This Russian Fallout Actually Looks Pretty Sweet

John Funk

U.N. Owen Was Him?
Dec 20, 2005
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This Russian Fallout Actually Looks Pretty Sweet

Imagine if the Cuban Missile Crisis hadn't ended so well.

That, at least, is the premise for 1C Company's Novy Soyuz - in 1962, cooler heads fail to prevail in the Cuban Missile Crisis [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuban_Missile_Crisis], and both the USA and USSR nuke each other off the map. Set fifty years later in 2012, Novy Soyuz puts you into the shoes of a former Soviet bomber pilot who survived the nuclear holocaust in a bunker beneath Moscow.

This isn't the first game to come out of the former Soviet Union that involves some sort of nuclear holocaust - see the Metro games and S.T.A.L.K.E.R., for some examples. But what makes this more interesting is that like Fallout, the Russian (Soviet?) society in Novy Soyuz seems to take its cues from 1950s/1960s environments - just look at the radio at the very beginning of the trailer for an example.

What's also interesting about Novy Soyuz is the advanced age of the protagonist - as someone who was a bomber pilot during the Cold War, he should be well into his seventies by now. Whether or not this affects gameplay remains to be seen, or perhaps the radiation did something wonky like slowing down his aging (as radiation in fiction sometimes does).

Like Fallout, Novy Soyuz's combat will be in real-time with options to pause for tactical decisions. It will also feature experimental Soviet weaponry from the Cold War, which somehow feels less tacky and crass when it's a Russian developer doing it in the first place.

The game is being developed by 1C Company, the studio behind cult RTS hit Men of War. While no official Western localization has been announced, Men of War has a devoted following, so I wouldn't be surprised to see Novy Soyuz pass through the former Iron Curtain sometime soon.

Source: Reddit [http://www.reddit.com/r/Games/comments/u1ksj/novy_soyuz_soviet_fallout_from_the_creators_of/]

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Jorec

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Jul 7, 2010
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That actually sounds really cool. I'm always up for a new post-apocalyptic game.
 

XandNobody

Oh for...
Aug 4, 2010
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If we do get this, the Russian adds so much to the atmosphere, I'd hope it's subtitles instead of a dub. I had no idea what anyone was saying and the atmosphere still felt awesome.

That, and from the surface footage, they seem to be taking a bit more realistic approach than fallout.
 

GothmogII

Possessor Of Hats
Apr 6, 2008
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ChaplainOrion said:
Where they saying stuff about nazis on the radio? I kept hearing nazis.
Well, from what I can gather, Germany at the time was afflicted by a massive radioactive dust cloud that killed all the citizens and raised a vast horde of mutant Nazi zombies.
 

Porygon-2000

I have a green hat! Why?!
Jul 14, 2010
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So... who are the enemies in this? The capitalist pig-dogs? Some sort of Soviet enclave? Mutant Polar Bears?
 

Blind Sight

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May 16, 2010
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XandNobody said:
If we do get this, the Russian adds so much to the atmosphere, I'd hope it's subtitles instead of a dub. I had no idea what anyone was saying and the atmosphere still felt awesome.

That, and from the surface footage, they seem to be taking a bit more realistic approach than fallout.
Oh trust me, if you'd heard the English voice acting in Men of War you'd want subs regardless.

 

A Raging Emo

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Apr 14, 2009
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Porygon-2000 said:
So... who are the enemies in this? The capitalist pig-dogs? Some sort of Soviet enclave? Mutant Polar Bears?
Super-Mutants. Russian Super Mutants.

Я в порядке с этим.
 

s_h_a_d_o

Mr Propellerhead
Jun 15, 2010
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John Funk said:
But what makes this more interesting is that like Fallout, the Russian (Soviet?) society in Novy Soyuz seems to take its cues from 1950s/1960s environments - just look at the radio at the very beginning of the trailer for an example.
What you have to understand John, is that the east-European design aesthetic has always been rather austere and utilitarian, and much of the industrial design trailed well behind "western" development (oftentimes due to a reliance on outdated industry infrastructure and tooling) - motorcycle aficionados like myself will be well aware that products coming from Russian in the 1970's and even '80's bear all the hallmarks of 1950 design sensibilities elsewhere in the world.
 

Rad Party God

Party like it's 2010!
Feb 23, 2010
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Subs or GTFO!.

*ahem...

That looks seriously interesting, Fallout in a post apocalyptic soviet Rusia, that's something I'd like to see, I wanted to freely explore Moscow in Metro 2033 and obviously Stalker takes place in a completely different and equally interesting setting.
 

=y

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May 11, 2012
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I approve. Russian made Russian apocalypse game. I sure hope we have some American killing! :D
 

GonzoGamer

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Apr 9, 2008
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That kind of looks like the same engine too.

I can only imagine how much a Russian version of Fallout would crash.
 

dyre

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Mar 30, 2011
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More Eastern European post-apocalyptic titles are always cool, and I've heard good things about Men of War. I hope they release it in the US (with subs).
 
Apr 28, 2008
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Sounds interesting. I welcome games not set in the US. Add in the fact that post-apocalyptic games from Russia are pretty good, and yeah I'm excited.
 

DeMorquist

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Dec 15, 2011
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There.

Now you can stop trying to break Fallout from being Fallout...Which is America in a 1950s glow..

Seriously I dont know why that bothers me when people start spouting on about FALLOUT LONDON WOOD BE AWESOME! ...No...Fallout uses the 1950esque America as its backdrop...
 

ChaplainOrion

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Nov 7, 2011
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CrossLOPER said:
ChaplainOrion said:
Where they saying stuff about nazis on the radio? I kept hearing nazis.
The announcer is listing the time of day in major cities. You are probably hearing the post-fix of the teen-numbers. Ex: seventeen is sem'natsit', fifteen is pet'natsit'.
Thank you for that. You have my thanks, and according to the security box on the bottom, I've forgotten the name, you must take it all, ALL OF MY THANKS.