![]() ![]() Once a mission begins, gameplay switches to a turn-based battle mode where you issue commands to soldiers. X-COM‘s combat hasn’t aged quite as gracefully, but still has all the tension and danger of alien encounters. But it’s still immensely compelling, especially when you have enough bases to deploy soldiers anywhere in the world. ![]() There are dozens of minor details X-COM expects you to micromanage, which will turn some players off. Personnel and equipment can be transferred between bases at any point, although travel times must be accounted for. New aircraft is essential, but you’ll also need missiles, ammunition, and hangars where they can be stored. You’re provided with a budget in the millions, which is quickly consumed by the expenses of an international organization. In other words, UFO Defense is a full-blown military management sim which lets you develop X-COM as you see fit. And instead of fighting off a mothership for the finale, UFO Defense gives you a spacecraft so you can take the fight back to the alien colony. It’s even possible to micromanage right down to the ammunition carried by each soldier. You can also specialize the facilities and function of each base, putting your research labs in Europe while North America is your manufacturing center. New bases can be constructed on any continent, each with its own soldiers and personnel. Instead of commanding X-COM from a single location, you’ll control operations across the entire planet. Unlike Enemy Unknown, UFO Defense has an even grander tactical scope. Those advances help you repel increasingly difficult terror attacks, both to protect civilian lives and preserve crucial funding from founding nations. Successful missions reward you with alien technology and alien specimens which can be studied to unlock new technologies. When UFOs appear on your radar screen, you can deploy attack craft to shoot them down and send strike teams to search the wreckage. You’ll construct X-COM facilities, recruit new soldiers, buy and sell equipment, and manage resources needed to halt the alien attackers. ![]() Just like in Enemy Unknown, gameplay flips between base management and tactical combat sequences. But as alien incursions intensify, X-COM must grow into a full-fledged strike force or risk losing each nation to alien rulers. Deciding no one country can defeat the menace alone, they create X-COM, an international first response team that can be dispatched anywhere in the world. Reports of abductions and mysterious experiments circulate the globe, and the world’s leaders can’t agree on how to proceed. X-COM: UFO Defense begins in a futuristic 1999, roughly a year after alien spacecraft appeared in the skies. It’s no wonder we’re still talking about UFO Defense twenty years later – and why we might still be studying it once we actually encounter alien life. But it’s hard to deny X-COM: UFO Defense got a lot right on the first try, or that modern developers are just catching up to it. And we’re no exception – in 2012, former Escapist editor Steve Butts argued X-COM: UFO Defense was the greatest video game of all time.ĭid Microprose really craft the perfect video game in 1994, and everything that’s come after is a pale imitation? Should Firaxis just remaster UFO Defense instead of bothering with sequels? Of course not – Enemy Unknown brilliantly improved upon the original in all kinds of ways. Many gaming websites still called X-COM: UFO Defense the world’s best PC game as recently as 2007. UFO Defense was an impressively complex strategy title for 1994, boasting a tactical scope Enemy Unknown couldn’t match. Sure, many fans always prefer original games over reboots, but with X-COM they have a pretty strong case. But depending on who you ask, the best alien defense game was already released in 1994: UFO: Enemy Unknown, or as it was marketed in North America, XCOM: UFO Defense, This series set the bar for turn-based gameplay, permadeath, and harsh tactical decisions in modern games, and the sequel should improve on XCOM: Enemy Unknown in every way. XCOM 2 finally launches next week, and alien invasion strategists couldn’t be happier. ![]() Platforms: PC (reviewed), Amiga, PlayStation. ![]()
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