Crimson Skies

Moby ID: 2320
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Description official description

Crimson Skies is an arcade flight simulator, set in an alternate reality in the year 1937. Based on a FASA pen-and-paper game, the player is cast as a daring rogue who flies missions for fame and fortune. The planes look like a mixture of futuristic planes and planes from WW2.

The single player missions let the player complete jobs such as finding a treasure, hijacking an experimental plane from the enemy or defending their base, a huge zeppelin.

Spellings

  • マイクロソフト クリムゾン スカイ - Japanese spelling

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Credits (Windows version)

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Reviews

Critics

Average score: 85% (based on 37 ratings)

Players

Average score: 3.9 out of 5 (based on 41 ratings with 5 reviews)

Cool and unique retro-styled masterpiece

The Good
Strap on tight and get ready for some barnstorming aerial fun as you take to the skies in the coolest flight sim to come out of Microsoft. Well, actually calling it a "sim" is stretching things a bit, in fact the game might better be classified as a "sci-fi sim" in the same vein as Wing Commander or Tie Fighter, regardless of the prop aircrafts in it.

The game is based on the boardgame published by FASA (of Battletech fame) and probably came to Microsoft as an added bonus when they acquired the Mechwarrior rights. Taking it's cues from early 20 century radio dramas (wow, doesn't that sound right out of star trek or something? :)) the game throws you into an alternate reality 1930's earth where the great war has torn apart countries like the US in several independent states (like the Kingdom of Hawai!!) and the primary means of transportation and warmaking have become the airplanes of the era. Sort of like Interstate '76, only with the look of movies like the Rocketeer or Indiana Jones, and boy is that "look" realized! This is one of the most perfectly designed games in terms of style and presentation. The whole interface has 1930's written all over it and the game constructs it's radio-drama feel perfectly with a blend of stylish B&W photos, newspaper articles you collect in your scrapbook, funny "memento" pictures you take aboard your plane as well as the "News on the March"-like style of the cutscenes and the amazingly orchestrated serials-influenced dynamic soundtrack. Heck, the soundtrack alone deserves a place in the spotlight as one of the most fantastic soundtracks I've heard for these types of games, beaten only by X-Wing Alliance and its use of John William's classic score.

As for the story and gameplay premise, you play as Nathan Zachary, your everyday "gentleman pirate". You know, dashing, courageus, a hit with the ladies, and honorable as opposed to the other aerial pirates out there. From your zeppelin/capital-ship you'll launch with your merry band of pirates to complete a series of mercenary campaigns that string together a larger plot as usual for these types of games. Said campaigns take you all over the place from the pacific ocean to sky-scrapper filled New York, glitzy Hollywood and sunny Hawai.

As mentioned the game plays like a sci-fi sim, meaning that it emphasizes action and gameplay over realistic game mechanics. In fact, your airplanes might be X-Wings for all you care, having no drag, no stalling or climbing problems and unheard of aerodynamic properties. Not a problem for me, as I love these types of games! Wisely, the developers included a variety of camera views, but placed the focus on the default fixed chase cam, which essentially turns the game into a much more detailed aircraft version of Rogue Squadron.

Of course, unlike that game you have a much less arcadey gameplay premise and the missions often span several complex objectives that go beyond "kill X thing" and involve puzzle elements and scripted events. Also included is the aspect of stunt-flying which is a winner for me and that involves precision-flying through narrow spaces and tight locations. Several missions are solely dedicated to that, like a race through manhattan near the end of the game and a kickass hollywood stunts trial. These elements seem to be love-or-hate for some, but I think they add an original level of excitement and fit perfectly in the game world, as well as serving as a nice extra for each mission (most of the times stunt locations are hidden in the levels and are there for bonus purposes as they unlock new mementos or scrapbook articles).

As the leader of the mercenary squadron you also get to choose what type of plane to take with you, and after you have accumulated enough cash, build a custom plane yourself in the best I76 tradition, selecting from a variety of wacky chassis and gun calibers as well as rocket types and even color. Unfortunately you have a few missions which force a specific plane on you, and your custom plane cannot be modified, but what the heck, right?

Technically speaking it's worth noting the great graphics engine under the hood of this game, which delivers great models and detailed textures as well as other niceties such as impressive ground detail and draw distance. And you also have a multiplayer mode to continue the dogfighting bonanza after you've beaten the main game!

The Bad
Practically the only bad thing I can mention about this jewel is that some of the missions can be a real pain (that gyro mission alone is unbelievable in it's difficulty) but fortunately the game allows you to skip the missions if you are not up to it and try them later on. Well, I guess that leaves the long load times and the graphic bugs as the only main gripe, but if you get the patch then that's about gone too.

The Bottom Line
Fantastic stylish sim that blends exciting action and killer production design into a masterpiece of the genre. Do not miss this game! It's unique setting and incredible gameplay alone makes it a clear home-run.

