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Æon Flux (video game) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Æon Flux (video game)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Æon Flux
The Xbox cover for Æon Flux.
Developer(s) Terminal Reality
Publisher(s) Majesco Games
Release date(s) November 15, 2005
Genre(s) Action / Adventure
Mode(s) Single player
Rating(s) ESRB: Teen (13+)
Platform(s) PlayStation 2, Xbox

Æon Flux is the video game adaptation of the 2005 science fiction film of the same name, with elements of the Æon Flux cartoon series. The game was released on November 15, 2005 in North America for the PlayStation 2 and Xbox gaming consoles.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

The game is set 400 years in the future, after disease has wiped out the majority of the Earth's population except for one walled and protected city-state, Bregna. A city ruled by the congress of scientists who discovered the vaccine for the disease. When Æon Flux, the player character and top operative in the underground "Monican" rebellion, is sent on a mission to kill a government leader (Trevor Goodchild) she uncovers a world of secrets which make her doubt her mission and question everything she thought she knew.

[edit] Reception

On January 31, 2006, the G4 television network's video game review show X-Play featured a review of the Æon Flux movie-based video game. The segment featured X-Play co-host Morgan Webb dressed in a black outfit and wig resembling the original Liquid Television-style Æon Flux character. Performing from the perspective of Æon herself, Webb comments on portions of the game throughout its review; the review ends with an extremely discouraged Webb/Æon concluding that "I finally get my own video game after 15 years, and it gets 3 out of 5." — X-Play's rating for an "average" game.

[edit] History

This was not the first attempt at an Æon Flux-based video game, but the first successful one. Disregarding a very short-lived effort by a now defunct start-up development studio, there were two other serious attempts at creating an Æon Flux video game prior to the 2005 release.

[edit] First attempt

A game based much closer to the original animated series was announced on April 9, 1996 for the PlayStation and Windows 95. The game, which was loosely based on "The Demiurge" episode, was being developed by Cryo Interactive and published by Viacom New Media. The game first made an appearance at E3 that same year, and commercial advertising was even included in the 1996 VHS release of the animated series.

Viacom New Media would merge with Virgin Interactive midway through the game's development. The merger would ultimately lead to the cancellation of Viacom's in-development games and subsequently leave Cryo without the rights to use the Æon Flux property. The game's assets weren't lost however, but were reworked into the 1997 title Pax Corpus, having been stripped of all copyrighted association with Æon Flux. Pax Corpus does retain many obvious similarities to the original animated series. Specifically in plot to "The Demiurge" and also in many design details, which bear a striking resemblance to examples found in the show. For instance, the female protagonist of the game wears a purple and black outfit not unlike Æon's.

GameSpot has more information on the cancelled 1996 title by Cryo Interactive.

[edit] Second attempt

Another failed attempt would be made by The Collective, sometime around the year 2000, and was to be published by GT Interactive. It was using a then-current version of the Unreal engine, and appeared to be a 3D third-person action title similar to The Collective's previous title, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: The Fallen. Again however, at some point during development, the game was cancelled and the project vanished.

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