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Gun (video game)

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2005 video game

2005 video game
Gun
DevelopersNeversoft
Beenox(PC)
Rebellion Developments(PSP)
PublisherActivision
ProducersPaul Gadbois
Dee Brown(PC)
ProgrammersSebastien Poirier
Sylvain Morel(PC)
WriterRandall Jahnson
ComposerChristopher Lennertz
PlatformsWindows
PlayStation 2
Xbox
GameCube
Xbox 360
PlayStation Portable
ReleaseWindows,PS2,Xbox,Gamecube
Xbox 360
PlayStation Portable
  • NA: October 10, 2006
  • EU: November 3, 2006
  • AU: November 15, 2006
GenreAction-adventure
ModesSingle-player,multiplayer

Gun is a 2005Western-themed[5][6]action-adventurevideo game developed byNeversoft andpublished byActivision for thePlayStation 2,Xbox,GameCube,Windows, andXbox 360 as alaunch title. ThePlayStation Portable (PSP) version was released a year later under the titleGun: Showdown, this version features new side-missions, a multiplayer mode, and other additions that were not available in the console versions. The Xbox version had online support through the "Live Aware" feature.[7]Gun is now supported onInsignia, a revival server for original Xbox games.[8]

During its first month, the game sold 225,000 copies across the four console systems for which it was initially released. The game had sold over 1.4 million units in the United States as of October 2008. It was well received by game critics and won several awards, includingGameSpy's Xbox 360 Action Game of the Year.

Gameplay

[edit]
Gunfights are an important feature of the game, with enemies ranging fromoutlaws towild animals.

Gun features anaction role-playing game environment, including side-missions that add to the story. Players control the protagonist, Colton White, from athird-person perspective. Side-missions improve the player stats. Players can purchase upgrades using money obtained from these optional activities and by mininggold veins.[citation needed]

While traveling from town to town,bandit attacks are frequent and players must either escape or defend themselves. Players can hunt and kill various animals likebuffalo,wild horses, and evenstray dogs and farm animals. The player can also cause mayhem within communities, but can attract attention from lawmakers and other gunslingers by doing so. They act as gunslingers protecting righteousness or seek reputation as they face resistance fighters, local lawmen, renegade soldiers and vengefulApache andBlackfoot Confederacy groups. A Town Patience meter goes down every time a civilian is killed. Once the patience meter reaches zero, a showdown ensues between the player and the locals.

Severalminigames are included inGun. As the player progresses through the game, they can choose to complete side missions, includingpoker tournaments,cattle herding,law enforcement,time trials andbounty hunting.

Combat

[edit]
Players can enter a first person quick draw mode during gameplay.

Players can wield arevolver and switch betweenrifles,shotguns, variousexplosives, andbows. There are a variety of types of arrows to choose from, including ordinary, flaming, and, if unlocked, explosive arrows.Throwing knives are available inGun Showdown. Attacking and killing enemies fills up a Quickdraw gauge which, when activated, slows down time likebullet time, switches the game to afirst-person perspective and gives the player unlimited ammunition for a short duration, allowing the player to take on a significant number of enemies.

The player can switch from first-person to third-person overhead camera with certain weapons. There are two handheld explosives available in the game:dynamite andwhiskey bombs. Dynamite explodes after a short delay, while whiskey bombs instantly ignite when they hit the ground. Enemies may roll to attempt to avoid explosives. Barrels ofTNT are scattered around the environment and during missions, encouraging players to use barrels to set traps or throw and use the Quickdraw mode to shoot them and detonate the TNT.Land mines are available on the PSP version.

Melee combat is also emphasized, with enemies randomly charging at the player throughout the game. Players can use aBowie knife,tomahawk, and cavalrysaber. They can use enemies as ahuman shield, and dispatch them by slitting their throats or knocking them out if the enemy has a bounty. Players can also scalp a dying enemy with ascalping knife.Stealth plays a part in many missions as well, and players are encouraged to use bows, melee and, on the PSP version, throwing knives, in such situations.Horseback combat is also featured, and is an important aspect of the game. Fast-paced chases are featured, and players can shoot while riding. Both the player's and the enemies' horses can be killed. While riding a horse players can do close-quarter combat with any melee weapon they possess. Trampling or running over enemies is also a way of dispatching them while on horseback.

Synopsis

[edit]

Setting

[edit]

Gun is set in theAmerican frontier, specifically inMontana,Arizona,Colorado,Kansas andNew Mexico in the year 1880. This includes cities andbadlands with populated environments that stretch from the mountains to the plains of earlyDodge City, Kansas. The story, written byRandall Jahnson, features several veteran actors, includingRon Perlman,Lance Henriksen,Kris Kristofferson,Brad Dourif,Tom Skerritt and the lead, played byThomas Jane.

