I’ve finally acquired all of the mainline Metal Gear Solid games and have decided to play them through. To date, I’ve only ever played the first two (the first two Metal Gear Solids, not the first two Metal Gears), though I have had a copy of Snake Eater on my shelf for years now that I am yet to boot up. (Despite this, I picked up a copy of the HD collection for PS3. Why not, eh?)
Despite the fact that I’ve only ever played the first two, I have always thought of the series very fondly. I recall playing the original PS1 game to absolute death when it first came out since it was far and away one of the most gobsmackingly impressive console games around at the time.
Today, it’s not looking quite so impressive thanks to its 320×200 resolution, limited colour palette (so much dithering!) and complete lack of facial animations, but Hideo Kojima’s artistic intentions still clearly shine through thanks to excellent, movie-like direction of the cutscenes and high production values for music and voice work. In terms of sound, at least, the original game is very much on a par with modern games, with spectacular voice acting and a stirring, memorable score accompanying the action.
I think one of the reasons I enjoy the Metal Gear Solid games I have as much as I do is because they quickly subvert expectations. Obviously I don’t have the same expectations of them as I did back when I first played them, but I still remember how enjoyable it was to see the game’s setting and narrative evolve from gritty, manly super-soldier preventing nuclear war to comic-book style character-driven tale with a series of ridiculously overexaggerated villains. The gritty, manly super-soldier preventing nuclear war story is still there, of course, but with all the other stuff going on atop it, it becomes far more interesting than your average Call of Duty or whatever.
This is, in part, Kojima’s craft. He can blend things together remarkably well. He can blend the realistic and the fantastic; the mundane and the ridiculous. The first game is relatively tame compared to what happens in some of the later installments — even the second one — but it’s still not afraid to let its hair down every so often with villains like Psycho Mantis, who requires you to plug your controller into the other slot so he can’t read your mind, and Vulcan Raven, who manages to come off worse in a fight against Snake even when attacking him with a tank.
Divisive though it may be, I’m also a fan of how Kojima tells his stories. My friend Mark described the Metal Gear Solid games as one part tactical stealth action game, one part movie and one part radio drama, and it absolutely is true. The stealth action stuff is solid, enjoyable and challenging; the movie is well directed and as enjoyable as anything I’ve seen on the big screen, despite only starring computer-generated characters; and the radio drama that unfolds any time you whip out your Codec to chew the fat with any of Snake’s colourful cast of allies is well acted and always worth sitting through. I feel a bit sorry for those who feel the need to skip cutscenes and dialogue; they’re missing out on a significant part of the Metal Gear Solid experience.
Anyway. This time around I’m hoping to make it all the way through to the end of 4. I’ve renewed my interest in the series somewhat since looking a little into the new games Ground Zeroes and The Phantom Pain, you see, and it would be nice to be up to date with what’s going on before I play those. Plus everyone always says Metal Gear Solid 3 is amazing, so I should probably see what they’re all banging on about at some point, huh?
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Oh man, I invested in the original DualShock controller and I fondly remember flipping out when the hear-attack scene happend with the DARPA Chief. Heck, I still remember ripping the plastic coating off my OPM the day it arrived like a lunatic, just to play said demo. I honestly think I put at least 10 hours into that demo alone, trying to find EVERYTHING! Haha