Blake Stone Cover

Blake Stone was the best FPS until Doom released a week later

Back in my day, everything was 90 degree angles

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I was a pretty Doom-obsessed kid. After playing it on my Uncleā€™s computer, I begged my parents for it when we got an Intel 486 powered PC of our own. I never got it for PC, but it wasnā€™t because my parents were afraid of exposing an eight-year-old to violence. They eventually bought me Duke Nukem 3D and the SNES port of Doom (which was better than no Doom). No, I think computers were just a mysterious device to them and they were afraid Iā€™d load it up with games. Which I probably would have!

However, our PC did come pre-loaded with a bunch of shareware, and one of the titles that interested me most that didnā€™t have Duke Nukem in the name was Blake Stone: Aliens of Gold. It was kind of like Doom. It was a first-person shooter back in the days when that term didnā€™t really exist. Itā€™s not Doom, however, and thatā€™s okay.

Blake Stone First Guard

If you havenā€™t heard of Blake Stone, thereā€™s a good reason for that. It was released a week before Doom. When youā€™re flanked by the first-person shooter of the time, youā€™re not going to stand out. Especially considering Blake Stone was built in the Wolfenstein 3D engine, which was obsolete the moment Doom hit the shelves.

A lot of Wolf 3Dā€™s limitations are still there. Every level is flat. All the corners are 90 degrees. There are only five weapons. However, itā€™s definitely not Wolf 3D.

The story involves the titular spy infiltrating (assaulting is probably a better term) the various STAR installations created by Dr. Goldfire in his bid to rule the world. Along the way, he fights robots, humans, and mutants while picking up gold bars that are just lying on the floor. Immediately, thereā€™s more variety than the game whose engine itā€™s based upon, but youā€™d certainly hope so considering this is a year-and-a-half later.

Blake Stone Friendly Scientist

The structure is perhaps where the biggest difference lies. In Blake Stone, Rather than a linear progression of levels, thereā€™s an elevator that takes you to each floor. Your goal is to find the keycard for the next floor, but you can go back to previous levels to scour them for resources and gold bars. There are your typical secret doors that can be found by aggressively humping the walls, and the game gives you a score at the end of each episode.

Thereā€™s also the inclusion of friendly scientists who roam around most of the stages. Theyā€™re indistinguishable from the scientists that call you a dick and then shoot at you, but killing them hurts your final score. Talking to them also gives you extra ammo and tokens to use in the gameā€™s vending machines.

Vending machines. It doesnā€™t matter if youā€™re on Earth or in an orbiting fortress, there are vending machines everywhere. As long as you have the tokens available, you can get healing food. I cannot stress how amazing this feature is. You know how, like, every first-person shooter since Half-Life has had vending machines? Imagine you could use those to destroy your diet! Like in Deus Ex!

Blake Stone Monster Thing

Itā€™s the little ways that Blake Stone goes beyond being a simple ā€˜90s FPS that make me love it. The music is interesting, the wallpaper makes every building look like a break room, and the levels arenā€™t quite as abstract as something like Doom. To this day, I enjoy playing it over Wolfenstein 3D or even Rise of the Triad (another game based on the Wolf 3D engine).

The enemies are varied, with new ones appearing in each episode. The levels are less so. Even though you venture underground and into space, most of them share the same textures; ones that make every level look like someoneā€™s rec room. Thereā€™s usually something new to see on each episode, but Iā€™m kind of past getting excited about a new color of wallpaper.

Green Thing

I canā€™t get over the abstract sound effects that ping at you as you hoover up loot with your feet. I didnā€™t reunite with Blake Stone until years after my childhood experience, and those chirpy, fun little tunes that each weapon and pick-up makes still made the hair stand on the back of my neck.

At the same time, donā€™t let me oversell it. If you canā€™t stomach pre-Doom shooters, then this one isnā€™t going to change your mind. It isnā€™t Doom. It lacks the energy and strategy of that seminal FPS. Itā€™s a major improvement on Wolfenstein 3D, but thatā€™s as far as Iā€™m willing to take it. Itā€™s a bright and creative mural painted over the old colors, not a groundbreaking new approach.

They didnā€™t fix that weird damage algorithm that Wolfenstein 3D had. No, Iā€™m serious, have you ever looked into it? It takes into account difficulty, the enemy type, distance, whether or not youā€™re looking at them, the speed youā€™re moving, and two random numbers, then calculates how much pain youā€™re in. This means that you can be hunky-dory one minute, then the next minute your life has been eaten by a generic guard that caught you buying a sandwich at a vending machine. Say what you will about Wolf 3D, but I feel like we could have done without that math equation judging our fate.

Thing Thing

Blake Stone was originally a shareware game, which meant the first episode was free. Thatā€™s a decent amount of gameplay if you went for completion. In total, there are six episodes with nine levels each. There are also two secret levels for every episode, making a total of 66 levels. Itā€™s a lot, honestly, and even with the tweaks they did to the Wolf 3D gameplay, it gets stretched pretty thin.

Then a year later they came out with Blake Stone: Planet Strike, and as much of a fan that I am of the first title, I have barely touched the second. Itā€™s too much Blake. I can only look at so many 90 degree angles before I start foaming at the mouth.

Despite that, Blake Stone is the franchise that Iā€™d most like to see a modern upgrade to. The mix of espionage and first-person shooting was an interesting thing in the pre-Goldeneye 007 era. If it isnā€™t taken too seriously, I could see Blake Stone making a fine addition to the neo-olden FPS wave. Please?

For other retro titles you may have missed, click right here!


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Author
Image of Zoey Handley
Zoey Handley
Staff Writer
Staff Writer - Zoey is a gaming gadabout. She got her start blogging with the community in 2018 and hit the front page soon after. Normally found exploring indie experiments and retro libraries, she does her best to remain chronically uncool.