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Wipeout 2097

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1996 video game

1996 video game
Wipeout 2097
European PlayStation cover art
Developer(s)Psygnosis[a]
Publisher(s)Psygnosis[b]
Programmer(s)Stewart Sockett, Chris Roberts, Nick Kimberley[9]
Artist(s)Pol Sigerson, Ashley Sanders, Nicky Westcott[9]
Composer(s)Tim Wright[9]
SeriesWipeout
Platform(s)
Release
18 October 1996
  • PlayStation
    PC
    Sega Saturn
    Amiga (WarpOS)
    1999
    Mac OS
Genre(s)Racing
Mode(s)Single-player,multiplayer

Wipeout 2097 (released asWipeout XL in North America and Japan) is a 1996racingvideo game developed and published byPsygnosis for thePlayStation. It is the second installment of theWipeout series and a sequel to theoriginal game, released the previous year. It was ported the following year toMicrosoft Windows and theSega Saturn, and later also toAmiga andMacintosh.

Whereas the original game introduced the F3600anti-gravity racing league in 2052,Wipeout 2097 is set over four decades later and introduces the player to the much faster, more competitive, and more dangerous F5000 AG racing league. The game introduced a new damage interface and new weapons and tracks. The Sega Saturn version supported analogue control by using its 3D Control Pad, whereas the PlayStation version supported analogue control only through using the optionalNeGcon twist controller.

Wipeout 2097 received critical acclaim upon release; reviewers praised the game for its dramatic improvements to the controls, graphics, and gameplay of the originalWipeout. The game featured a licensed electronic soundtrack featuring artists such as The Chemical Brothers and The Prodigy, an early example of modern licensed music being used in video games.Wipeout 2097 alongside its predecessor has since appeared on lists of thegreatest games of all time by multiple publications.

Gameplay

[edit]
Gameplay from the Sega Saturn version

Gameplay inWipeout 2097 expands upon its predecessor, introducing new circuits and weapons while retaining fundamental aspects. Players race against computer-controlled artificial opponents or other pilots, aiming to finish in the highest position possible. The game features futuristic hover vehicles that handle differently from traditional racing cars. The craft move at high speeds, with air-brakes used for cornering.[11]

Wipeout 2097 introduces a weapons system, allowing players to eliminate opponents during races. Each vehicle has a shield energy quota, and when this reaches zero from weapon attacks or impacts, the craft is destroyed.[11][12] However, the ship can be "recharged" to health at thepit stop in exchange for a precious few seconds of the race.[13][14] The Quake Disruptor is a notable new weapon, causing a wave effect on the track that launches opponent vehicles into the air.[11]

The game offers multiple difficulty levels, called classes: Vector, Venom, and Rapier. Each class increases in challenge, with higher speeds and more complex tracks.[11]Wipeout 2097 features a progression system where players can unlock additional content. Winning gold medals across all tracks in the first three classes unlocks a full season mode. Completing this season reveals additional hidden options, including new tracks.[11] Challenge mode takes a very single player-centric approach by only allowing progress to the next track by coming in first on the current track. Players can lose the mode by losing all three lives, which are lost by finishing a race in worse than third position.[14][15]

The game includes multiple racing teams, each with vehicles that handle differently. FEISAR, the European team, offers a balanced vehicle with good turning and strong shields, suitable for beginners learning the tracks. Auricom, the American team, provides faster vehicles than FEISAR and AG Systems, designed for more experienced racers. AG Systems, the Japanese team, features a vehicle with higher speed than FEISAR's but less cornering ability. Qirex, the Russian team, offers the fastest vehicles in the game, but with reduced steering capabilities. Each team's vehicle has its own strengths and weaknesses, allowing players to choose based on their preferred driving style and skill level.[11]

Development

[edit]

As with thefirst installment,Wipeout 2097 was developed by Liverpudlian developerPsygnosis and the promotional art was designed bySheffield-basedThe Designers Republic.[16] The development cycle ran for seven months.[13] To cater for the increase inWipeout players, an easier learning curve was introduced whilst keeping the difficulty at the top end for the experienced gamers.[17] The game was originally intended as a tracks add-on for the originalWipeout. No sequel had been planned, but Andy Satterthwaite (who worked on theMS-DOS version of the original) was asked by Psygnosis to apply for the role "internal producer". He did, and during the interview, asked to do a sequel toWipeout, but instead ended up developing extra tracks. The add-on was titledWipeout 2097 because Psygnosis did not want to give the impression that it was a full sequel. In the United States, it went by the name ofWipeout XL because it was felt that American players would not understand the concept of the game being set a century in the future, and might confuse it for an installment number. The American title was originally to beWipeout XS (for "Excess"), but it was pointed out that XS could also stand for "extra small". Satterthwaite ended up with a team of three coders (two of whom were new), six artists, and Nick Burcombe.[18]

