And so it was at the beginning of the 21st Century...


The nuclear weapons disposal facility on Shadow Moses Island in Alaska's Fox Archipelago is attacked and captured by Next Generation Special Forces led by members of FOXHOUND.
The terrorists have got their hands on hundreds of nuclear warheads and they're demanding that the government turn over the remains of Big Boss. They warn that if their demands are not met within 24 hours, they'll launch a nuclear weapon.

Take on the role of retired Special Forces veteran Solid Snake as he is called back into duty in a top-secret mission to deal with the greatest terrorist threat the world has ever seen.

Your mission is to infiltrate the base, rescue the hostages and kill the terrorists carrying nothing but a pair of binoculars, a pack of smokes and a bad attitude. The clock is ticking.

Once again, Snake heads into battle...alone.

 

Solid Snake, badass superspy extraordinaire, has had the most illustrious career this side of 007. Averting global nuclear destruction is all in a day's work for Snake, who commands the starring role in Hideo Kojima's Metal Gear series, now one of the most popular franchise properties in video gaming. Metal Gear offsets the run-and-gun attitude of most action-adventure games by introducing an element of stealth; a full frontal assault with guns blazing means a quick "Game Over." Kojima combines this unique gameplay with stylish cinematic presentation and a fair dose of political intrigue, and the result is the closest thing available to a real spy movie on a video game console.

 

 

The year was 1995. At that time, nuclear disarmament was only a pipe dream, and fears of nuclear attack ran rampant. Deep in South Africa, a mercenary group controlled a stronghold called Outer Heaven. According to leaked information, this group had access to a new kind of weapon that would change the scale of warfare irreversibly. The elite special forces team Fox Hound was called upon to gather further intelligence related to this supposed weapon of mass destruction. To this end they sent their best agent, Grey Fox, to go under cover, infiltrate Outer Heaven, and report back with new information. Grey Fox's report consisted of exactly two words: "Metal Gear." Then contact was broken.



Deeply disturbed by the loss of communication with Grey Fox and the apparent urgency of his brief message, Fox Hound sent another agent, Solid Snake, into Outer Heaven to find Grey Fox and discover the secret of the mysterious Metal Gear. Snake found his way inside the fortress, enlisting the aid of various prisoners to continue his search for Grey Fox and Metal Gear. Eventually Snake located Fox and learned that Metal Gear was, in actuality, a walking, nuclear-capable tank. The implications of this new weapon were staggering; Metal Gear's mobility and its ability to launch a nuclear warhead from any position made it an imposing factor in the global tension between nuclear superpowers. Solid Snake went on to rescue the scientist behind Metal Gear's development and from him learned Metal Gear's weak point.



Finally, Snake discovered Metal Gear itself, on the 100th basement floor of Outer Heaven, and using his knowledge of the behemoth, he destroyed it. After Metal Gear's destruction, Snake received a shock: The leader of the Outer Heaven mercenaries, and the man behind Metal Gear, was none other than Fox Hound's leader, Big Boss! Big Boss had been pulling the strings behind Snake's mission in Outer Heaven all along. Stunned by this betrayal, Snake went on to engage Big Boss in battle, emerging victorious. With Metal Gear destroyed and the traitor vanquished, Solid Snake flew off into the sunset.

The Game


Metal Gear introduced the idea of stealth to a video game audience more accustomed to obliterating everything in sight. True to secret agent form, Solid Snake's greatest ally wasn't a rifle or grenade (though their importance wasn't understated), but rather his own agility and resourcefulness. The clearest path to victory in Metal Gear was through sewer grates, behind corners, and in the shadows. Combined with the twisting plot, the stealth aspects made Metal Gear one of the most original action-adventure games of the time. The original Metal Gear plays very much like the more recent versions; the series continues to get prettier and perhaps more elaborate, but the core remains the same. Action is presented from an overhead perspective so floor layouts and the location of guards can be easily discerned. Like usual, Snake begins this mission with no equipment, requiring him to find weapons and items during the mission. He is also assisted by a Metal Gear staple called the codec, a tiny radio with a tunable frequency that keeps him in contact with the mission commander and any number of support personnel. Avoiding guards is essential to Snake's survival; being spotted means a horde of guards coming seemingly out of nowhere, and Snake must evade them for a preset amount of time before they'll stop looking for him. Metal Gear was a departure from the typical video gaming of the day, to be sure.

The first Metal Gear appeared originally in 1987 on the MSX, a computer popular in Japan and Europe but basically unknown in the United States. American gamers were fortunate enough to receive the chance to play Metal Gear the following year, when Konami released it there under the Ultra Games label on the NES. This 8-bit incarnation of Metal Gear had undergone a few minor changes by the time it made it to American consoles. Many of the backgrounds had changed, and maps were laid out differently. The translation was a bit odd in parts. And although Big Boss is still the eventual bad guy, you are led to believe that a terrorist named Vernon CaTaffy is controlling the Outer Heaven group. The changes weren't earth shattering, but die-hard Metal Gear fans agree that the MSX version is the definitive Metal Gear.

 


The Story (con't)

By 1999, the world's nuclear superpowers had improved their diplomatic relations with each other, and they agreed to dismantle their nuclear weapons. In this environment of coming peace, a small Middle Eastern nation called Zanzibar created a new military regime and began raiding the larger nations' nuclear disposal sites. At the same time, the world was experiencing an energy crisis due to a rapidly diminishing supply of oil. To combat this threat, Dr. Kio Marv invented a microorganism called OILIX that could refine crude oil. Naturally, he was kidnapped by Zanzibar.

The militaristic Zanzibar had established itself as controller of the world's energy and nuclear weapons, and only the best secret agent would be able to infiltrate the country and rescue Dr. Marv.
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New Fox Hound commander Roy Campbell thus called upon Solid Snake, now in retirement, to take the job. Again acting entirely on his own, Snake penetrated Zanzibar's defenses and made it into the heart of the militant country. It would seem that Big Boss's betrayal in Outer Heaven was not the end of Fox Hound treachery, however, as Snake discovered that Grey Fox, the first special agent sent into Outer Heaven four years before, was leader of Zanzibar's mercenary force. Snake defeated Grey Fox in battle and went on to pursue Dr. Marv. Snake retrieved the OILIX microorganism, ensuring the world a new source of energy, but in the process he again encountered none other than Big Boss, who had survived the destruction of Outer Heaven and gone on to found Zanzibar's empire. Big Boss was, of course, accompanied by a new Metal Gear. Snake again defeated both Metal Gear and Big Boss and then fled Zanzibar in the midst of its destruction.

After Solid Snake's series of harrowing battles, he again retired, this time to the Alaskan wilderness. But the evil intentions of those who hunger for power would ensure that Snake's retirement was short-lived....