible for things like:

  • Identifying traits and features of the game
  • The type of gameplay and user interaction that is developed
  • How the game will use the technology available on a particular platform (video game system or computer)

Portal Runner is a linear game. This means that you follow a predetermined path and accomplish specific goals to complete the game. The pattern of the game is: FMV1, Play1, FMV2, Play2, FMV3, Play3 and so on until the end. Each play portion has a different look, theme and goal, all of which combine to form the game world. Linear play makes the story line much easier to create than it would be for a game that branches or has multiple endings. Branching games can contain a series of paths that all lead to the same ending. Even more difficult are branching games that can result in one of several different endings, depending on the path taken. Of course, the type of game largely determines what the story line and style can be. A puzzle or sports game would not require as detailed a story line as a 3D action or role-playing game.

Once the story line is developed, the team creates a set of storyboards. A storyboard is a collection of still drawings, words and technical instructions that describe each scene of the game. These include storyboards for the FMV sequences that introduce the story and continue it between the periods of actual gameplay. Here’s an example:

In addition to storyboarding the game, the designers will map out the different worlds, or levels of play, within the game during the preproduction phase. The attributes of each world and the elements contained within it are pulled directly from the story line.

Developing the Game

Once the storyboards and overall game level designs are complete, the game enters the production phase. The preproduction team expands as needed to include additional artists, programmers and designers.

3DO’s artists began developing the 3D models that will make up the worlds of Portal Runner using a software application called 3D Studio Max. Richly detailed texture maps were created for each object. While the game developers at 3DO created the actual game environment using these models and textures, another division of the company, PlayWorks, used the same models to develop the animated full-motion video (FMV) sequences for the game.

Meanwhile, the programmers wrote custom code in C programming language that provided the framework for the game objects. A lot of code was pulled from the company’s library, a bank of predeveloped code that could be repurposed for different games.

Some of the code for a game involves the 3D engine, an application that generates all the polygons, shadows and textures that you see. Another piece of code is the artificial intelligence component. This is the logic of any game. It establishes the physics of the game, detects interaction and collisions of objects and controls movement of the characters. Development of the game code is done using a special development version of the particular game system that has increased memory, an SVGA monitor connection, a network connection and a hard drive.

All the bits and pieces — objects, textures and code — are fed into a special utility called a tool chain that combines the pieces into one big piece of code. The tool chain makes code that is executable on a specific platform, which basically means that the game code will actually run on the game system that it was designed for. To test the game, Portal Runner director John Salera used another specialized game console built for debugging games.

The Game World

If you can find a copy of Portal Runner and play the game, you’ll see that it used an over-the-shoulder perspective. When you’re playing, you seem to be hovering in the air slightly behind the character you are controlling. As your character moves around, you see the world of the game stretch out into the distance. But what you are really seeing is a very clever illusion reminiscent of the backlots of Hollywood.

The world that the character actually interacts with in Portal Runner is a very defined area. If you could pull the camera view up in the air, you would see that the play area is completely self-contained. Other parts of the world that you can see in the distance are actually two-dimensional images mapped onto a flat surface that surrounds the play area like a barrel. The sky was created in the same way, by mapping the sky image onto a large dome or cylinder that fits over everything else. Look at the example below to get a better idea of how this works.

A production team constantly looks for ways to add realistic effects without degrading the performance of the game. A good example of this is the reflections of objects on shiny surfaces, like the chess board in the medieval world of Portal Runner. The chess pieces and characters moving around on the chess board appear to have detailed reflections on the polished surface of the chess board. What’s actually happening is that a second version of each object is positioned upside-down just below the semi-transparent surface of the chess board. The upside-down version moves in concert with the “real” version of the object, providing an illusion of reflection.

Polygons and Shading

The vast majority of 3-D objects created for computer games are made up of polygons. A polygon is an area defined by lines. To have a polygon, you must have at least three lines.

The lines connect a series of coordinates in the three-dimensional “space” the computer creates. The point where the lines connect is known as a vertex. Each vertex has XY and Z coordinates.

