Brink kind of scratches that cyber punk itch


(Jess Alon) #1

In a weird way you know? I was just thinking about that. I grew up playing shadowrun on pen and paper.

I just realized today that brink reminds me of necromunda a little. Did anyone ever play that back in the day? http://www.games-workshop.com/gws/catalog/landingArmy.jsp?catId=cat480009a&rootCatGameStyle=specialist-games

But it’s way geekier though.

I would have no problem with Splash Damage doing a completely different game in the future that uses Brink’s engine and you’re in some post Apocalyptic world where resistance style gangs are all fighting over territory and resources. It’d be pretty amazing. It could actually be happening at the same time as the whole ark fiasco or in the aftermath.


(15% or more) #2

I was a Magic: The Gathering man myself.


(Cankor) #3

Never played any cyberpunk games but am a fan of William Gibson, Neil Stephenson, and Walter Jon Williams.

Stephenson in particular. That guy kills me, here’s one of my favourite bits describing a lamp called a “Galvanic Lucipher”:

The Galvanick Lucipher is of antique design. Ghnxh, who is about a hundred years old, can only smile in condescension at Waterhouse’s U.S. Navy flashlight. In the sotto voce tones one might use to correct an enormous social gaffe, he explains that the galvanick lucipher is of such a superior design as to make any further reference to the Navy model a grating embarrassment for everyone concerned. He leads Waterhouse back to a special room behind the room behind the room behind the room behind the pantry, a room that exists solely for maintenance of the galvanick lucipher and the storage of its parts and supplies. The heart of the device is a hand-blown spherical glass jar comparable in volume to a gallon jug. Ghnxh, who suffers from a pretty advanced case of either hypothermia or Parkinson’s, maneuvers a glass funnel into the neck of the jar. Then he wrestles a glass carboy from a shelf. The carboy, labeled AQUA REGIA, is filled with a fulminant orange liquid. He removes its glass stopper, hugs it, and heaves it over so that the orange fluid begins to glug out into the funnel and thence into the jar. Where it splashes out onto the tabletop, something very much like smoke curls up as it eats holes just like the thousands of other holes already there. The fumes get into Waterhouse’s lungs; they are astoundingly corrosive. He staggers out of the room for a while.

When he ventures back, he finds Ghnxh whittling an electrode from an ingot of pure carbon. The jar of aqua regia has been capped off now, and a variety of anodes, cathodes, and other working substances are suspended in it, held in place by clamps of hammered gold. Thick wires, in insulating sheathes of hand-knit asbestos, twist out of the jar and into the business end of the galvanick lucipher: a copper salad bowl whose mouth is closed off by a Fresnel lens like the ones on a lighthouse. When Ghnxh gets his carbon whittled to just the right size and shape, he fits it into a little hatch in the side of this bowl, and casually throws a Frankensteinian blade switch. A spark pops across the contacts like a firecracker.

For a moment, Waterhouse thinks that one wall of the building has collapsed, exposing them to the direct light of the sun. But Ghnxh has simply turned on the galvanick lucipher, which soon becomes about ten times brighter, as Ghnxh adjusts a bronze thumbscrew. Crushed with shame, Waterhouse puts his Navy flashlight back into its prissy little belt holster, and precedes Ghnxh out of the room, the galvanick lucipher casting palpable warmth on the back of his neck. “We’ve got about two hours before she goes dead on us,” Ghnxh says significantly

sorry, off topic, had to share.


(Jess Alon) #4

I love Cyberpunk so much. They were supposed to make one of William Gibson’s books into a movie this year but I have yet to even see a preview for it.


(Seyu) #5

I don’t see any cyberpunk theme in Brink, the setting is pretty much dystopian science fiction. And, yea, I too wanted a game set in a post-apocalyptic world with various factions vying for more control, Fallout didn’t really scratch that itch.

Cankor, I always thought of Neil Stephenson as more steampunk-ish than cyberpunk, don’t know why.


(Cankor) #6

[QUOTE=Seyu;278159]I don’t see any cyberpunk theme in Brink, the setting is pretty much dystopian science fiction. And, yea, I too wanted a game set in a post-apocalyptic world with various factions vying for more control, Fallout didn’t really scratch that itch.

Cankor, I always thought of Neil Stephenson as more steampunk-ish than cyberpunk, don’t know why.[/QUOTE]

Maybe because of his magnum opus “The System of The World” taking place in the 1600’s or something like that (can’t rememebr). But yeah, he’s not pure cyberpunk… Snowcrash and The Diamond Age are why I mentioned him as part of that gendre, but his other books aren’t even close to cyberpunk. They are all great though.


(Auzner) #7

I admire it a lot as well but have hardly participated in its pretty rare media. I wasn’t alive when it was popular, I would like to see it come back with 80’s and all. Syndicate, Deus Ex, Max Headroom and Bladerunner are what made me interested in cyberpunk. And that wasn’t until I thoroughly enjoyed post apoc movies after the turn of the century. I don’t see Brink fulfilling the genre for me though. It is too bright of a game with not enough tech.


(Slade05) #8

His opus magnum is called a “Baroque Cycle”, and cyberpunk references are due to cyphering technology being developed in time the books are set.
Real cyberpunk deals with artificial intelligence or at least artificial life going independent, though.


(CVIChEK) #9

Dude yes, Brink 2 could be abaout survivors fighting each other on land, happening at the same time as fighting on the Ark.
Like, Mad Max style punks fighitng to get inside some high tech cities, which are protected by something like ressistance.


(Apples) #10

Spoke about Brink and necromunda a year ago I think, you’re late Jess!

(And yes you do need to read everything I posted before you dare opening a new thread! :D)

Yes indeed this remind me of necromunda, but in a cleanest way somehow, thats also why I suggested it would be cool in the future to have some kind of other faction, but it needs to blend in the storyline and not unbalance everything, kinda impossible IMO.

Peace


(LyndonL) #11

'Back in ya box Apples :tongue:


(Apples) #12

Rawr rawr

Apples crawls back

FUUUUUU


(obliviondoll) #13

I don’t really see cyberpunk in Brink either…

Although, oddly, I can see how someone else might. It just doesn’t come across that way to me.


(tokamak) #14

More a fan of the mono-archaism in ETQW.


(Jess Alon) #15

[QUOTE=obliviondoll;278387]I don’t really see cyberpunk in Brink either…

Although, oddly, I can see how someone else might. It just doesn’t come across that way to me.[/QUOTE]

Hi welcome to the splash damage forums. I saw you posting over at bethesda during my very brief return.


(Herandar) #16

How many times are they going to ban you?


(Jess Alon) #17

Twice now. Actually Three times.


(Cankor) #18

[QUOTE=Slade05;278170]His opus magnum is called a “Baroque Cycle”, and cyberpunk references are due to cyphering technology being developed in time the books are set.
Real cyberpunk deals with artificial intelligence or at least artificial life going independent, though.[/QUOTE]

yeah, my bad, System of the World was just one part. The reference to those books was a just guess regarding the association with Steampunk.

To me cyberpunk is more about cybernetics, cyborg technology and nanotechnology in a dystopian future.


(Jess Alon) #19

I wish I could find a way to play necromunda online.


(Nail) #20

isn’t Warhammer close ?