The game's look was influenced by Japanese culture because the team had worked with The Designers Republic. Nicky Westcott was the lead artist, and her team built on the original vehicle designs. She also worked with the designers and coders on the tracks. Custom tools were created inSoftimage to develop the tracks, which were tweaked and the team played each other's tracks to obtain feedback. During the process, Satterthwaite realised that he could do more than the tracks add-on he was tasked with producing. Work on the tracks began in January 1996, and the plan was to select eight tracks out of twenty designed and built in a month. Their "skinning" was expected to be complete by June, with the game anticipated for release in October. Despite the work involved, Satterthwaite had three uninvolved coders.[18] The collision code from the originalWipeout was also completely overhauled to make cornering easier by making wall grinding not bring the player to such a halt.[17]

Burcombe wanted to improve on the original's ship handling and introduce a new weapon, which led to new power-up ideas. Westcott said that it was a collaboration between the areas because of the strict deadline. The gameplay change that had the most interest was what happened to ships that hit track edges. That ships stopped immediately in the original game was considered too harsh. It was desired that ships scraped the edges instead, and this took longer than expected to develop. Ghost vehicles were only featured in the European version becauseAtari had a patent on them fromHard Drivin' in the United States. The team wanted to make it possible to win races in any ship, and a challenge was to make them all feel different and to still have their worth. Months of work rebalancing theartificial intelligence was undertaken to ensure all vehicle and track settings were a challenge. Sony wanted alink-up feature, which proved difficult due to syncing issues and the frame rate differences betweenPAL andNTSC. Much extra content, such as more difficult tracks and a prototype ship, was added because, according to Westcott, the team were both enthusiastic and stressed, and described their development as "a period of great energy and immense exhaustion at the same time".[18]

An entire United Kingdom nightclub tour was initiated in conjunction with theRed Bull energy drink, which was featured prominently throughout the game before the drink actually gained popularity in the American market.[19]

The game was first unveiled in the form of apre-alpha demo at the May 1996Electronic Entertainment Expo.[20]Wipeout 2097 was released in 1996 and sold around a million copies. Ports for theSega Saturn, and Windows PC were released in 1997. Later it was also ported toAmiga by Digital Images in 1999 and toMac OS by Coderus in 2002.[18]

Music

[edit]

The originalWipeout game was one of the first racing titles to prominently feature electronic music, including tracks by artists such asLeftfield,The Chemical Brothers, andOrbital. This use of licensed music was unconventional for the time and helped establish the series’ identity. The game and its soundtrack drew heavily on the'future UK' aesthetic of the 1990s—a style defined by techno-inspired visuals and the rise of electronic music andrave culture.[21] Its marketing campaign, aimed at a young, club-going audience, further emphasised the connection between the game and the rave culture of the 1990s.[21]

Wipeout 2097, released asWipeout XL in North America, expanded upon this foundation with a soundtrack that featured a wider array of high-profile electronic music artists. Tracks byThe Prodigy,Fluke,Underworld, andPhotek were included, alongside returning contributors Leftfield and The Chemical Brothers. The game’s music played a key role in defining its high-energy, futuristic atmosphere, with the soundtrack often being associated with the mid-90s rise ofbig beat and techno music.[22]Fluke contributed the trackAtom Bomb, which was created specifically for the game and accompanied by a music video set in theWipeout universe.

