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TimeSplitters: Future Perfect Single-Player Preview

We travel through time to check out the latest PS2 and Xbox preview builds of Free Radical Design's upcoming shooter.

Tanks Very Much

Cortez takes on a 1920s tank in this action-packed clip.

We've just returned from a few weeks into the future (March 22 to be exact) when, among other things (sports results mostly), we were able to get our hands on PlayStation 2 and Xbox versions of TimeSplitters: Future Perfect. We already covered Future Perfect's fast-paced and varied multiplayer options a couple of months ago, so during this visit to the future we spent as much time as we could playing through the game's single-player campaign, wearing the boots and flak jacket of its Vin Diesel-like hero, Sergeant Cortez. We've played through the first 10 of the campaign's 13 missions on both consoles thus far and are pleased to report that we've enjoyed every minute.

Without wishing to give anything away about the game's intriguing, unpredictable, and amusing storyline, your adventure will get under way in the year 2401, when the timesplitters and humankind are at war. Your mission, which you'll have no choice but to accept once you've successfully negotiated the first level and arrived safely at a rebel base, is to travel back through time and end the war before it has even started. How are you expected to do this? By blowing stuff up, killing bad guys, and jumping headfirst into every wormhole that you see, of course.

Unlike the time periods in previous TimeSplitters games, the ones that you'll be battling your way through for much of the story-driven campaign are arranged in chronological order. The furthest back in time that you'll travel is to an island off the coast of Scotland in 1924, and after that you'll slowly work your way back to 2401 via the '60s, the '90s, and the 21st and 23rd centuries. There are only six different eras in total, but we've found the environments and gameplay to be varied enough that no two levels feel the same.

One of the things that all of the levels in TimeSplitters: Future Perfect have in common is that in them you'll be fighting alongside at least one other character for significant amounts of time. We've been paired up with a pipe-smoking naval officer on a mission to rescue a prisoner of war, a teenage girl who wants to take photos of zombies so that she can get into a gang, and an enemy robot who has been reprogrammed to protect us Terminator 2-style, to name but a few. All of the sidekicks do a good job of looking out for you when things get hairy, and there are times when the game's plot will require you to return the favor, either by assisting them with one of their own mission objectives or simply by keeping them alive. You'll also bump into helpful "future" versions of yourself from time to time, which is made all the more amusing by the fact that, just moments later, you'll catch up with yourself and have to assist the Cortez that's a couple of minutes behind you in exactly the same situation that you were in. Confused? Wait until you find yourself in a room with three other versions of Cortez.

Unlike the other versions of yourself that you might have encountered in Free Radical Design's Second Sight, those in Future Perfect are able to converse with, fight alongside, and even pass useful objects to one another. We've found the dialogues between the various versions of Cortez to be quite entertaining as we've progressed through the game, and even sitting through identical cutscenes twice within the space of a few minutes hasn't gotten old yet, because, thankfully, they're kept very brief. If you're a fan of last year's Second Sight, there are a few other features in TimeSplitters: Future Perfect that will feel even more familiar to you than seeing versions of yourself from other timelines. Many of the computers in Future Perfect, for example, can be interacted with by using your left analog stick as if it were a mouse, and in addition to checking other people's e-mail and hacking into security cameras, you'll occasionally find computers that have far more interesting uses. Some of the computers afford you manual control of enemy gun turrets (and even an enemy mech), for example, while others will let you experiment on laboratory test subjects--often with amusing results.

Like John Vattic in Second Sight, Sergeant Cortez also has the ability to move physics-enabled objects and throw them at enemies. He uses a glove-mounted device rather than psychic abilities to manipulate the objects, but the results are practically identical. Half-Life 2's gravity gun would perhaps be just as obvious a comparison to make, but Cortez's glove isn't nearly as versatile, and besides, we were planning to save the Half-Life 2 mention for the level set in a futuristic research facility in which Cortez briefly disguises himself as a scientist named Gordon. TimeSplitters: Future Perfect is littered with references to movies and other games, and although the Half-Life 2 example is one of the most obvious, many of them (Aliens and Jurassic Park spring to mind) are a little more subtle and are sure to raise a knowing smile the first time you spot them--just like some of the game's more powerful weapons, which we'll talk about on the next page

Justin Calvert
By Justin Calvert, Executive Editor

Justin's youth was largely misspent playing Commodore 64 and Amiga games. He left the UK's Official PlayStation Magazine to join GameSpot in 2000, believes that he's one of the best Speedball 2: Brutal Deluxe players in the world, and puts HP Sauce on everything.

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Game Info

  • PS2 Xbox GameCube Release Info

    • Release Date: Mar 21, 2005 (US)
    • ESRB: M
      Titles rated M (Mature) have content that may be suitable for persons ages 17 and older.

TimeSplitters: Future Perfect Boxshot
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