Characters

[edit]

The game features a number of characters whose names are taken from real American frontier figures, includingClay Allison,José Chávez y Chávez,Hoodoo Brown,Dave Rudabaugh,John Joshua "J.J" Webb,Luke Short, Major Thomas Magruder (who was most likely based onJohn B. Magruder), Soapy Jennings (who was based onSoapy Smith), and Magruder's hulking personal bodyguard, Dutchie, based on "Dutchy" Schunderberger, a member of the real-life Hoodoo Brown'sDodge City Gang. The name "Alhambra", given to thebrothel in the game, comes from a former pleasure-castle of theNasrid Kingdom of Granada.[9]

  • Colton "Cole"White (Thomas Jane) – The Apache protagonist andplayer character of the story. He learned the ways of the outdoors from hisadoptive father, Ned White. Cole meets many characters during his adventure; some become his allies while others turn out to be the utmost of enemies. He is a skilledmarksman, and is always willing to stand up for what he believes is right.
  • Soapy Jennings (Dave Wittenberg) – Asafe-cracker and a friend of Colton. Soapy's two specialties are cracking safes and cheating at poker, two major moral strikes against him in the American frontier. During the ride to Piper Lake from the Badlands, he confides to Cole the origin of his nickname: he was cornered in a lady friend's bedroom by her husband, and was forced to hide inside the shaft of herwater closet – after which he had to scrub for three days before he could get the smell off of him.
  • Major Thomas Magruder (Lance Henriksen) – The main antagonist of the story. He is the unofficial boss of the frontier, in charge of the railroads being installed through Apache Indian territory. Magruder was aConfederate States Army Major during theAmerican Civil War (1861–1865) and led a group of soldiers, which included Clay Allison, to find the mythical city of gold,Quivira. The war ended, but Magruder's mission did not. He has made it his ultimate goal in life to find the lost city of gold and is willing to do anything to accomplish it. Magruder meets his end when he is crushed to death during a cave-in at his mine.
  • Ned White (Kris Kristofferson) – Colton's adoptive father. He raised Colton under the false pretense of being his real father. Right before his death, he confesses part of the truth to Colton and sends him on his quest to find out the rest of the truth. Ned is a well-trainedoutdoorsman and makes his living selling animal skins and carcasses to the localriverboats sailing down theMissouri River.
  • "Reverend" Josiah Reed (Brad Dourif) – Amisogynistic andpsychopathic priest who works for Magruder as ahired killer to take control of the area. He is eventually killed by Cole in retribution for murdering Jenny.
  • Sergeant Hollister (Marc Graue) - Thepsychotic renegade army commander, who wields Ned's rifle and is in league with Magruder. After Hollister injures Fights-At-Dawn and battles with Colton, he dies when he fails to kill Colton via asuicide bombing with dynamite.
  • Mayor Hoodoo Brown (Ron Perlman) – The fast-talkingmayor of Empire City. Hoodoo takes orders from Thomas Magruder, although his true goal is to make his city great rather than simply earn money. Due to his dirty practices, Hoodoo has many enemies and therefore has hired two professional gunslingers, J.J. Webb and Dave Rudabaugh, as personal bodyguards. He himself is a skilled gunfighter. The mayor pretends to hire Colton as another bodyguard, but in fact intends to set him up and is later killed in a firefight with Cole.
  • Clay Allison (Tom Skerritt) – A former Corporal for the Confederate Army and friend of Ned White and Tom Magruder. He is the leader of the resistance group fighting against Hoodoo Brown's corrupt reign over Empire City. He and his followers work closely with the Apache, dedicated to keeping Magruder and his men out of the frontier and restore some dignity to the American frontier.
  • Fights-At-Dawn (Eric Schweig) – TheBlackfoot Confederacy chief and a proudwarrior. He is deeply concerned for the future of his tribe and saddened by the white man's arbitrary murder and theft. He befriends Colton, and recalls a time when Cole was younger, when he was attacked by acougar.
  • Many Wounds (Eric Schweig) – An Apache Indian who gave Colton to Ned when he was a baby. Later in the story, Many Wounds becomes a trusted ally of Colton and helps him out with Cole's fight against Magruder.
  • Jenny (Kath Soucie) – Aprostitute and the main attraction of the Alhambra Saloon in Dodge City. Jenny is tired of the small-town life and is anxiously waiting the completion of the bridge in town so she can travel south to New Mexico to Empire City. She briefly proves to be a valuable ally to Colton, but is murdered by Reed.

