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Crossfire (2007 video game)

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Revision as of 11:46, 27 August 2019 by 203.99.196.179 (talk) (Modes)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff) For the Apple II game, see Crossfire (1981 video game). For the role-playing computer game, see Crossfire (1992 video game). For other uses, see Crossfire (disambiguation).

2007 video game
CrossFire
Developer(s)Smilegate Entertainment Remedy Entertainment
Publisher(s)
EngineLithtech Jupiter EX
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows, Xbox One
Release
  • KOR: May 3, 2007
  • JP: February 23, 2008
  • VN: March 15, 2008
  • CN: April 28, 2008
  • NA: January 30, 2009
  • PH: September 17, 2009
  • ID: December 8, 2009
  • RU: June 2, 2010
  • TW: March 24, 2011
  • EU: August 31, 2011
  • BR: November 29, 2011
  • SEA: September 12, 2013
  • ES: January 28, 2014
  • IR: March 16, 2019
Genre(s)First-person shooter
Mode(s)Multiplayer

CrossFire is an online tactical first-person shooter for Microsoft Windows developed by Smilegate Entertainment. The game was released in China by Tencent Games, with the company also acting as the exclusive agent service company. The tests for its software bugs were started publicly on April 2008.

Due to its popularity in Asia, especially China and South Korea, it became the most played game in the world by player count of all time, with 660 million players worldwide. It was the world's top-grossing online game as of 2014, and went on to become one of the highest-grossing video games of all time, having grossed $10.8 billion in lifetime revenue, as of 2018.

A film adaptation of the game was announced in October 2015. A remake and a sequel, CrossFire HD and CrossFire 2, respectively, are in development at Smilegate, with Remedy Entertainment working on both games' single-player portions.

An Xbox One version of the game, known as CrossFire X, was announced at E3 2019.


Gameplay

A mission success screen on a team deathmatch mode, the player holding an M16

CrossFire is a free-to-play first-person shooter that features two mercenary corporations named the "Black List" and "Global Risk," fighting each other in an epic global conflict. Players assume the role of either a Black List or Global Risk mercenary, joining an online team that must work together to complete objective-based scenarios. With the exception of the Zombie mode and Wave mode, each mode can support a maximum of 16 players, each divided into an 8-man team.

Players will progress and be promoted through various Military Ranks, beginning at trainee, with the highest being Marshall. Players also have the ability to customize their character's equipment and appearance through in-game items.

CrossFire has a free currency which is called Game Points (GP), which are earned through playing and completing matches, buying premium items that grant bonus GP, or fulfilling certain missions. Premium and special items like modified weapons can only be bought using monetary currencies. The content tends to vary from version to version.

Modes

CrossFire features several game modes, each with unique maps and rules.