  • X determines the position relative to right or left in the virtual space
  • Y determines the position relative to top or bottom in the virtual space
  • Z determines the position relative to front or back in the virtual space

Once each polygon has a set of vertices to define its shape, it needs information that tells it what to look like. There are four common ways to do this:

  • Flat shading
  • Gouraud shading
  • Phong shading
  • Texture mapping

Flat shading simply assigns a single color to a polygon. It is very simple and fast, but makes the object look artificial. Gouraud shading is more complex. Colors are assigned to each vertex and then are blended across the face of the polygon. Since each vertex is typically associated with at least three distinct polygons, this makes the object look natural instead of faceted. Look at this example:

You will notice that the ball with Gouraud shading appears much smoother than the flat shaded one. But look closely at the outlines of the two balls. That’s where you can tell that both balls have the exact same number of polygons.

An even more complex version of shading, Phong, improves upon Gouraud shading. Whereas Gouraud shading interpolates colors by averaging between the vertices, Phong shading averages each pixel based on the colors of the pixels adjacent to it to create smooth surfaces.

Another common technique for determining the appearance of a polygon is to use texture mapping. Think of texture mapping as wrapping a present. Each side of the box you are wrapping is a blank polygon. You could paint the box, but it would be very difficult to make it match all the designs on the wrapping paper. However, if you take the wrapping paper and tightly cover the box with it, you have completely transformed the box with just a little effort.

Texture mapping works the same way. Mapping requires the use of another image. Essentially, this other image is stretched over the object like a skin. Most video game consoles and computer graphics adapters contain a special chip and dedicated memory that store the special images used for texture mapping and apply them to each polygon on the fly. This allows games such as Portal Runner to have incredibly detailed 3-D environments that you can interact with in real time.

Character Skeletons

The characters in a game have skeletons. Similar to our own skeleton, this is a hidden series of objects that connect with and move in relation to each other. Using a technique called parenting, a target object (the child) is assigned to another object (the parent). Every time the parent object moves, the child object will follow according to the attributes assigned to it. A complete hierarchy can be created with objects that have children and parents. Here’s an example for a human character:

Once the skeleton is created and all of the parenting controls put in place, the character is animated. Probably the most popular method of character animation relies on inverse kinematics. This technique moves the child object to where the animator wants it, causing the parent object and all other attached objects to follow. Another method that’s popular for games is motion capture, which uses a suit of sensors on a real person to transmit a series of coordinates to a computer system. The coordinates are mapped to the skeleton of a game character and translated into fluid, realistic motion.

Each character’s range of motion is programmed into the game. Here’s a typical sequence of events:

  • You press a button on the controller to make the character move forward.
  • The button completes a circuit, and the controller sends the resulting data to the console.
  • The controller chip in the console processes the data and forwards it to the game application logic.
  • The game logic determines what the appropriate action at that point in the game is (move the character forward).
  • The game logic analyzes all factors involved in making the movement (shadows, collision models, change of viewing angle).
  • The game logic sends the new coordinates for the character’s skeleton, and all other changes, to the rendering engine.
  • The rendering engine renders the scene with new polygons for each affected object, redrawing the scene about 60 times each second.
  • You see the character move forward.

Finishing Touches

After the basics are in place, the production team begins to refine the game. Part of this refinement involves optimizing the game code, polygon count and logic, including adjusting the clipping planes and culling. The polygon count (number of polygons on screen at the same time) is a major factor in the smooth rendering and quick response of a game.

Clipping planes determine whether or not polygons in the field of view will be rendered. This depends on how close to the camera the polygons are. Typically, the near clipping plane will not render polygons that are close enough to intersect the plane of the camera. This keeps your viewpoint in the game from intersecting another object and thus blanking out. And the far clipping plane is normally set at the point where the screen resolution causes the details to become impossible to see. There is no need to render objects that you cannot see.

This leads to another area of optimization. While the far clipping plane does not render entire objects that are too far away, culling means that the video game system does not render the parts of objects that are outside your viewing area. For example, when you look at a building, you normally only see one or two sides of the building. In a game, you can increase performance by not rendering the other sides of the building until you move around to the point that you can see them. And as you move, the game can stop rendering the things you can no longer see.

One of the refinements that John Salera said 3DO wanted to make to Portal Runner was to determine where they could eliminate polygons through culling in order to increase the polygon count for Vikki, from 1,500 polygons to 3,000. They want to do this without increasing the overall number of polygons onscreen. By increasing the polygon count of a specific object (like Vikki), the object can be made to look smoother and more realistic.