Plot

[edit]

In 1880, Colton White and his father Ned are huntinggame along theMissouri River. After Cole saves Ned from agrizzly bear, they board a riverboat to sell the meat. The riverboat is suddenly attacked by a psychopathic preacher named Reverend Josiah Reed and his men. After losing ground to Reed's men, Ned tells Cole to find a prostitute named Jenny inDodge City, Kansas. Ned then reveals he is not Cole's real father, and pushes him over the side to save him from thesteamboat's explosion. Cole travels to Dodge City to find Jenny. After rescuing her from a gang of bandits, Cole learns from her that Reverend Reed came to Dodge City from Empire City, and that Empire's Mayor Hoodoo Brown would know of the preacher's whereabouts. After assisting thesheriff in fixing the bridge to out of Dodge, Cole and Jenny travel to Empire City.

Upon arriving in Empire City, Colton is made a deputy by Hoodoo and promises to help him find Reed. During a gunfight at the local cattle ranch between the Resistance and the Deputies, Cole is appalled to see Hoodoo's other deputies kill an unarmed innocent couple. Cole then attempts to arrest the deputies but is forced to kill them both when they resist. When Cole confronts the Mayor in hiscasino back in Empire City, Hoodoo tells Cole that Reed has captured Jenny and is holding her in his office. Rushing to save her, Cole witnesses Reed murdering Jenny and is then quickly knockedunconscious by Hoodoo. Colton is then brought before Thomas Magruder, Reed and Hoodoo's boss, who had also ordered the Steamboat Massacre and Jenny's murder. After Cole learns Magruder and Ned have history, Magruder orders Colton to be hanged the next morning for Jenny's murder.

Cole is thrown into the Empire jail before his scheduled execution the next day. Here he meets Port, a member of the Resistance, and Soapy Jennings, asafe-cracker. With Soapy's help, Cole escapes jail and flees Empire with the other two prisoners. Soapy departs for Dodge while Port takes Cole to the Resistance's Hideout, where he meets their leader, Clay Allison. Cole later learns from Clay that he and Ned had served under Magruder during the American Civil War, and that the formerConfederate Major was searching forQuivira, a lost city of gold, and that his ruthless quest had torn the frontier apart.

Clay takes Cole on a mission to destroy one of Magruder's trains, which they execute successfully. They also discover that theboxcar of the train is full of captured Apache, who Magruder had been using as slaves. The Apache Chief Many Wounds turns up at the scene, and thanks Cole for freeing his people, whilst criticising him for killing them at the bridge. As the Resistance celebrate at the hideout later that night, they are attacked by Magruder's men. They eventually manage to repel the attack but Clay is captured and taken to Empire City. Cole convinces Port and the rest of the Resistance to attack Empire, rescue their leader and take out Hoodoo. After battling his way through Empire to Hoodoo'sfortification, Cole eventually rescues Clay from his prison and confronts the corrupt mayor, whom he eventually kills. With the city liberated from Magruder's control, Cole travels back to Dodge to find Soapy so they can crack a safe that Cole noticed on the steamboat. After Cole saves Soapy from alynch mob, the pair escape Dodge and travel to the wreckage of the steamboat. However, the two are then captured by the renegade army commander Sergeant Hollister, who is revealed to be in league with Magruder. After escaping Hollister's fort, Cole and Soapy save the localBlackfoot Confederacy tribe from Hollister's soldiers. Cole then assists the tribe in attacking and capturing Hollister's Fort. Cole then travels up river, only to be attacked by Hollister, who now wieldsNed's powerful rifle. After Cole wounds the psychotic sergeant heavily, Hollister then attempts to kill him via a suicide bombing, which he fails, killing only himself.

With Hollister dead, Cole and Soapy make their way to the riverboat, only to be ambushed by Magruder's riders. Cole defeats them, then they are attacked by Reed. After a long gunfight with the psychopathic preacher, Cole kills Reed in retribution for murdering Jenny and he and Soapy discover that the item Magruder had been hunting for is a part of the goldenCross of Coronado which shows the route to Quivira. Cole realizes that the other piece is held by Many Wounds, the Apache Chieftain. Cole and Soapy travel through the Badlands to the Apache Camp, where Many Wounds reveals that Cole is Apache. Many Wounds explains that his father and many other innocent villagers, were murdered by Magruder and his soldiers during their original search for the Cross of Coronado during the American Civil War. They are then once again ambushed by Magruder's men on their way to a mountain top Many Wounds told them of. Upon reaching the peak and using the Cross, they learn that Quivira is hidden inside a mountain, above where Magruder had been digging for it.

