Thief: Gold
Description official descriptions
Thief Gold is a reissue of the game, Thief: The Dark Project, updated to version 1.37. Thief Gold includes three entirely new campaign missions which deepen the plot and provide new challenges, as well as five new types of enemies to overcome. Some of the original Thief levels have had minor modifications, including bug fixes, small design changes, and the new enemies.
Thief Gold also includes a bonus "Behind the scenes at Looking Glass Studios" footage and DromED, a level editor for Thief.
Groups +
- 3D Engine: Dark Engine
- Eidos Premier Collection releases
- Game feature: In-game screenshot capture
- Gameplay feature: Body dragging
- Gameplay feature: Drowning
- Gameplay feature: Lock picking
- Gameplay feature: Pickpocketing
- Games with officially implemented community changes
- Physical Bonus Content: Making-of / behind-the-scenes footage
- Setting: Church / Monastery
- Theme: Zombies
- Thief series
Screenshots
Promos
Credits (Windows version)
82 People (77 developers, 5 thanks) · View all
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[ full credits ] |
Reviews
Critics
Average score: 92% (based on 10 ratings)
Players
Average score: 4.3 out of 5 (based on 64 ratings with 6 reviews)
Gems such as this are stupidly rare
The Good
I first recall playing āThief: The Dark Projectā over the winter holidays my senior year in high school. I was so enthralled with this revolutionary game and played it so obsessively that I think Santa Claus was peeking over my shoulder at 3:00 am Christmas Eve watching me play. You have to realize that in 1998, games like āQuakeā and āHalf-Lifeā were the standard of the day. While they were good games, they were dreadfully linear and focused on a run-and-gun approach which could wear oneās nerves after awhile.
Not so with T: TDP. Never before had I seen such well-written mythology and atmosphere in an FPS, or any other game for that matter. The āsteampunkā environment was also highly intriguing; a mixture of 16th century Europe, Industrial Revolution-era England, and the American art-deco/film noir eraā¦very strange. Itās a game I feel will be more appreciated in the future than it is now for its radical aura.
Needless to say I was ecstatic when I learned that in late ā99 the game would be reissued with the three missing levels, which couldnāt be finished in time for release. Thief Gold for the most part it is in fact the same, but much longer than the original version, and in my eyes, more complete and logical in regards to plot. Some of the niggling bugs were fixed, and the levels from the original were renovated and retooled to fit the story as it was originally envisioned. A perfect game in almost every way.
The Bad
In terms of voice acting, plot, and level design, I have no complaints whatsoever; perfect in every respect. However, the Dark Engine, which drives the game, is highly prone to bugs that can sometimes be debilitating to the game play. There were more times than I wish to remember where I got hung up on a staircase and was forced to do a quick load. There were also times where the NPCs would get stuck in similar predicaments (which could oftentimes work to your advantage). Also, the graphics were fairly dated even by ā98-ā99 standards (256 texturesā¦yes you heard me correctly), and this unfortunately turned many people away.
The Bottom Line
I say with absolute authority that this is one of the best game in history, PC or console, and my #1 game of all time (right alongside its sequel). And since itās now priced at only $9.99, you have no excuse not to pick it upā¦taffer.
Windows · by HandofShadow (49) · 2007
A revolution-in-a-box yet to be matched.
The Good
My favorite bit of Wolfenstein 3D wasn't gunning down hordes of people, nor running around like a lab rat on speed.
It was the suspense.
In finding my way around, the only warning signs I had were doors opening and closing - once I heard someone shouting, I knew I was busted. Since my sound card was mono and all the doors sounded alike, there wasn't much more I could do than count how many doors I had opened and count down when they closed.
Of course, I'd eventually lose count, or a door would catch me off guard, and I'd become more and more frantic, up to the point where I'd finally lose it and run around firing wildly at the furniture. Not to mention those zombie soldiers that didn't shout at all. Turned me into a nervous wreck.
Doom had it too, to some degree, although the feeling was more fighting an uphill battle than sneaking around. By the time Quake hit, the magic was gone for me, and I shied away from first-person shooters for some time.
...game? I'm supposed to be reviewing a game? Oh, yeah. That.
Thief put the suspense back where it belongs, quietly revolutionizing first-person 3D games. Naturally, everyone was too busy having LAN parties at the time to notice.