Periodically during the development of the game, 3DO sends builds (partially complete versions) of the game to the game console maker. This is done to keep the console maker informed about how the game is developing and to ensure that there are no surprises that the manufacturer might take issue with.

As the game nears completion, it enters the post-production phase. This phase has several parts:

  • Game versions
  • Product testing
  • ESRB review
  • Marketing and advertising
  • Distribution

Once the game is done, an alpha version is sent to designated game testers. This preliminary version is a first pass meant to find any major flaws in the game. The problems are identified and the game is released again in beta form. The beta version is tested exhaustively to find any bugs and discover ways to further optimize the game. After the items found in the beta version are fixed, the final candidate is released.

Sometime during this period, the game is sent to the Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB) to be given a rating. If the game is released before a final rating is set, it will have an RP (Rating Pending) in the rating box.

Distributing the Game

During post-production, the marketing engine begins to ramp up. The game is advertised in print, on the Web and oftentimes on TV. Quite often, a game that is a hit or has a very memorable character provides the company with opportunities for merchandising and licensing. Comic books, cartoons, movies and amusement park rides have all spun out of the popularity of certain video game characters. Products such as clothing, toys and board games often display characters from the game. A popular video game character can be a marketing gold mine for the parent company.

A major difference in creating a video game for a console versus building a game for a PC is the approval and distribution process. Console manufacturers normally require strict licensing agreements between themselves and companies that wish to develop games for their systems. We will outline the process that 3DO goes through with the game console makers they work with.

Every company that develops games for a video game system manufacturer is considered a third-party licensee. Here’s how it breaks down.

A third-party developer:

  • Develops the game idea
  • Creates the game
  • Tests the game
  • Markets the game
  • Distributes the game

Console maker:

  • Approves the game idea
  • Tests the game
  • Reviews and approves the game
  • Manufactures the game

When a developer submits the game to the console maker, the testing and review process can be very rigorous. The game may be sent back to the developer with requests to change certain parts before resubmitting it.

Many people mistakenly assume that the cost per game to the parent company is minimal and the profit huge. This is seldom the case. While the actual material costs for the game duplication, box and manuals may only be a few dollars per unit, there are a lot of other costs incurred:

  • Console licensing royalties (about $3 to $10 per unit for the console maker)
  • Game development costs (typically several millions of dollars)
  • Advertising (anywhere from $1 million to $4 million for most games)
  • Salaries for the production team (a typical game might employ 40 people for a year or more)
  • Other licensing fees (particularly in sports titles, where the professional sports organization and any featured athletes tend to receive royalties for each unit sold)
  • Operational costs (the costs of running the company must be split between the various games sold)

Game companies also have to take into account the short lifespan that most games enjoy. Since the technology that video games thrive on is continually improving, the games that are cutting edge today will seem slow and outdated in just a year or two.

Test: Army Men: Sarge’s War by Jens Bischoff. 4players.de August 24, 2004

Original source

https://www.4players.de/4players.php/dispbericht/Allgemein/Test/2916/3074/0/Army_Men_Sarges_War.html

Anyone who thought that after 3DO’s bankruptcy would finally have peace and quiet before further Army Men games was rejoicing too soon. Take 2 seems to have found an almost finished plastic soldier shooter in the bankrupt vulture’s licensing dump, which they now want to sell at a budget price as Army Men: Sarge’s War. You can find out in the test whether it is the usual hazardous waste or a surprisingly good bargain.

Cry for Vengeance

It’s hard to believe, but the green and beige armies finally make peace in Sarge’s War and all disputes are put to rest. But the suddenly pacifist toy soldiers have reckoned without the renegade Lord Malice and his henchmen.

Unscrupulous: The renegade Lord Malice has all your plastic comrades on the conscience (PS2).
As soon as the peace treaty is signed, an insidious bomb attack turns the entire party into a lump of plastic. Only Sarge, who returns late from a mission, survives the toy massacre. You can imagine everything else: Sarge wants revenge and doesn’t want to rest until he has hunted down Lord Malice.

To the weapons!