In addition to licensed tracks,Tim Wright, known as CoLD SToRAGE, contributed original compositions to the game. Wright wanted his music to emphasise slower tempos while still maintaining a driving sense of energy to match the fast-paced visuals ofWipeout 2097. To achieve this, he leaned heavily into the big beat sound, inspired by artists like The Chemical Brothers andFatboy Slim.[22][23] The style’s heavy basslines, prominent drops, and use of samples allowed Wright to maintain an adrenaline-pumping atmosphere despite the slower tempo. Wright noted that it was difficult to get his tracks into the game due to the larger number of high-profile artists featured on the soundtrack.[22]

Sony promotedWipeout 2097 by showcasing PlayStation consoles running the game in nightclub settings.[24] They also released a line of branded clubwear inspired by the game.[24] Additionally, theWipeout 2097 game disc doubled as an audio CD, allowing players to listen to the soundtrack directly, and a separate album with a different tracklist was also released.[24]

Track listing PlayStation version
No.TitleWriter(s)PerformerLength
1."Data track"N/A  
2."We Have Explosive"Garry Cobain,Brian DougansThe Future Sound of London5:53
3."Landmass"Garry Cobain, Brian DougansThe Future Sound of London4:29
4."Atom Bomb"FlukeFluke5:33
5."V Six"FlukeFluke5:19
6."Dust up Beats"Ed Simons, Tom RowlandsThe Chemical Brothers6:07
7."Loops of Fury"Ed Simons, Tom RowlandsThe Chemical Brothers4:41
8."The Third Sequence"Rupert ParkesPhotek4:48
9."Tin There (Underworld Edit)"Darren Emerson, Rick SmithUnderworld6:08
10."Firestarter (Instrumental)"Liam Howlett,Keith FlintThe Prodigy4:39
11."Canada"Tim WrightCoLD SToRAGE6:14
12."Body in Motion"Tim WrightCoLD SToRAGE5:14
Track listing Saturn version
No.TitleWriter(s)PerformerLength
1."Kinkong"Tim WrightCoLD SToRAGE4:31
2."Plasticity"Tim WrightCoLD SToRAGE3:55
3."Messij Xtnd"Tim WrightCoLD SToRAGE9:22
4."Body in Motion"Tim WrightCoLD SToRAGE5:15
5."Canada"Tim WrightCoLD SToRAGE6:13
6."Tenation"Tim WrightCoLD SToRAGE2:42
7."Surgeon"Tim WrightCoLD SToRAGE4:06
8."Body Plus"Tim WrightCoLD SToRAGE9:22
9."Hakapik Murder"Tim WrightCoLD SToRAGE4:08
10."Messij Received"Tim WrightCoLD SToRAGE4:18
Track listing Mac version
No.TitleWriter(s)PerformerLength
1."Body in Motion"Tim WrightCoLD SToRAGE5:15
2."Canada"Tim WrightCoLD SToRAGE6:13
3."Hakapik Murder"Tim WrightCoLD SToRAGE4:08
4."Plasticity"Tim WrightCoLD SToRAGE3:55
5."Messij Received"Tim WrightCoLD SToRAGE4:18
6."Surgeon"Tim WrightCoLD SToRAGE4:06
7."Tenation"Tim WrightCoLD SToRAGE2:42
8."Messij Xtnd"Tim WrightCoLD SToRAGE9:22
9."Kinkong"Tim WrightCoLD SToRAGE4:31

Reception

[edit]
Reception
Aggregate scores
AggregatorScore
GameRankings95%[25]
Metacritic93/100[26]
Review scores
PublicationScore
AllGame (PS)[33]
(PC)[34]
Edge8/10[27]
GameSpot8.5/10 (PS)[28]
7.1/10 (PC)[29]
IGN9/10 (PS)[14]
Next Generation (PC)[30]
PC PowerPlay75% (PC)[31]
Sega Saturn Magazine92% (SAT)[32]

PlayStation

[edit]

In the United Kingdom, it was among the nineteen best-selling PlayStationgames of 1996, according toHMV.[35]

Air Hendrix scored the PlayStation version a perfect 5 out of 5 in every category (FunFactor, control, sound, and graphics) inGamePro, citing "across-the-board innovations" over the already excellent originalWipeOut. He particularly remarked that the controls are much more refined, fairer, and easier to master, and that the frame rate and graphical effects are much more impressive.[36] Tom Ham ofGameSpot also commented on the control improvements and approved of the new ability to destroy opponents. Additionally praising the elaborate backgrounds, detailed sound effects, and more aggressive A.I., he deemed it "a must buy."[28]IGN said that it had topped the original in terms of music, number of simultaneous racers, A.I., weapons, and graphics, and concluded, "It's games like this that make you proud to be a PlayStation owner."[14] In 1996,Next Generation rankedWipeout 2097 as the 32nd top game of all time for how "playing linkedWipeout comes close to gaming at its very best", noting that the game could have been atechnology demonstration for PlayStation.[37]Edge gave both the PlayStation and Sega Saturn versions a score of 8 out of 10, with similar remarks of its improved graphics and its gameplay.[27][13]

