Trivia
In the German gaming magazine GameStar (issue 02/2001) The Operative: No One Lives Forever was named as "Best Action Game in 2000".
In the German gaming magazine PC Player (issue 01/2001) The Operative: No One Lives Forever was named as "Best Action-Adventure in 2000".
The game initially sold poorly until the reviews and word of mouth increased interest in the game. Notably, the sales spiked a few months after the games release and enough positive reviews were printed.
The second disc includes In the Lounge: 9 exclusive music tracks inspired by the 60s, plus 2 groovy music tracks from the Fox Interactive & Indiespace.com music search. The track listing is:
- Goodman's Surprise
- Santa's Workshop
- Be-boppin' Shoo-woopin' Along
- The Operative
- Elevator of Love
- No One Grooves Forever
- Suisse Chalet
- UNITY's Spy
- [untitled track]
- El Dorado (by Archie Thompson)
- Void (by Red Delicious)
Tracks 1-9:
Written and composed by Becky Kneubuhl;
Doug Norwine, Flute;
Joe Finetti, Trombone;
Lee Thornberg, Trumpet;
Lisa Kable, Vocals;
Chris Lee, Guitars;
Mixed and recorded by Gabriel Rutman at Asylum Studios
"El Dorado" (Track 10):
Written and performed by Archie Thompson;
Published by ArchType Music (BMI);
© 2000 Archie Thompson;
"Void" (Track 11):
Written and performed by Red Delicious (Steve Baca, Sara Wallace, Rob King);
Published by Stompin' Music (BMI);
© 2000 Red Delicious
Contributed by
Szajd (6) on May 24, 2007.
Several of the game's missions take place in German cities such as East Berlin, Bremen and Frankfurt. While the developers did make an effort to create a proper setting by making signs that are correctly written in German there are some errors. One in particular is a sign in the Stasi (state security ) compound in East Berlin which reads "Begriff -- Kein Trespassing". This would literally translate to "Term -- No Trespassing". Additionally, most of the articles on posters and Inge Wagner's banner are wrong since they use the wrong gender.
Another noteworthy issue are the villains accent's: Most of the villains are supposed to be German. However, some of their accents sound rather East European. One voice actor seems to have based his supposedly German accent on Arnold Schwarzenegger with a more Austrian note to his German.
CD 2 of the game contains 11 CD-audio tracks of music much in the spirit of the game.
Contributed by
dasfatso (6) on Dec 04, 2006.
The publishers have released the source code for NOLF for anyone to modify. For anyone interested, they can be downloaded at the download section of the official NOLF webpage (link available at the related sites section).
In one of the cut scenes in the mission "The Dive" you'll see a submarine that has the number 5675-309. This is likely a reference to a popular rock song of the 80's by Tommy Tutone, called "Jenny 8675309". Notice the similarities between the numbers?
Contributed by
Emepol (393) on Jul 06, 2004.
A few months after NOLF's release, the ESRB changed its rating to M and its descriptors to Animated Blood, Animated Violence. The Game of the Year Edition has this rating, and it is listed as M on the website, but the original boxes don't. Inquiries to the ESRB about why this happened result in a canned "When the game was first submitted, we gave it a T, but then it was resubmitted with more mature content," which is obviously not true.
A LA Model named Mitzi Martin was the 'model' for Cate Archer.
http://www.nolf.info/mitzi.htm
PS version was developed with the Lithtech Cobalt engine.
In one of the missions, Kate receives a codename "Foxhound". This is an obvious reference to Konami's Metal Gear series.
The game features Inge Wagner, supposedly a grand-granddaughter of the famous German composer Richard Wagner. During your battle against her, a tape recorder plays Wagner's music ;)
NOLF was named #44 of the Top 50 Best Games of all time by PC Gamer magazine in their October 2001 issue.
The game evolved quite a lot from its original conception. Originally you didn't play as a woman, but as Adam Church, operative for Her Majesty's Most Secret Service (MI0) and the game was not as Austin Powers-Swinging Sixties but strived for a more serious humorous take on the James Bond films (Adam himself was a satirical version of Bond). Early screenshots from late 1999 can be found on the web or in old magazines were you can see the early incarnations of NOLF.
Contributed by
Zovni (9138) on Aug 19, 2001.
On nearly every level the guards, if you don't alert them, will carry on coversations with each other. Many of these are very funny, as the guards discuss things which range from high brow topics like sociology in how in relates to criminals and alcohol to how let the guard dog relieve itself at the one guard's post. Even if it was part of the point system, being stealthy would be something people would strive for just to hear all these topics.
The model and actress, Mitzi Martin, was the inspiration for the heroine of the story, Cate Archer.