Deus Ex is full of so many uncanny references to things to come. Also I remember a bit of controversy after 9/11 when someone on the Deus-Ex.org forums noticed that the twin towers were missing from NYC skyline in a game that came out early in 2000.
Well also it translates to "God From A Machine" and in the plot involves an ex-Illuminati billionaire "philanthropist" trying to use the latest technology to become a physical god over the people of Earth.
(To be honest, gamers are the 1st ones to break away from propaganda,TV. <we used them to game, instead of :watch> Gen X have grown up gaming, instead of watching.. many truths have been inserted... GI Joe & Ninja Turtles,, also rallied against the Deep State ... I may be rambling,, but Gen X... is a key.... imho)
Maybe.. I meet a lot of awfully dumb, brainwashed young people... And gamers are some of the worst at times in my experience. I used to play a lot of games.
Games were promoted as a way to keep parents from interacting with their children and to keep children stuck not learning any trade skills.
It backfired on them when more games came out with puzzle, strategy, and character-building elements that actually did teach important skills.
Then, the internet came about and the transfer of ideas about the games promoted a community of 'cheat code" and "exploit" seekers.
The looking for exploits in an information system is another way to describe hackers. They really didn't realize how much promoting games would come back to bite them -- now with a highly trained generation of adults who grew up trying to figure out how to break meticulously crafted systems and bend them to their will. It also taught team-work, community organization skills, and the value of competition for those who broke into the MMO market.
Games like EVE also encouraged entrepreneurship and economic literacy.
I think the reason most games these days are geared toward monetization and short-term rewards is because they realized how badly the messed up their distraction tactic and now have to coerce game developers to dumb games down in order to make up for lost time.
Also online multiplayer was where I first got to interact with people outside of my country on a regular basis and talk to them about what was really going on in their homelands.
The 1st one. It has all the real conspiracy stuff.
The others are effectively soft-reboots.
Deus Ex, the original, was made pre-2000 yet it has some features 1st person shooters to this day fail to include in the game.
Once you get over the graphics, control scheme, and old animations, you will be constantly impressed by the game to a degree where you're embarrassed for modern developers. You'll be constantly asking "How does this game have this feature in 2000!?" and "I can do that!?"
Melee headshots that can insta-knockout depending on what angle you hit the head (back of head with blunt weapon means unconscious, not kill).
Individual health bars for each body part, applicable for enemies as well as the main character.
Getting shot in both legs forces you to crawl, basically the Fallout VATS system.
Pacifist playthrough possible.
Corner peeking/leaning with Q and E.
Fully voice acted.
RPG character building with leveling system based on discovery not combat.
Movable bodies that can be detected by enemies.
Stealth with respect to lighting system/shadows and footsteps.
Weapon upgrade kits to customize your favorite weapons.
Jumping puzzles with alternate paths based on skills chosen and movable boxes you have to stack to get places.
RPG side quests that significantly change how you approach the map (passkeys, clues to broken doors, contacts that give you things)
NPC branching dialogue options.
Hack robots from terminals to do your bidding.
Augmentations that act like magic spells; invisibility, night vision, increased jumping, super strength, shields, regeneration, etc...
Passcodes DON'T require you to get them to use. Which means, as long as you remember all passcodes from your previous playthrough, you are effectively psychic. Good for speedruns.
Shooting, dropping or throwing items grabs enemys' attention.
You can set traps for enemies with mines and drop boxes on them (very rigid box physics mind you).
You can get a kit to control the Missile Launcher's missile with your crosshair.
Attache inventory system like Resident Evil.
Magazine based ammo system, not bullet based. Which means if you have 8/9 bullets with 3 magazines and reload, you lose those 8 bullets and your magazines go down to 2. This is intentional to balance item usage and deemphasize run and gun. Plus, more realistic. Not for everyone, though.
There's a noisy cricket 1shot gun called the PS20 as a get-out-of-jail-free tool. Good for bosses your build is bad against.
You can eavesdrop on enemies who talk to one another and they will sometimes reveal secrets about the map.
Now, looking at all that, remember... This game came out in 2000, along side MGS and Zelda: Majora's Mask. That was a good year for games, aye?
Remember, the original Deus Ex is far ahead of its time in so many ways, it's almost prophetic. Take a break after playing it, because many similar games will only let you down on how much Deus Ex actually has over them.
Start with this one, then move to Human Revolution, skipping Invisible War.
Or, play Deus Ex: Invisible War at your leisure. It is a red-headed step child and tries to be what other games were when it came out, not succeed the original. In other words, it cuts a lot of the original game's best features in order to appeal to console-oriented gamers. Story is fine, but going to it straight from Deus Ex is like a kick in the nutsack.
Human Revolution is a great run of the mill cover shooter with a few of these nice mechanics fleshed out a bit, but doesn't expound on anything too much.
Mankind Divided should be the next after that, but I never got far into it because it streamlined a lot of the RPG adventure/sandbox elements for a Dishonored type of run-gun stealth shooter.