Electronic Gaming Monthly editors awardedWipeout 2097 Best Music of 1996 and a runner-up (behindSuper Mario 64) for Best Graphics.[38] In 1997,The Official PlayStation Magazine named it the fifth top PlayStation game yet,[39] andElectronic Gaming Monthly named the PlayStation version the 96th best game of all time, calling it "the first game of the cyberpunk-esque 'electronic age,' before the electronic age was just a hype-filled buzzword."[40] InIGN's top 25 PlayStation games of all-time list it ranked 13th, noted for being often considered the PlayStation's best racing game of its time and was chosen ahead of others in the series becauseWipeout 2097 was "the one they preferred to keep coming back to".[41] In 2003,Wipeout 2097 was inducted intoGameSpot's list of the greatest games of all time.[42] It ranks as the third-best PlayStation game atGameRankings with an average review score of 94.75% from ten different sources.[25]

Ports

[edit]

Rich Leadbetter ofSega Saturn Magazine commented that the Saturn version, while not as good as the PlayStation original, is a much closer conversion than the Saturn port of the firstWipeout, particularly in terms of the fluidity, control, and sense of speed. He deemed it the second best racing game on the Saturn, exceeded only bySega Rally Championship.[32]

Jeff Gerstmann reviewed the PC version inGameSpot, assessing that "The PC version's Direct3D support gives this new release a nice face-lift, while still keeping intact the fast action and stylized graphics that console players have come to know and love." He said that the new soundtrack, while good, is a disappointment compared to the PlayStation version's techno tracks, but gave the game a strong recommendation.[29]Next Generation stated that "If you have a 3D accelerator of any sort, you owe it to yourself to pick up this game. Its nearly flawless gameplay, pumping soundtrack, and visual excellence mark it as a showcase title and all around good time."[30]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Ported to Sega Saturn byTantalus Entertainment andPerfect Entertainment. Ported to Amiga by Digital Images and by Coderus for Mac.
  2. ^Mac port published by Virtual Programming.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Release List (Framed )". Archived fromthe original on 27 October 1996. Retrieved4 May 2023.
  2. ^"Hull Daily Mail 16 Oct 1996, page 11".Newspapers.com. Retrieved4 May 2023.Wipeout 2097 andActua Golf on the PlayStation are out on Friday and are expected to do well.
  3. ^"Psygnosis Publishes Ports".PC Gamer. 26 June 1997. Archived fromthe original on 18 February 1998. Retrieved5 December 2019.
  4. ^"Psygnosis Games Index". 19 June 1997. Archived fromthe original on 19 June 1997. Retrieved4 May 2023.
  5. ^I. G. N. Staff (17 June 1997)."Real Life Wipeout XL".IGN. Retrieved4 May 2023.
  6. ^"sega-europe.online". 2 December 1998. Archived fromthe original on 2 December 1998. Retrieved3 May 2023.
  7. ^"Freeverse makes Wipeout 2097 available in US".Macworld. Retrieved4 May 2023.
  8. ^"Wipeout 2097 comes to Mac".Macworld. Retrieved4 May 2023.
  9. ^abcWipeout 2097 manual. Psygnosis. 1997. p. 18.
  10. ^Cohen, Peter."Wipeout 2097 goes Carbon". Macworld.Archived from the original on 19 March 2024. Retrieved21 March 2025.
  11. ^abcdefCutlack, Gary (August 1997)."I Feel the Need, the Need for Speed... Again!".Sega Saturn Magazine. No. 22.Emap International Limited. pp. 52–57. Retrieved25 November 2018.
  12. ^"NG Alphas: Wipeout XL".Next Generation. No. 20.Imagine Media. August 1996. p. 77.
  13. ^abcEdge staff writers (24 February 2013)."The Making Of:Wipeout".Edge. Future plc. Archived fromthe original on 8 December 2014. Retrieved22 August 2014.