Team Deathmatch
Teams work towards goals, such as first to x many kills, or the team with the most kills.
Search & Destroy
Black List's objective is to plant and detonate a C4 charge in a designated spot or kill all of the Global Risk players. Global Risk's objective is to eliminate all Black List players or prevent Black List from planting and detonating the charge within the match's time limit. Players do not respawn. Rounds last up to 3 minutes.
Free for All
No teams, kill as many players as possible. Players respawn at different locations. The round ends when a player reaches the kill quota for the match or the timer runs out. Weapon restrictions exist for this mode.
Elimination
Similar to TDM, except players do not respawn when killed. In some maps, players start only with their melee weapons and must pick up guns pre-set in the map. Rounds last up to three minutes, with Global Risk defaulting in wins.
Suppression Mode
A new, and much faster Search and Destroy! Each Black List player gets a bomb, and spawns only a few metres from the bomb plant site. The Global Risk must storm their defenses and disarm the bomb before it detonates!
Ghost Mode
All Black List mercenaries have invisibility and melee weapons, while all Global Risk mercenaries are fully visible, but can use all available weapons. Black List emits a heavy breathing sound, footsteps, splashes while running through water, and also become significantly visible while moving.
Shadow Mode
A variant of Ghost Mode. A player becomes a Shadow warrior which is an advanced ghost character. This mode introduces security devices such as Sensors, Lasers and Sprinklers to track down the Shadow warriors. In this map, there are certain part of the floors which are covered with different textures (including broken glass) that will make more noise than others, making it easier for the Mercenary Soldiers to hear the Shadow Warrior movements.
Mutation Modes
One or two players are infected and turned into mutants 20 seconds into the round. When the time is up or all mutants are dead, the soldiers win. If all the soldiers become mutants or die, the mutants win. Mutants are knocked backwards when shot.
Escape Mode
A game mode where Black List team must "escape" through a portal a certain number of times while the Global Risk team tries to prevent them. There are walls and doors that can be destroyed to make the escaping team's job easier or is a requirement to escape, at half time the teams switch sides (if the team finishes escaping early, then they immediately switch sides. If they do not complete their goal, then the other team only has to finish what the other team started).
Hero Mode
The game plays mostly like Mutation mode, but features a "Hero" character. 20 seconds into the round, one to three players randomly will become mutants and one will become the "Hero". Also, mutants here will continue to respawn when killed unless they are killed with a headshot. The game ends when either the soldiers survive until the round ends or they are all turned into mutants.
Hero Mode X
Random players are turned into mutants after 20 seconds count down and one of them is chosen to be the "Terminator" which has 6000 HP and can infect players with longer ranged lightning bolt attacks, making it a rather daunting foe for soldiers. Mutants can only be prevented from respawning by being killed with a melee attack rather than a headshot. The premise of this mode is that once only 2-3 players are left, they can have a chance to turn into Commandos, which cannot be infected like regular soldiers and possess dual kukris, which does massive damage to mutants and prevent them from respawning altogether, Commandos can not using firearms. The round ends either with all players infected/killed or if all the mutants are killed and cannot respawn. Also in this mode, it features a damage boost for soldiers, which deals much more damage to mutants and increases every time a soldier is infected. Soldiers can have a maximum of 340% damage boost, to the point of becoming Commandos themselves. This mode also features two expansion packs, one with a new Terminator-like mutant called Havoc, same equivalent as Terminator but has slashing attacks instead of electricity attacks and a Commando counterpart called Nemesis, a female commando armed with dual axes. The other expansion is called Parasite Expansion, an upgraded add-on where the mutants side features a Devil Terminator mutant armed with long blades and a parasite bomb and for the soldier's side features a new Commando called Devil Hunter armed with Twin Assassin Swords and can regain 200 HP for every mutants killed. In this add-on, the Devil Terminator can infect soldiers using its parasite bomb from a distance and the soldiers will have to shoot each other, should they were hit by the parasite bomb to prevent getting infected and curing you or your teammates will have your primary weapon's ammo restocked.
Zombie Mode
Four players in a Zombie Apocalypse-esque scenario. Zombie Apocalypse consists of a team of four Global Risk mercenaries trying to survive a fixed number of rounds with a boss at the final round. The enemies featured in the game are a variety of "zombified" Black List mercenaries and mutants, each kind having their own unique characteristic The game ends once the players survive through the rounds and kill the final boss in the map or if all the players are killed and cannot respawn.
Elite/Bounty Mode
This mode is the first with given money and battle results, similar to the concept of Counter Strike. When the battle begins, players can only use the pistol equipped in their inventory and must buy other weapons using their cash. Cash can be gained by killing opponents or planting/defusing the bomb. This mode is like S&D Pro.
Wave Mode
5v5 or 4v4 team based mode. Both teams must destroy the opposition's defense towers in order to reach the base, which has two "Last defense tower" guarding it, players must destroy those two towers to start damaging the base (clearance of all side towers is not needed). This is the first mode where you can pick one of eleven classes before joining the room. Each class is different and has its own unique skills. This mode also introduces NPCs, airstrikes, mortar bombs, energy transmitters and Class Upgrade Systems.
King Mode
No teams. Players compete in a series of mini-games each round, and the players with the highest score gets selected as a commander each round. Game continues until a player reaches a certain score and fight to be crowned the King.
Sheep Mode
No teams. Players compete to get the most points in the end by picking up sheep, which generate points every so often. Once someone has gotten to a point limit set before the game, the golden sheep is spawned, and everyone must fight to see who will get it.
Big Head
Team death match but with a twist, as you get kills you level up, increasing your head size. The maximum is five. A bar will fill up for each team and when it is full, that team will enter "Big Head" mode, where you are able to instant kill anyone with a melee attack.

Weapons

CrossFire features weapons based on real life models, with each weapon belonging to a category. Categories include machine guns, assault rifles, sniper rifles, etc. Each category is functionally similar to their real world counterparts (Ex. Machine guns are heavy, powerful, lay down heavy fire and have long reload times, Submachine guns are lighter and fire faster but deal less damage, Shotguns are effective in close range but ineffective at long distance, etc.) Weapons often have many variations, including different skins which give them different attributes. In addition, the re-skinned versions are often more rare. There are also some weapons which are different from other weapons like the VIP weapons, which has more powerful functions like faster reload, among others. Certain modes have mode-exclusive weapons.

Characters

Characters are the avatar of players and is what they will look like while playing in the game. A note is that while all characters are visually unique from each other, they are all functionally the same with no real advantages or disadvantages from each other in terms of stats, apart from a few limited-edition characters who are, for example; able to see better through smoke or reduces the visual incapacitating effects of flash bang grenades.

The characters featured in CrossFire is a combination of both real and fictional Special Forces groups. The real groups featured are: The Russian OMOH, the LAPD SWAT, the British SAS, the Brazilian BOPE, the German GSG9, the Korean 707th Special Mission Unit, the United Nations Special Forces, and the American Navy SEALs. Each character also has both a Black List and Global Risk variant. Some characters are bought with GP, while some are bought with premium currency. There are special characters found in some modes like the knight.