OK thanks. It looks like the original is only playable on PC. I went to the xbox store and only saw the others. I remember those days. I was probably playing Goldeneye and Perfect Dark. Never got around to Deus Ex.
Jumping puzzles with alternate paths based on skills chosen and movable boxes you have to stack to get places.
Or if you have explosives or high enough melee skill and strength augmentation you can often just smash down the door in the your way (although risk alerting everyone nearby.) Many games still don't have destructible doors to this day.
First one is ancient and definitely plays like it, even though it’s great.
I just played through Human Revolution and Mankind Divided. They’re pretty great. They’re prequels to the original, but should be played in the order I just said.
Deus Ex is full of so many uncanny references to things to come. Also I remember a bit of controversy after 9/11 when someone on the Deus-Ex.org forums noticed that the twin towers were missing from NYC skyline in a game that came out early in 2000.
I'm on the map right now. I'll post a picture tomorrow when I'm at the top of the tower. Bed time now, though.
He has an earring and a face tattoo. Sounds like a JoJo character to me.
Well also it translates to "God From A Machine" and in the plot involves an ex-Illuminati billionaire "philanthropist" trying to use the latest technology to become a physical god over the people of Earth.
That game, was a damn good game. That was my first encounter with red pills, along with the matrix movies.
I did the same recently ... this was a nice future ref about our efforts.
Screenshot
Woah! Manderly is a Bob Page/Magestic12 plant in the game, as well, so coming from him it is clear he is working a disinfo agenda.
This is shockingly topical! Good find!
Yep, very uncanny.
I know! Read my earlier post where I connected McAfee to Joseph Joestar.
https://greatawakening.win/p/12j0RFUJNp/this-is-why-mcafee-has-joseph-jo/c/
Shall we play a GME?
(To be honest, gamers are the 1st ones to break away from propaganda,TV. <we used them to game, instead of :watch> Gen X have grown up gaming, instead of watching.. many truths have been inserted... GI Joe & Ninja Turtles,, also rallied against the Deep State ... I may be rambling,, but Gen X... is a key.... imho)
Maybe.. I meet a lot of awfully dumb, brainwashed young people... And gamers are some of the worst at times in my experience. I used to play a lot of games.
Games were promoted as a way to keep parents from interacting with their children and to keep children stuck not learning any trade skills.
It backfired on them when more games came out with puzzle, strategy, and character-building elements that actually did teach important skills.
Then, the internet came about and the transfer of ideas about the games promoted a community of 'cheat code" and "exploit" seekers.
The looking for exploits in an information system is another way to describe hackers. They really didn't realize how much promoting games would come back to bite them -- now with a highly trained generation of adults who grew up trying to figure out how to break meticulously crafted systems and bend them to their will. It also taught team-work, community organization skills, and the value of competition for those who broke into the MMO market.
Games like EVE also encouraged entrepreneurship and economic literacy.
I think the reason most games these days are geared toward monetization and short-term rewards is because they realized how badly the messed up their distraction tactic and now have to coerce game developers to dumb games down in order to make up for lost time.
Also online multiplayer was where I first got to interact with people outside of my country on a regular basis and talk to them about what was really going on in their homelands.
I never played any of the Deus Ex games. Which one would you suggest?
The 1st one. It has all the real conspiracy stuff.
The others are effectively soft-reboots.
Deus Ex, the original, was made pre-2000 yet it has some features 1st person shooters to this day fail to include in the game.
Once you get over the graphics, control scheme, and old animations, you will be constantly impressed by the game to a degree where you're embarrassed for modern developers. You'll be constantly asking "How does this game have this feature in 2000!?" and "I can do that!?"
Now, looking at all that, remember... This game came out in 2000, along side MGS and Zelda: Majora's Mask. That was a good year for games, aye?
Remember, the original Deus Ex is far ahead of its time in so many ways, it's almost prophetic. Take a break after playing it, because many similar games will only let you down on how much Deus Ex actually has over them.
Start with this one, then move to Human Revolution, skipping Invisible War.
Or, play Deus Ex: Invisible War at your leisure. It is a red-headed step child and tries to be what other games were when it came out, not succeed the original. In other words, it cuts a lot of the original game's best features in order to appeal to console-oriented gamers. Story is fine, but going to it straight from Deus Ex is like a kick in the nutsack.
Human Revolution is a great run of the mill cover shooter with a few of these nice mechanics fleshed out a bit, but doesn't expound on anything too much.
Mankind Divided should be the next after that, but I never got far into it because it streamlined a lot of the RPG adventure/sandbox elements for a Dishonored type of run-gun stealth shooter.
OK thanks. It looks like the original is only playable on PC. I went to the xbox store and only saw the others. I remember those days. I was probably playing Goldeneye and Perfect Dark. Never got around to Deus Ex.
Or if you have explosives or high enough melee skill and strength augmentation you can often just smash down the door in the your way (although risk alerting everyone nearby.) Many games still don't have destructible doors to this day.
First one is ancient and definitely plays like it, even though it’s great.
I just played through Human Revolution and Mankind Divided. They’re pretty great. They’re prequels to the original, but should be played in the order I just said.