To do this, you fight your way through twelve linear levels divided into tiny sections and use a total of eight firearms and grenades to blast everything that stands in your way to a pulp. If you are initially solely dependent on your carbine, which is equipped with unlimited ammunition, you will soon be able to use more interesting calibers such as shotguns, bazookas, heavy machine guns or sniper rifles as the game progresses, with which you can literally tear apart your opponents.

That’s where the plastic flies

All of the plastic soldiers are extremely tough and sometimes even continue to fight with severed limbs, holes in their bodies or half of their head missing. It’s just a shame that you can’t achieve the same result with a flamethrower as you could with a magnifying glass in the sandbox…

Swiss cheese: With such major gunshot wounds, only a plastic soldier can fight on bravely (Xbox).
But even without plastic warriors melting together, the damage model can be quite impressive and its detailed hit zones will make you grin maliciously – especially if you’re playing against one (PS2) or three (Xbox) friends.

Multiplayer on the back burner

Nevertheless, the multiplayer mode is extremely poor: there are just four maps, no switchable CPU bots and no sensible online use. Xbox users can only play scheduled duels against friends from their Xbox Live contact list, while PS2 owners cannot go online at all. Alternatively, there is also the option of competing against each other via split screen, but since you can see all the opponent’s positions, ambushes or surprise attacks are virtually impossible, which significantly reduces the fun of the game – especially on the PS2, where only duels are possible anyway. On the Xbox you can go into battle with at least four people and also play other modes such as team progression (taking and defending positions) and capture the flag.

Army Men Preview

Plastic soldiers, huge explosions, and free form destruction… Studio 3DO gives a violent home to the kid in all of us

by Tim Soete for gamespot.com on May 5, 2000 at 3:56PM PDT

Sources for this article:

https://gamespot.com/articles/army-men-preview/1100-2563189/

Remember when you were a kid playing with those little dime-a-dozen plastic army figures? You’d set up fortifications on either side of some shrubs or a little patch of dirt and then let the battle between the green and tan unfold. Well, 3DO, with their upcoming and succinctly titled Army Men, will attempt to bring that nostalgic microcosm of a battlefield to life. This action-strategy game is at once challenging and humorous, featuring those little synthetic knick-knacks that you so fondly remember, now fully animated and fighting it out in a real environment.

Army Men is a scrolling, 3-D, top-down perspective strategy game, albeit one that is a great deal more action-oriented than current real-time wargames on the shelf. You begin by choosing a map to set the stage and a commander (they roughly follow a plan of action toward one branch of the armed forces – an Army strategy that concentrates on land attacks, a Navy tendancy towards water assaults, an Air Force aim for air superiority, or a Marine-like attempt to grab land from the water) to pit your guys against. At your home base, you pick a command vehicle that you actually control (personnel and attack helicopter, tank, jeep, or boat), load it with units, and deploy the units in strategic areas. Maps of each battleground are rendered with different terrains of varying traversability. These maps contain separate object layers, so a tank or infantry unit will disappear from view when passing underneath a group of trees or other hovering objects. Units vary in function and size depending on the unit type – heavy or light infantry, grenadiers, or engineers. After deployment, each group of units will get back to you, identifying themselves and delivering status reports. The first side to destroy the opponent’s base – whether it belongs to the computer or a live network player – wins the match. Units are capable of making some decisions on their own, but the player must take a very active role to achieve final victory. “The idea is that if you don’t do anything and put a bunch of units out there, they’ll kind of mill around, perhaps even fight a little, but they won’t do anything serious unless you tell them to,” says David Bunch, Army Men’s director. This idea of constant control of small groups is in direct opposition to the current trend, found in many strategy titles, towards real-time control of large armies.

When you finally do achieve victory, you’re treated to black and white WWII-era propaganda trailers starring computer-generated characters, complete with authentic film scratches and frame-jumps. Graphical details like these really add to the overall humor and believability of the game. For example, the seven death scenes you’ll encounter during battle are consistent with the fact that you’re actually dealing with toy soldiers – so if one of your guys takes a shot, his arm might snap off, or he might melt into a puddle of plastic, a single hand emerging from the remnants. All of the soldiers were designed using 3D Studio MAX with a plug-in called Character Studio that enables the artists to create a framework model of their intended subject and then map realistically moving textures on the finished skeleton. The end result is a phenomenally believable representation of what it might be like if plastic figurines actually came to life.