However, Magruder'smilitia discover their location, and attack them. Soapy is captured and tortured by Magruder, and is forced to reveal Quivira was above him all along. Magruder returns to his mine to find the City of Gold, while Cole fights his way down the mountain to save Soapy. Cole then kills Magruder's henchman Dutchie and his men, and captures Magruder's armored train. Clay and Cole then use the train to break into Magruder's Mine, which is then attacked by a joint force of Resistance fighters and Apache warriors. Fighting their way into the mines, Cole finally confronts Magruder inside Quivira. The two then furiously battle inside the Lost City, with Cole eventually overcoming the ruthlesstyrant and causing the mountain to begin to collapse. Cole leaves Magruder with his leg trapped under a rock to be crushed by the crumbing mountain while he escapes the Lost City with the help of Many Wounds. Then, with Magruder dead and Quivira lost for good, Cole tells Many Wounds that their fathers can finally rest in peace.

Development and marketing

[edit]

Gun was marketed through the use ofLast Call Poker — analternate reality game from42 Entertainment.[9]

Reception and sales

[edit]
Reception
Aggregate scores
AggregatorScore
GameRankings79%[10]
Metacritic79/100[11]
Review scores
PublicationScore
Eurogamer7/10[12]
GameProStarStarStarStarHalf star[13]
GameSpot7.4 of 10[14]
GameSpyStarStarStarStar[15]
GameTrailers7.6/10[16]
IGN8.0 of 10[17]
Official Xbox Magazine (UK)9/10[19]
Official Xbox Magazine (US)9.5/10[18]
Play8/10[20]
X-PlayStarStarStar[21]

Gun received mostly positive reviews from critics, although the Xbox 360 version met positive to mediocre ratings. It holds aggregate scores of 79% and 79/100 atGameRankings andMetacritic respectively.[10][11]IGN stated that "Neversoft has finally made a good game besides all theirTony Hawk".[17]GameSpot described it as "initially a 19th-centuryGrand Theft Auto",[14] whileGameSpy addressed it as having "just about everything you could want from a game set in the Wild West".[22] In its first month, the game sold 225,000 units across the four systems for which it was initially released.[23] According toToy Retail Survey Tracking (TRST) sales data, the game had sold over 1.4 million units in the U.S. by October 2008.

Awards

[edit]

The game was highly acclaimed by many, and has scored high ratings and awards. GameSpy awarded it "Editor's Choice"[24] and "Xbox 360 Action Game of the Year", saying that it "needs a sequel and fast".[25] The game's protagonist was placed #7 onGame Informer's "Top 10 Heroes of 2005" list.[26] At the9th Annual Interactive Achievement Awards,Gun was nominated for "Outstanding Achievement in Original Musical Composition", "Outstanding Character Performance – Male", "Outstanding Character Performance – Female", and "Outstanding Achievement in Story and Character Development".[27]

The editors ofComputer Games Magazine presentedGun with their 2005 "Best Voice Acting" award.[28] It was a finalist forPC Gamer US's "Best Action Game 2005" award, which ultimately went toF.E.A.R..[29]

Boycott by Native Americans groups

[edit]

The Association for American Indian Development declared aboycott of the game, claiming that it contains "derogatory, harmful, and inaccurate depictions of American Indians". Featured on the Association's boycott-specific website was a petition demanding that Activision clean up various aspects of the game before re-releasing it to retailers; the group called for a worldwiderecall of the game if the revision was not completed.[30] The site suggested that a game in which players were required to kill members of specific ethnic groups, likeAfrican Americans, Irish, Mexicans, orJews would never be tolerated, "but apparently, killing Indians is still fair game".[31] The site also mentioned events and revelations that take place later in the game's story, but assert that they do not address the problematic portions from earlier sections of the game.

On the now-defunct GamerGod.com website, contributor, Beth Dillon, concluded on January 31, 2006, that:

Even though the historical period portrayed inGun was fraught withracism, Activision's decision to publish aracially stereotyped video game represents a serious misstep in social responsibility. LikeCuster's Revenge,Gun provokes wonder. In this case, the industry has unfortunately bought into the popular misconception that games are frivolous because they are made for fun.[32]

The game's publisher issued this brief statement:

Activision does not condone or advocate any of theatrocities that occurred in the American West during the 1800s.Gun was designed to reflect the harshness of life on the American frontier at that time. It was not Activision's intention to offend any race or ethnic group withGun, and we apologize to any who might have been offended by the game's depiction of historical events which have been conveyed not only through video games but through films, television programming, books and other media.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Van Leuveren, Luke (October 21, 2005)."Updated Australian Release List - 31/10/05".PALGN. Archived fromthe original on March 7, 2012. RetrievedOctober 22, 2016.
  2. ^"Activision draws Gun".GameSpot. RetrievedMay 24, 2023.
  3. ^ab"Gun".Eurogamer.net. Archived fromthe original on June 28, 2015. RetrievedMay 24, 2023.
  4. ^"Microsoft Announces Xbox 360 Day One Launch Lineup — Strongest Launch in the History of Video Game Consoles".Microsoft. November 14, 2005. RetrievedNovember 14, 2005.
  5. ^Staff (August 8, 2005)."Gun Developer Interview"(Video).Gamespot Asia. CBS Interactive Inc. RetrievedJune 4, 2012.
  6. ^Greg Kasavin (November 8, 2005)."Gun Video Review".Gamespot Asia. CBS Interactive Inc. Archived fromthe original(Video) on January 11, 2013. RetrievedJune 4, 2012.
  7. ^"SPOnG.com :: Home to the video games database".spong.com. RetrievedApril 5, 2025.
  8. ^Xbox, Pure (November 16, 2023)."Xbox Live 1.0 Replacement 'Insignia' Now Supports 150 Games".Pure Xbox. RetrievedApril 5, 2025.
  9. ^ab"Gun Setting". Associate Publisher. Archived fromthe original on August 19, 2011.
  10. ^ab"Aggregate score".GameRankings. RetrievedAugust 22, 2008.
  11. ^ab"Aggregate score".Metacritic. Archived fromthe original on September 13, 2008. RetrievedAugust 22, 2008.
  12. ^"Gun". Eurogamer.net. May 17, 2010. Archived fromthe original on July 9, 2012. RetrievedOctober 4, 2010.
  13. ^"Gun Xbox 360 review from GamePro". GamePro.com. May 7, 2010. Archived fromthe original on April 30, 2009. RetrievedMay 17, 2010.
  14. ^ab"Xbox 360 review".GameSpot. Archived fromthe original on January 24, 2013. RetrievedAugust 22, 2008.
  15. ^"Xbox 360 review".GameSpy. RetrievedAugust 22, 2008.
  16. ^"Gun Review".GameTrailers. May 17, 2010.Archived from the original on December 21, 2021. RetrievedMay 17, 2010.
  17. ^ab"Xbox review".IGN. Archived fromthe original on November 24, 2005. RetrievedAugust 22, 2008.
  18. ^"Gun". oxmonline.com. Archived fromthe original on July 9, 2012. RetrievedOctober 14, 2008.
  19. ^"Gun Score".Official Xbox Magazine. January 21, 2011. Archived fromthe original on July 9, 2012. RetrievedJanuary 25, 2011.
  20. ^"Review: Gun". ComputerAndVideoGames.com. May 17, 2010. Archived fromthe original on July 9, 2012. RetrievedOctober 4, 2010.
  21. ^"Xbox 360 review".G4TV. Archived fromthe original on November 24, 2014. RetrievedAugust 22, 2008.
  22. ^"Xbox 360 review".GameSpy. Archived fromthe original on October 16, 2007. RetrievedOctober 1, 2007.
  23. ^"Activision warns of "significantly lower" earnings".GameSpot.
  24. ^"Action Game of the Year".GameSpy. Archived fromthe original on April 30, 2009.
  25. ^"Action Game of the Year".GameSpy. Archived fromthe original on October 16, 2007. RetrievedOctober 1, 2007.
  26. ^"Top ten Heroes".Game Informer. Archived fromthe original on August 19, 2011.
  27. ^"Interactive Awards".Annual Interactive Achievement Awards.
  28. ^Staff (March 2006). "The Best (and Worst) of 2005; The 15th AnnualComputer Games Awards".Computer Games Magazine (184):42–47.
  29. ^Staff (March 2006). "The Twelfth AnnualPC Gamer Awards".PC Gamer US.13 (3):33–36, 38,40–42, 44.
  30. ^Sinclair, Brendan (November 18, 2008)."Gun controversies".GameSpot.Archived from the original on December 22, 2013. RetrievedAugust 22, 2008.
  31. ^Chris Leigh (February 3, 2006)."GUN is "derogatory, harmful and inaccurate"".PALGN. Archived fromthe original on January 15, 2013. RetrievedJune 4, 2012.
  32. ^Beth Dillon (May 30, 2012)."Stereotype of the Month Entry (12/30/05) – Review of Gun From GamerGod.com: GUN Misfires".Blue Corn Comics. Robert Schmidt. RetrievedJune 4, 2012.

External links

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