Editing
Wolfenstein
(section)
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
==Games== The history of Wolfenstein begins with ''Castle Wolfenstein'', released in 1981 by Muse Software on the Apple II, Atari 8-bit and Commodore 64. In it, you take the role of a nameless American POW who has been held prisoner in the titular fortress; escaping with the aid of a loaded pistol smuggled to you by a dying cellmate, you seek to evade or murder the Nazi guards, find the secret plans for Operation Rheingold, and escape the fortress with them. Unlike its 3d cousins, 8-bit Wolfenstein was the granddaddy of the stealth-based game; going in guns blazing would get you killed in short order. It was followed by a sequel in 1984, ''Beyond Castle Wolfenstein'', where you seek to plant a bomb with which to assassinate Hitler. The Wolfenstein game that everybody remembers was the brainchild of Apogee Software (Chiefly the guys who'd eventually break off to form Id Software), and came out in 1992. A precursor in many ways, mostly technical, to the later smash hit [[Doom]], ''Wolfenstein 3D'' was essentially a reimagination of Muse Software's Wolfenstein duology. As William "B.J." Blazkowicz, you're a prisoner in the Nazi stronghold of Castle Wolfenstein. Escaping with luck and the aid of a knife, you fight your way out of the fortress, killing Nazis and stealing loot and valuable secret documents as you go. Expansion packs were promptly released, telling a chronological story; first there was Operation: Eisenfaust, in which a post-Wolfenstein B.J. is sent after a mad Nazi scientist creating horrible cyborg mutants as super soldiers. This was then followed by the canonical end of the game - ''Die, Fuhrer, Die!'' - in which B.J. tracks down and kills Hitler, despite the latter being outfitted with a giant exo-suit carrying four miniguns. With the success of Wolfenstein 3d, ID Software hurried to cash in by retexturing files and creating ''Spear of Destiny'', a set of prequel level packs that tell B.J.'s pre-Wolfenstein story, as the agent who recovers the Spear of Destiny. Although the initial levels of Wolfenstein 3D are best remembered (Helped in no small part by cameoing in Doom II with actual Nazis), the mutant and mecha-Hitler caught in the gamer's consciousness, creating an association of the game with the infamous mad science and occult experiments of the Nazis. A proper sequel to 3D was in progress at some point in the mid 90's (Called ''Wolfenstein II: Rise of the Triad'') that would have revealed that Hitler was but the pawn of a greater shadowy triumvirate that wanted world armageddon, but the legal tie-ups of ownership between ID and Apogee eventually saw this turn into a much different game, using some scrapped [[Doom]] concepts and 3D's engine. You'd better know this as just ''Rise of the Triad''. The hopes for a proper sequel came to fruition with ''Return to Castle Wolfenstein'', an official sequel to Wolfenstein 3D (with some handwaving) that came out in 2001. In this game, B.J. returns to Castle Wolfenstein (no shit), and becomes embroiled in thwarting the activities of both Wilhelm "Deathshead" Strasse, a mad scientist creating cyborg mutant super-soldiers, and the SS Paranormal Division, which is reanimating the dead and seeking to awaken a vengeful undead [[lich]]-king. Needless to say, old B.J. is having none of that; he destroys the lab where Deathshead is creating all his monsters and super-weapons, kills as many heads of the Paranormal Division as he can find, and slays their undead champion. After this, Wolfenstein went dormant for another eight years. In 2009, we received a new game, called, simply, ''Wolfenstein''. In this game, canonically a sequel to the 2001 game, Deathshead has discovered a way to reach the mysterious Black Sun Dimension and draw upon its otherworldly energies. With this power, this "Veil Energy", he is able to create incredibly advanced weapons, as well as recruiting alien monsters and even using the mysterious energies of this other-world to reanimate the dead. Yet again, ol' Billy Blazkowicz has to step into the breach and kick some Nazi heads in, this time with the aid of a band of German anti-Nazi resistance fighters. This was, without a doubt, the most overtly [[dieselpunk]] of any Wolfenstein game to this point, putting the super-Nazi science and ghostapo elements of ''Return'' to shame. In 2014, Wolfenstein 2009's sequel came out, in the form of ''Wolfenstein: The New Order''. It is the year 1946... and America is losing the war, courtesy of yet another wave of new super-technology being produced by Deathshead. B.J. takes part in a massive operation to storm Deathshead's fortress and destroy his machines... but fails. Paralyzed by shrapnel in the brainpan, he spends 14 years in a hospital before miraculously regaining the ability to walk - just in time, as Nazis come to kill everybody in the hospital. Now in a world in which Nazis rule everything, B.J hooks up with a band of freedom fighters, seeking to unlock the keys to Deathshead's technology before carrying out a daring mission to assassinate the arch-scientist. Like its predecessor, TNO is full-blown, hard-core [[dieselpunk]], with killer robots, cyborg dogs, cyber-mutant super soldiers, tank-sized robot dogs, and giant mecha. The very next year, ''Wolfenstein: The Old Blood'' was released; this prequel to TNO revolves around B.J going to Castle Wolfenstein in order to retrieve the information needed to locate Deathshead's Compound, from the prologue of ''The New Order''. Things get out of control when the Nazis accidentally release an ancient zombifying gas and a hideous flesh-golem like giant monster buried under the town, but ol' Billy soon puts things to rights. A sequel to ''The New Order'', called ''Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus'', released in late 2017. This plot sees B.J. go to a Ku-Klux-Klan-controlled America to fight the Nazis on his home turf while becoming even more fucked up than he was before. It earned attention by being the first Wolfenstein game ever where B.J would '''not''' be the sole protagonist. A DLC pack called the Freedom Chronicles featured three new sub-stories, focusing on three different freedom fighters and their respective missions around the US: * Episode Zero: A prologue that introduces the protagonists. * The Adventures of Gunslinger Joe: Focuses on former quarterback Joseph Stallion as he deals with Nazis in Chicago and all the way to space. * The Diaries of Agent Silent Death: Focuses on ex-OSS assassin Jessica Valiant as she infiltrates Nazi bunkers in California. * The Amazing Deeds of Captain Wilkins: Focuses on Captain Gerald Wilkins as he dismantles a Nazi operation in Alaska. The sequel/spinoff, ''Wolfenstein: Youngblood'', follows BJ's twin daughters taking up their father's mantle and fighting through Nazi controlled Paris in a weird variant of the 1980's. The game features forced co-op. Too bad this one was terrible, particularly for it's portrayal of the twins as cringy as hell brats and seemingly written by someone who has no idea how siblings actually interact with each other. Also by forced we mean that the game forces you to play as both characters. So if want to play single player. You have to play with a dumbass AI bot like Left 4 Dead.
Summary:
Please note that all contributions to 2d4chan may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see
2d4chan:Copyrights
for details).
Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Navigation menu
Personal tools
Not logged in
Talk
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Namespaces
Page
Discussion
English
Views
Read
Edit
View history
More
Search
Navigation
Main page
Recent changes
Random page
Help about MediaWiki
Tools
What links here
Related changes
Special pages
Page information