“I can’t believe that nobody thought of this before,” says Army Men producer Nick Earl. It’s true – other titles such as Close Combat hark back to those days when you sat in the mud and enacted a miniature combat, but Army Men takes the toy soldier idea to its literal extreme. This game, which takes an otherwise static cast of characters and brings them to life, will certainly win over real-time strategy game fans, most of whom began their war-game days setting up battle scenarios with pocket-sized polyurethane troops.

Army Men: Sarge’s Heroes Review by Duke Ferris. gamerevolution.com December 1, 1999

Original source

Tennn’ HUT!

At ease, men. It is the greatest honor of your life to be a Green beret. Your honor, your duty, your training – these are all privileges that you must hold dear. Perhaps the greatest thing you can hope to achieve in your lifetime is to accept and perform a dangerous suicide mission. I am looking for a volunteer, and I know that every one of you good men is up to the task.

– Scorch, that’s a nice flamethrower you got there, but there might be more heat than you can handle if you accept this mission.

– How about you, Shrap? You’ll need to do more than just lob mortars from the other side of the hill. And you,

– Thick, do you even understand what I’m saying under all those muscles

– We will probably need your bazooka, Riff.

– Hoover, which one of us would cross an innocent looking field before you had checked it for mines?

– Sarge, you look like a willing candidate for the job. Eager, perhaps. Let me tell you what dangers lie ahead.

Gentlemen, Vikki has been kidnapped by General Plastro of the evil Tan army.

To get her back, you will need to face countless Tan soldiers, tanks, helicopters and even robots. Stranger enemies await you as well: giant insects from another world.

The Tan Army has captured portals to a strange world of giants. When you travel to these worlds, you will find yourself engaged in combat through giant kitchens, bathrooms, and an enormous sandcastle. While the otherworldly battlegrounds are interesting, there are only 5 of them, and that’s out of 16 levels in total.

So, at least this will not be a very long assignment. However, the Tan Army will not be your only enemy.

While your Green Army commanders are concerned about your health, their technology is limited.

Your plastic bodies have been buffed to a high sheen, but other than that, the army will supply you with only standard grunt graphics.

The big problem is that new Tan technology has jammed your camera. Throughout your dangerous mission, you will find it nearly impossible to see where you are going or even spot the enemy. As you run, your camera will get caught on objects and show you dozens of unhelpful angles as it struggles to keep up with your turns.

Nothing is more frustrating to a Green soldier than being hit by enemy fire from a Tan unit that you cannot even see. Cheer up soldiers! Nobody said the army was for wimps.

Fortunately the Green army can provide you with improved sniper abilities.

With your .50 caliber sniper rifle you will be able to accurately zoom in on Tan soldiers from a long distance. One shot to the head and it’s plastic chunks on the ground and smooth sailing for you.

The rest of the arsenal is up to muster as well. Our commanders would never allow you to go out unarmed. You’ll discover the combat shotgun to be useful at close range and the M-60 is perfect for strafing. The bazooka will help you against the enemy armored vehicles and the grenades and mortars allow you to eliminate big groups of soldiers and buildings too. The flamethrower will turn any Tan soldier into a heap of bubbling plastic in seconds, and with mines you can insure that nobody sneaks up behind you.

Don’t get too excited though, I’ve saved the worst for last. These weapons won’t help you as much as you think. Gentlemen, I have met the enemy, and he is us. You will discover your own body to be your worst enemy on this mission.

Your control over your own limbs will be sluggish and unwieldy. You will find it nearly impossible to turn to face the enemy. You will get frustrated as you get shot time after time because you can’t tell how far you’ve turned, and then you cant see in front of you because the camera hasn’t moved yet. Even the simplest tasks, like leaving a building through the door will prove difficult.

That’s the situation in a nutshell, gentlemen. Which one of you is man enough for the task? I notice that you’re no longer smiling, Sarge. I’m looking for a soldier with character and true grit; a soldier that is not afraid to give 150% for the Green Army. This mission will test your loyalty and …. Aw hell, screw it. I’m going AWOL. Let’s ge the hell outta’ here. Who’s with me? Sarge? I’ll buy the first round of beer….