Windows · by Zovni (10504) · 2003

Indiana Jones and the Barnstormers from Hell!

The Good
Submitted for your approval: imagine a world of air flight and combat simulators that aren't really simulators of what IS... but of what we wish COULD BE. These games already exist. Lucasfilm has released several "flight/combat simulators" under its fine line of Star Wars games -- Tie Fighter and X-Wing, for example. Are these games accurate flight simulators? Hell, no... but they're loads of fun, and packed with that Star Wars flavor, which is why you bought them in the first place.

"Crimson Skies" is that kind of game. It captures the flavor of its genre and time period like no other game I've ever played. Between the stylings of the scenery, the great little "newsreel" cutscenes, and even the interface, this game has 1930s written all over it.

It is NOT a flight sim, and the planes you will fly routinely ignore various laws of physics, as well as the technology of the time, but who cares?

The Bad
The game is not without its problems. For one thing, although this is very much an "arcade style" flight sim, you are going to want a joystick to play this one; trying to handle the flight controls via the keyboard just makes you wish you had a spare pair of hands. You're also going to want to download the patch; load times make this game a yawn until that patch is installed.

The Bottom Line
It's not a HUGE bargain... at least, not unless you already HAVE a joystick... but if you're a fan of barnstorming action or the genre in general, this game is a must have.

Windows · by Dr.Bedlam (55) · 2003

These guys almost had it perfect!

The Good
(1) Graphics
Crimson has some of the nicest graphics that I have seen. Unlike many other flight games the landscapes and environment feel REAL. Lighting and in flight music is excellent throughout the game.


(2) Storyline
But the best and probably the biggest reason why I like this game is the story line. In Crimson Skies the US has split into 20 or more different nations. Because of this air travel has become the primary means of transporting people and cargo. Thus air piracy has become a viable and lucrative business. Oh did I mention this all takes place back in the 1940's? Granted at first I didn't buy this product when it came out because I thought that the premise was rather strange. However I recently picked up this gem for 10 bucks and boy was I surprised. They lovingly styled the graphics and sounds. The effect of this effort was to make a story line as rich as it was new. I would compare this to what Interplay did with fallout and they way they styled the game to feel 1950s. My hats off to Microsoft and Zipper interactive.

(3) gameplay
While no one would mistake crimson as a "realistic flight sim" the gameplay is fund and enjoyable. One of the nice touches of the game can be seen when you shoot one of your opponents down. Often times the plane will start to smoke and slowly fall to earth. At the same time the pilot will bail out. The missions are varied and the scrapbook that is kept is excellent.

The Bad
Well first of all some of the missions (like the race in Hollywood) can be difficult to the extreme. Fortunately you can skip a mission after 3 tries. Also it seems that the Zipper did not completely test or fix the game. Often times the music will skip and lag in between missions. Also until the patch the load time for missions could be long.

The Bottom Line
Overall the game has little to be upset about and much to enjoy.

Unlike many gamers today I enjoy a good story, and boy does Crimson provide!

Windows · by William Shawn McDonie (1131) · 2001

[ View all 5 player reviews ]

Trivia

1001 Video Games

Crimson Skies appears in the book 1001 Video Games You Must Play Before You Die by General Editor Tony Mott.

Bugs

The original release of the game was extremely buggy with several engine-related problems, but worse than those was a horrible bug that erased your single player campaign whenever you started a multiplayer game. This was addressed on the very first patch, however.

Installation

During installation of the game you are treated to a radio play featuring Nathan Zachery (the player character) and the Fortune Hunters. However, on faster machines, the installation finishes before the radio play does... and cuts the drama short!

Intro

The introduction movie to Crimson Skies is done in the style of 1930s newsreel footage... complete with propaganda.

Merchandise

In addition to the game, Crimson Skies universe also extends to a tabletop RPG, novels a comic book line and a planned, but never made, movie from Dreamworks.

Pictures

One of the features in the game is the ability to change your "momento" on the "stateroom" screen. The momento is a picture frame containing B&W photographs of a variety of subjects, mostly women, but also of your dog, yourself, and yourself with Black Swan. As you win more missions, you can get even more pictures to put inside.

You can export most items you "won" in your scrapbook to your Windows desktop. For example, when you took out the sub, you get a picture of your gang posing with a life preserver from the sub. You can export that to desktop! You can also export most of those women pictures (such as the one in the screenshots).

Awards

  • GameSpy
    • 2000 – Special Award for Sound
  • GameStar (Germany)
    • Issue 01/2001 - Best Simulation in 2000

Information also contributed by Kasey Chang and WildKard

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Contributors to this Entry

Game added by DaHero.

Additional contributors: Zovni, Abi79, Patrick Bregger, FatherJack, Zhuzha.

Game added November 8, 2000. Last modified March 23, 2024.