There are also mutant characters for the Mutation/Hero modes, which unlike regular game characters, each have unique abilities

Different versions of CrossFire

  Server Status Open
  Server Status Closed
  Server Status Unknown

CrossFire was released by different publishers worldwide. These are the countries that CrossFire was released in:

Country Publisher Release date Closure date URL Notes
South Korea Smilegate Megaport/Neowiz May 3, 2007 http://www.crossfire.co.kr/ Shut down on July 11, 2012. Reopened on December 12, 2013
Japan Playgra February 23, 2008 March 31, 2018 http://cf.playgra.com/
Vietnam VTC Game March 15, 2008 https://web.archive.org/web/20161013185229/http://cf.vtcgame.vn/
China Tencent April 28, 2008 http://cf.qq.com/
West (previously NA/UK) Smilegate West January 30, 2009 http://crossfire.z8games.com/ Changed name to CrossFire West after the CrossFire Europe merge
Philippines Gameclub September 17, 2009 http://cf.gameclub.ph/
Indonesia Lytogame December 8, 2009 http://crossfire.lytogame.com/
Russia Mail.Ru June 2, 2010 https://cfire.mail.ru/
Taiwan Macrowell OMG March 24, 2011 March 23, 2014 http://cf.me2.com.tw/
Europe Smilegate West August 31, 2011 November 8, 2018 http://crossfire.gamerage.com/ Merged with CrossFire NA/UK on November 7, 2018
Brazil Smilegate West November 29, 2011 http://br.crossfire.z8games.com/
South East Asia Gambooz September 12, 2013 March 17, 2015 http://cf.gambooz.com/
Latin America Smilegate West January 28, 2014 http://es.crossfire.z8games.com/
Iran Ariogames March 16, 2019 May 7, 2019 https://crossfire.ir/ Because of US sanctions against Iran

Commercial performance

CrossFire is the most played online FPS game worldwide, with over 8 million concurrent users and 650 million registered players by 2017, according to developer Smilegate, with the majority of players in Asia, especially China and South Korea. As of 2018, the game has 660 million players worldwide.

In 2013, the game was one of the three most popular video games in China, with a revenue of almost $1 billion. It was the world's top-grossing game of 2014 at ₩1.5 trillion ($1.3 billion). By 2015, CrossFire had grossed $6.8 billion, making it one of the top five highest-grossing video games of all time, along with Space Invaders, Pac-Man, Street Fighter II and World of Warcraft. CrossFire grossed $1.1 billion in 2016 and $1.4 billion in 2017, making it one of the three top-grossing PC games for both years, along with League of Legends and Dungeon Fighter Online (DFO). In 2018, CrossFire grossed $1.5 billion, making it one of the year's five top-grossing video games, along with Fortnite, DFO, League of Legends and Pokémon Go. In total, CrossFire has grossed $10.8 billion in lifetime revenue, as of 2018.

Film adaptation

In October 2015, it was announced that Neal Moritz would be producing a film version of CrossFire, after spending a year weighing up proposals from Hollywood producers and studios.

References

  1. "Smilegate to close Berlin office just over a year after it opened". GamesIndustry.biz.
  2. ^ "Smilegate Entertainment announces details for the CFS 2018 Grand Finals". Business Wire. September 7, 2018.
  3. ^ Lee Ji-yoon (May 20, 2015). "[Herald Interview] The woman behind success of 'Crossfire'". The Korea Herald. Retrieved May 29, 2015.
  4. ^ "World of Warcraft Leads Industry With Nearly $10 Billion In Revenue". Game Revolution. CraveOnline. January 26, 2017.
  5. Kil, Sonia (October 14, 2015). "'Fast & Furious' Producer Neal Moritz to Make Movie of Korean Hit Game 'Crossfire'". variety.com. Retrieved October 14, 2015.
  6. https://www.polygon.com/2016/7/27/12303804/crossfire-2-remedy-entertainment-smilegate
  7. https://www.gamesindustry.biz/articles/2018-08-22-remedy-building-third-development-team
  8. "Together CF EU and CF NA will make ... CrossFire West!". crossfire.z8games.com.
  9. "CrossFire West What Belongs Together Will Grow Together". gamerage.com.
  10. "Smilegate shuts down CrossFire SEA". gamerage.com.
  11. "Most Played FPS in the World, CROSSFIRE". Archived from the original on December 15, 2016. Retrieved January 29, 2019. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |dead-url= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  12. "Smilegate to close Berlin office just over a year after it opened". GamesIndustry.biz.
  13. Davis, Kurt (December 9, 2014). "Why the South Korean game market looks almost nothing like it did last year". Tech in Asia. Retrieved May 29, 2015.
  14. "The 11 top-grossing video games of all time". Business Insider. August 15, 2015.
  15. "Market Brief — Year in Review 2016". SuperData Research. Retrieved January 17, 2017.
  16. "2017 YEAR IN REVIEW: DIGITAL GAMES AND INTERACTIVE MEDIA" (PDF). SuperData Research. January 25, 2018.
  17. "Market Brief – 2018 Digital Games & Interactive Entertainment Industry Year In Review". SuperData Research. Retrieved January 19, 2019.
  18. Kil, Sonia (October 14, 2015). "'Fast & Furious' Producer Neal Moritz to Make Movie of Korean Hit Game 'CrossFire'". Variety.

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