3DO Ships Army Men(TM) — Air Attack(TM) for PlayStation(R) Game Console – News Release November 1, 1999

Original source

https://web.archive.org

Plastic Combat Takes to the Skies

The 3DO Company (ticker: THDO, exchange: NASDAQ)

REDWOOD CITY, Calif., Nov. 3 /PRNewswire/ — The 3DO Company (Nasdaq: THDO) today announced the release of the Army Men — Air Attack game for PlayStation(R) game console. The immensely popular Army Men series now launches into the great blue yonder as helicopters take center stage in a game that evokes fond memories of playing with plastic soldiers. An all-new hero, the brash young Captain Bill Blade, and his Alpha Wolf Squadron take up the Green Army’s cause from the air to sabotage the Tan Army’s nefarious plans.

The Army Men — Air Attack game leads players on a ride through six new worlds ranging from a cold mountain fortress in Their World to cheery battles among sandcastles in Our World. Through 18 missions players may choose from three different co-pilots to help Captain in his crusade to disable the plastic-melting hot iron, extinguish deadly firecrackers, and most importantly, fight the evil Tan nemesis. Missions play homage to classic helicopter game play, and everything in the levels, from weapons and troops to pine cones and snack food, may be manipulated to achieve mission goals, just like playing with toys in your back yard.

Multiplayer options add endless hours of fun. The cooperative mode, in which players combine tactical skills to bring down the Tan menace, is especially suited for players of different skill levels. For example, one player may utilize an arcade action style of play while the other player uses a tactical play style. In Flag Nab-it mode, players face off to infiltrate the other’s base.

“This is a game that gets people’s imaginations fired up,” says Trip Hawkins, chairman and CEO of The 3DO Company. “The Army Men — Air Attack game evokes the magic of playing with toys, using whatever is at hand, whether it’s a bottle rocket or a pine cone, to carry on the fantasy, a fantasy everyone seems to love.”

A multi-million dollar marketing campaign for the Army Men brand features television advertising through the holiday season and a seven-month print campaign in both consumer and gaming magazines and point-of-purchase promotions.

Other upcoming games from the Company include Army Men(TM) — Sarge’s Heroes(TM), Crusaders of Might and Magic(TM), and BattleTanx(TM): Global Assault(TM) for the PlayStation game console, Crusaders of Might and Magic, Family Game Pack(R) Royale, and High Heat Baseball(TM) 2001 for the PC, and Army Men, Vegas Games(R), and BattleTanx for the Game Boy(R) Color.

The 3DO Company, headquartered in Redwood City, Calif., develops, publishes and distributes interactive entertainment software for personal computers, the Internet and advanced entertainment systems such as the PlayStation game console and the Nintendo(R) 64 console. 3DO markets and publishes its products worldwide under multiple brand names including Army Men, BattleTanx, Heroes of Might and Magic(TM), High Heat Baseball, Might and Magic(R), and Meridian 59(TM). More information about 3DO’s products can be found on the Internet at www.3do.com .

This release contains forward-looking statements, which are subject to risks and uncertainties. Potential risks and uncertainties include, without limitation, the Company’s ability to develop and ship future products, market demand and acceptance for the Company’s current and future software products, and the consequences of competitive factors in the marketplace. Further information on potential factors which could affect these forward looking statements and the Company’s financial results are included in the Company’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended March 31, 1999 and the Company’s Reports on Form 10-Q for the fiscal quarters ended December 31, 1998 and June 30, 1999.

3DO, Air Attack, Army Men, BattleTanx, Crusaders of Might and Magic, Family Game Pack, Heroes of Might and Magic, High Heat Baseball, Meridian 59, Might and Magic, Sarge’s Heroes, Vegas Games, and their respective logos, are trademarks and/or service marks of The 3DO Company in the U.S. and other countries. New World Computing is a division of The 3DO Company.

PlayStation and the PlayStation logos are registered trademarks of Sony Computer Entertainment Inc.

Nintendo, Nintendo 64 and Game Boy are registered trademarks of Nintendo of America Inc.

All other trademarks and tradenames belong to their respective owners.

SOURCE The 3DO Company