Turtle Rock Studios and 2K Games have taken the wraps off Evolve, the cooperative multiplayer, monster-hunting first-person shooter coming this fall to PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC. In a hands-on preview, I found it to be both terrifying and a lot of fun.
Evolve is the latest title from developer Turtle Rock Studios, started by Phil Robb and Chris Ashton in 2002. They did a lot of work with Valve, creating Counter-Strike: Condition Zero, Counter-Strike: Source, and Left 4 Dead. The latter game was about four human players who teamed up together to fend off hordes of fast-running zombies. Robb said that game taught the developers a lot about cooperative multiplayer, including boss battles. Such battles are usually scripted and repetitive since they’re based on computer-controlled bosses. (See our full interview with Robb here).
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On an alien world with lush jungles and wildlife, the two sides play a cat-and-mouse game. The 3D graphics are outstanding. As the monster, you can hunt and eat wildlife so that you get the energy to evolve into a more powerful creature. After you do that, you can take the offensive against the humans.
“Until now, we never really had the hardware to fully realize the vision,” Robb told GamesBeat. “If you’re the monster, you have to be able to hide, and that means you have a lot of foliage. There’s also a lot of wildlife that you have to model. It was OK on the previous generation, but we decided the game presents itself much better on next-generation consoles.”
Turtle Rock started on Evolve three years ago, and THQ was planning to publish it. But then that company went bankrupt, and Take-Two Interactive bought the rights to publish the game for $10.8 million a year ago. Here’s a rundown on what it’s like to play on both sides of this game.
Playing as Goliath
I started out playing as Goliath, a tremendously strong creature who is a cross between King Kong and a monster from the Alien movies. Goliath can leap long distances and come stomping down on targets. It can also charge at an enemy and send it flying.
As strong as it is, the Goliath can’t kill a human with a single blow. At stage three, the monster can do a lot more damage. Even so, the humans can take a lot of abuse. That makes the game more balanced. But once one of the survivors goes down, the monster’s chances are much better.
At the beginning of a round, the monster gets a 30-second head start at hiding while the squad of humans drops into the large battle arena. The area is so big that there are many places for the monster to hide. You can move around fast, but there’s a chance you’ll scare birds. If you do so, the hunters get an immediate jump on your location. The monster can also move around in stealth mode as if it were stalking something. The trackers can see the monster’s footprints, but the monster can walk through streams to hide tracks.
As I started moving, I couldn’t shake a feeling of fear as I was being stalked even though I was a very powerful creature. That sense of dread is something you don’t feel in a lot of video games, and it’s even worse because you know that those chasing after you are smart.
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I moved away from the drop zone as quietly as possible, but the humans saw me relatively quickly and started shooting. I had to jump and run to try to lose them. Then a trapper set up a kind of shield that ensnared me inside a section of the terrain. So I had to turn and fight. I charged the humans, but they were able to fly around with jet packs and escape me. One of the trackers harpooned me, and I had to pull the weapon out and stay on the run. I pummeled the members of the squad but never scored enough hits to kill one. Then the shield expired, and I was able to run off. I was able to escape because the monster can climb up any surface, like a cliff, quickly.
As I put some ground between me and the humans, I was able to stop and smash a few smaller creatures. I ate them to restore my health. And as I ate more, I was able to hide and then evolve. I was vulnerable during this time, but I was able to emerge from it much stronger as a stage-two monster. As I ran away, I squashed a bunch of smaller animals and scared a lot of birds. I was able to elude the humans during this time and faced the squad again in an area around a huge rock. I was able to use the rock as protection from anyone trying to shoot me from above.
Then I just started running around the rock in circles and was able to get away from anyone who had a bead on me, and I would occasionally knock into a hunter from behind. This was enormously satisfying as the hunter went flying at a single swat or charge. But I didn’t get any of them for good and ran off again. I found it a bit hard to make precise attacks with the monster.
I was able to eat enough animals to heal and then level up to stage three. At that point, I was able to take the offensive since I was now about 30 feet tall. I went to a multilevel building that had a bunch of targets that I had to destroy. I hopped around and was able to ascend the building without being spotted. Then, on top of the platform, we had a big melee.
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I had to chase after the medic most of the time because she was healing the other hunters that I attacked. If I took her out, I would be able to eliminate the other players more easily. I eventually learned how to aim rocks that I could fire like missiles at the humans. I also could jump up and come smashing down on the ground, knocking the humans off their feet if they were too close. I was able to deal a lot of damage. But the medic was fast and could jump around with her jet pack. So she kept escaping. Eventually, the hunters brought me down. When they did so, I found that my hands were sweating. It was pretty intense.
Playing as a human
After my turn as a monster, I had a much better idea of how to play a human. I started out as Griffin, the trapper. Griffin has a light submachine gun that can do a little bit of damage to the monster. But his value comes in other ways. I was able to plant a bunch of sound sensors into the ground. If the monster walked by them, they would sound an alarm, and my team could descend on the location. I had seven sensors, or enough to cover a line down the middle of the map. At one point, the monster crossed over a sensor, and we spotted him.
We were able to communicate with each other on headsets. We ran to the spot, and I deployed a big shield, which trapped the monster. And then I started opening up on him with my submachine gun. The others opened up on him with harpoons, assault guns, and artillery barrages. One of the humans can shield you from attacks and protect you as you fire at the monster at close range. Eventually, the monster ran away again.
The monster survived until stage three, and we had to defend the platform. That was pretty hard to do, and the monster kept knocking us out by charging us. After I died, I had to sit out for two minutes while my comrades tried to stay out of the monster’s way. I respawned in the midst of the action and got taken out again. The monster survived long enough to win that round.
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The next time, I played a support character. This class gives the other players some tactical advantages in offense and defense. In this role, I was able to call in an occasional artillery strike that tore up the monster. I could also harpoon the monster and keep it pinned down in an area while the others shot it.
My fellow squad members made themselves very useful. The medic had a special gun that could punch a hole in the monster’s armor. It shows up as a target on the monster’s body, and other players can shoot at it, doing more damage than ordinary. She could also point a ray at a comrade and heal the player on the spot. The trapper did his job. And the assault gunner stayed busy and never appeared to run out of ammo.
We found that there are other dangers besides the monster. There are plants like Venus flytraps. If you get tangled in them, your teammates will have to come and shoot you loose. The wildlife can attack you if you startle it. The fight went all the way up to stage three again. And the monster was victorious. Clearly, if you don’t pull together a coordinated assault on the monster, you fall, one by one.
Different stages of play
I was a little disappointed there wasn’t a single-player campaign to give me a greater sense of the universe. But there are tutorials that will get a new player off the ground and running. And I expect to see a lot of variety in the gameplay, maps, and other features. There will be different game modes beyond Hunt, and there will be different kinds of monsters. But Turtle Rock won’t be talking about those until later. Like Left 4 Dead, this game could prove to be enormously versatile over time. Ashton said Evolve has been designed to be infinitely replayable. I think he’s got a point.
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The game design is wonderful. The inclusion of the wildlife and the birds makes the game world come alive, and it introduces a lot of surprises to the gameplay. You can test your skills as a teammate or a lone wolf. Either way, I think this game is going to look great on next-generation hardware and will provide a ton of multiplayer fun when it finally comes out.
Check out our screenshot gallery below.