  14. ^abcdIGN staff writers (26 November 1996)."Wipeout XL".IGN. Ziff Davis.Archived from the original on 26 August 2014. Retrieved22 August 2014.
  15. ^Wipeout 2097 Instruction Manual. 1996. p. 7.
  16. ^Yin-Poole, Wesley (30 November 2014)."WipEout: The rise and fall of Sony Studio Liverpool".EuroGamer.Archived from the original on 12 February 2019. Retrieved18 January 2015.
  17. ^ab"Wipeout 2".Next Generation. No. 17.Imagine Media. May 1996. p. 55.
  18. ^abcd"The Making Of: Wipeout 2097".Retro Gamer Annual Volume 3.Future plc. 2016. pp. 136–143.ISBN 978-1785-464-690.
  19. ^"The Future Sound of Game Music".Next Generation. No. 24.Imagine Media. December 1996. pp. 86, 88.
  20. ^"Psygnosis Own E3...".Maximum: The Video Game Magazine. No. 7.Emap International Limited. June 1996. pp. 78–80.
  21. ^abDylan Wray, Daniel (2 April 2024)."Wipeout: The Story of the World's First Rave-Inspired Video Game".Mixmag. Retrieved7 December 2024.
  22. ^abc"Wipeout 2097: The Making of an Iconic PlayStation Soundtrack".Sonic State. NoClip. 6 November 2024. Retrieved2 December 2024.
  23. ^Quillfeldt, Thomas (9 December 2023)."Wipeout's Original Composer Revisits a Stylish Masterpiece".Laced Records. Retrieved3 December 2024.
  24. ^abcLangshaw, Mark (7 December 2014)."20 years of PlayStation: Wipeout revisited".Digital Spy. Retrieved2 December 2024.
  25. ^ab"Wipeout 2097".GameRankings. CBS Interactive. Archived fromthe original on 16 October 2014. Retrieved22 August 2014.
  26. ^"Wipeout XL".Metacritic.Archived from the original on 8 June 2020. Retrieved29 April 2020.
  27. ^abEdge staff (24 August 1995)."Wipeout Review".Edge. Future plc.Archived from the original on 21 June 2013. Retrieved22 August 2014.
  28. ^abHam, Tom (1 December 1996)."Wipeout XL Review".GameSpot.Archived from the original on 11 December 2017. Retrieved11 December 2017.
  29. ^abGerstmann, Jeff (26 August 1997)."Wipeout XL Review".GameSpot. CBS Interactive.Archived from the original on 22 August 2017. Retrieved22 August 2014.
  30. ^ab"Finals".Next Generation. No. 33.Imagine Media. September 1997. pp. 143–144.
  31. ^Lawrence, Jere (July 1997)."Wipeout 2097".PC PowerPlay (14):56–57.
  32. ^abLeadbetter, Rich (August 1997)."Review: Wipeout 2097".Sega Saturn Magazine. No. 22.Emap International Limited. pp. 72–73. Retrieved25 November 2018.
  33. ^"Wipeout XL (Playstation) Review".Allgame. Archived fromthe original on 15 November 2014.
  34. ^"Wipeout XL (PC) Review".Allgame. Archived fromthe original on 15 November 2014.
  35. ^"Editorial".Computer and Video Games. No. 183 (February 1997). United Kingdom:EMAP. 10 January 1997. pp. 6–7.
  36. ^"ProReview: Wipeout XL".GamePro. No. 98.IDG. November 1996. pp. 102–3.
  37. ^"Top 100 Games of All-Time".Next Generation. No. 21. September 1996. p. 59.
  38. ^"The Best of '96".Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 92.Ziff Davis. March 1997. p. 90.
  39. ^Staff writers (September 1997). "Top 25 PlayStation Games of All Time".PlayStation: The Official Magazine. Vol. 1, no. 1. Future plc. p. 34.
  40. ^"100 Best Games of All Time".Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 100.Ziff Davis. November 1997. p. 102. Note: Contrary to the title, the intro to the article explicitly states that the list covers console video games only, meaning PC games and arcade games were not eligible.
  41. ^IGN staff writers (22 January 2002)."Top 25 Games of All Time: Complete List".IGN. Ziff Davis.Archived from the original on 27 April 2013. Retrieved22 August 2014.
  42. ^"The Greatest Games of All Time:Wipeout XL".GameSpot. Archived fromthe original on 7 October 2007.

External links

[edit]
Games
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Colony Wars
Destruction Derby
Formula One
Lemmings
Shadow of the Beast
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