There were of course the external trappings, the ingenious industrial-mediaeval age with a modest sprinkling of magic, which got you gas/electricity-arc streetlights, magic crystal arrows which turn into water on impact, heavy-duty mining machinery operated by people in chain mail armor right alongside well houses, drawbridges and archers... Not to mention Garrett, the coolest videogame hero of the late nineties simply because he was the only one of them who dared to be established exclusively by his voice and a few elusive hand-drawn images when he wasn't under the player's control.
There was the sound, the lovely, luscious sound of footsteps on all sorts of materials as you strained your ears to the limit for clues on the opposition; this was the first game to do surround sound and environmental reverbs right. In fact, still one of the few games to really do anything at all with it. (The current trend towards releasing on six consoles and then maybe the PC isn't exactly helping things either, as most of the effort goes into making the soundtrack loud enough to be distinguishable coming out of the crummy stereo speakers on the TV set of Joe Average. Muttergrumble.)
And the difficulty levels, the absolute stunning genius of demanding that you kill fewer things as the difficulty goes up, and then actually making it not suck! The likes of this we may never see again.
The first level is an excellent introduction; there are way more guards than you can overcome, and you start off on the street, which will teach you not to draw your weapons until you need them. Going unnoticed is not simply beneficial, it's an absolute necessity. You quickly learn where it's at: Sneaking in the back, knocking people over the head, peering around corners, hiding unconscious guards...
(Interestingly, Thief delivers what was promised in an electronic Apogee advertisement for Wolf3D, the ability to drag bodies out of the way. Makes you wonder if it was ever in the design, or if it was just a misunderstanding.)
The way you have to concentrate on nuances of light and sound means that this game winds up seriously warping your reality - you may find yourself moving into shadows instinctively, or listening to the sound of your own footsteps like you never have before.
The third level is a strange detour, though; after training five years of Doom conditioning out of players they suddenly throw them into an entire level of killing things and running around subterranean mazes. It's like they were feeling insecure.
The Bad
For a game where shadows are extremely important, it's very bright, and doesn't play half as much with silhouettes and shading as I'd like. The reason for this is probably the Quake 1-style blocky edges on diagonal shadows, which would have ruined a lot of them. Not that there aren't areas that shine in this respect, but there could have been so many more.
To enforce stealth, you're always out of luck when spotted; this makes for rather a lot of saving and loading, and can possibly land you in unwinnable states, forcing you to go waay back in the level. Which can be painful, considering the slow pace of the game. Me, I didn't mind so much, but I grew up back in The Day(tm), when we didn't have them fancy things like F12 keys. Of course, I played with an onion taped to my monitor, as was the style at the time...
Oh yeah, and the way you purchase equipment before missions is a bit flawed; it would have been better to just dictate you a base pack of gear as a sort of "par for the course" and letting you top it off, or at least make a few recommendations. The way you sometimes have to half-complete a mission, then restart and buy gear from what you've learned is the only real flaw in this gem.
The Bottom Line
Going on six years and still worth playing. Still worth getting quadrophonic speakers for, in fact.
Windows · by Ola Sverre Bauge (237) · 2004
The Good
- Very advanced stealth system for it's time (and 20 years after), surprisingly developed sword fighting.
- Variety of environments; from grounded and mundane to wacky and surreal or downright horror.
- Missions vary heavily both in gameplay and the atmosphere, some give you multiple options on how to play through them.
- Great difficulty system.
- Unique setting and lore, voice acting is stellar, story is intriguing.
- Stylish cutscenes and art direction.
- Sound design is iconic.
The Bad
- Sometimes a level can make you mad not in a good way, due to it's gargantuan size and confusing layout.
- Some missions are heavily focused on fighting different creatures. These can be a walk in the park or pure hell, depends on your ability to utilize game fighting mechanic and some engine quirks. Overall, these levels can still be completed in a stealthy way, but you'll have to be a very patient person.
- Some levels can be a real chore to get through, in most cases due to the backtracking and pacing issues.
- Not very responsive controls at times, occasional engine bugs.
The Bottom Line
Despite everything, this deserves the praise it's got over the years.
Windows · by SanfordMorgan · 2023
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Contributors to this Entry
Game added by Kate Jones.
Additional contributors: Xoleras, Danfer.
Game added May 4, 2000. Last modified March 17, 2024.