How StarCraft II will teach you to play competitively
When the single-player campaign isn't enough, Challenge mode awaits
Some of you will be lucky enough to be playing the StarCraft II beta. Many more of you will not. A good proportion of those forced to go without will be howling, denied access to the eagerly awaited sequel to the world’s most popular strategy game. To both these groups of people – the haves, and the have-nots – Blizzard have some news: that beta people are playing? It’s definitely not StarCraft II.
“People are using the beta as a demo for SC2,” says Chris Sigaty, lead producer on StarCraft II, “and that was never really our intention. It was specifically to test our new hardware infrastructure as well as the balance of the game at the various skill levels.”
Integrated with a revamped Battle.net client, which arranges 1v1 and 2v2 matches between players sorted by skill, this pre-release version is tight in its focus. Games against the computer are only available at the idiotic ‘very easy’ difficulty level, an open space where the player can experiment with tech trees and build orders while the AI dribbles and blunders into walls.
Chris is very keen to assure us that this is but one facet of the perfectly cut diamond StarCraft II will eventually become. “We’re trying to direct players, to say ‘hey, go try out the single-player thing, look at our challenges, check out the map editor, go play cooperatively with friends against the AI, or indeed go play this competitive multiplayer’.”
So, good news all around. The lucky few who Zerg-rushed their way into early beta access have but scratched the surface; those who were passed over can look forward to a balanced, honed game that no one has truly played yet. What will that game be like? Let’s crack open the carapace of StarCraft II, stick our arms into the gooey mass within, and see what we can find.
Above: Not at all Sarah Palin
StarCraft II’s single-player campaigns will be released as three distinct packs, the first of which – Wings of Liberty – will focus on the Terran story. The gribbly insectoid Zerg are next, getting their content and campaign – The Heart of the Swarm – 18 months later. The third race – the space-elf Protoss – will get a set of missions to call its own at an unspecified time after that.
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The first StarCraft was so stupidly fun as a competitive multiplayer game that it’s been co-opted as a heavily televised national sport in Korea. The beta for the new game is heavily weighted toward player-on-player battles. Is there a danger that these single-player campaigns, when they arrive could prove nothing more than glorified tutorials, a stepping-stone to the multiplayer?
It’s a worry Chris has heard before. “Some people are under the impression that single-player is the training ground for multiplayer, and we actually don’t view it that way. We’re taking single-player in very different directions this time – each mission is its own minigame in many instances and that is not the case in multiplayer.”
We’ve seen examples to back this up, just to be sure Blizzard aren’t fibbing. One mission sticks in the memory: a small band of Terran workers, mouthing off with the southern drawl of good old boys from Louisiana, are desperate to get offworld before they become Zerg-fodder. The problem – they’re in the south. The spaceport is in the north. Between the two is a road, and that road is infested with Zerg, each one hungry for soft human flesh.
Fortunately, badass Terran space-hero Jim Raynor is in the vicinity. And that’s you. Facing off against increasingly bitey waves of the swarm, you must provide safe passage for the stranded men. Assuming, that is, you can organise your forces. Some of these forces are unique to the single-player campaign. The Firebat – a pressure-suited flame-chucking assault trooper from the first game – has been excised from multiplayer thanks to balancing issues, replaced with the similarly beefy Marauder. In the single-player campaign he resurfaces, ready to pump napalm from his dual flamethrowers.
“We’ve got a bunch of other things in single-player,” Chris tells us, “like tech purchase and research, and a detailed story mode.” It’s this story that breaks most with RTS tradition, offering a spaceship-set hub – the Hyperion – where players will kill time between operations. The home of Raynor’s Raiders, the alien-artifact-nabbing mercenary group you’ll lead as noted badass Jim Raynor, the vessel offers conversation a-plenty with other Raiders and, most interestingly, the chance to accept or decline missions.
Depending on their quest-giver, some of these will give you a certain reputation if accepted. Take on worthy operations from characters such as doctor-with-a-heart-of-gold Ariel Hanson, for example, and your Raynor will align himself with good. If you just want to get stuff done and nick all the artifacts for your own swag pile, you’ll want to listen to that amoral marine Tychus Findlay.