Viscera Cleanup Detail

Viscera Cleanup Detail

Official logo of Viscera Cleanup Detail
Developer(s) RuneStorm
Publisher(s) RuneStorm
Engine Unreal Engine 3
Platform(s) Microsoft Windows
Release date(s)
  • WW: 23 October 2015
Genre(s) Simulation
Mode(s) Single-player, multiplayer

Viscera Cleanup Detail (commonly referred to as Viscera, officially abbreviated as VCD) is a science fiction simulation video game where players are tasked to clean up the bloody aftermath of a successfully repulsed alien invasion. The game was developed and published by South Africa-based indie developer studio RuneStorm and was released on 4 April 2014 through Steam Early Access, with the full release available on 23 October 2015.[1]

Gameplay

In Viscera Cleanup Detail, players are given the role of "Space-Station Janitors", tasked with cleaning and repairing facilities that have been the scene of bloody battles during an alien invasion or other form of disaster. Tasks include gathering and disposing of debris, including, dismembered bodies of aliens and humans, spent shell casings and broken glass, restocking of wall-mounted first-aid kits, repairing bullet holes in walls, and cleaning of blood splatter and soot marks from floors, walls and ceilings, as well as secondary bonus tasks. These include stacking items like crates and barrels in a designated stacking area, and filing disaster reports on the events and deaths that took place in a corresponding level.

To accomplish these tasks, players carry with them a mop, to help clean up any blood pools or soot found around the station, a sensor device, to detect traces of biological or non-biological messes, and a small PDA to take notes on the level. Players may also interact with debris and other items with their empty hands. Another addition in a recent patch added to the game, a broom, which players could find lying around every map of the game to help sweep up those pesky bullet casings or other trash deemed worthy of sweeping.

Deployed throughout each level are janitorial machines in which the player must make use of to complete the cleaning operation: An incinerator for disposal of debris, a bucket dispenser which is the only source of clean water, a dispenser for bins that can be used to carry multiple smaller items such as cans, casings and even body parts, a welding device for repairing bullet holes in the walls, and an item vending machine where the player can get additional items such as lanterns, first aid kit restocking supplies, "wet floor" signs and flares. Occasionally, bucket and bin dispensers may malfunction and instead dispense one or more pieces of bloody debris, resulting in additional debris and blood stains to be cleaned up.

It is also possible to spread blood by dropping debris, spilling used buckets, or by the player tracking blood on the bottom of their boots, so some amount of care and planning is necessary to avoid re-cleaning the same area multiple times.

After punching out of a level, players are taken to a small collection of rooms known as "The Office". The Office acts as an interactive way for players to see how well they may have performed on the previously completed level. As well as a large report screen displaying the player's score in the form of a percentile, several news articles will also be scattered around The Office's main room. These detail events caused by the player's oversights, such as employees consuming viscera, tripping over buckets, or choking on discarded bullet shells, and show the player what they may have missed upon completing a level. The Office also serves as a place to collect items, which can be brought from successfully completed levels via the "Janitor's Trunk".

Players may "punch out" at any time to end the level. There is no set time limit, but there are penalties for not fully completing the level. If the player has not sufficiently cleaned a level and scored less than 75%, they will be "fired", causing The Office to reset and any items or changes made within will be lost.

Stand-alone expansions

During the development of Viscera Cleanup Detail, RuneStorm created two stand-alone expansions of their own game, which featured the same mechanics but different settings.

Downloadable content

On 17 July 2015, during the game's Early Access phase, RuneStorm released a DLC for Viscera Cleanup Detail, which includes the complete soundtrack that is played by the in-game radio in the main game and both stand-alone expansions.

On 29 October 2015—just six days after the game's full release—a Halloween DLC pack entitled Viscera Cleanup Detail: House of Horror was put up on Steam, featuring a crime scene of a house, where an unsolved mass murder has happened, while the player gets to uncover it during the gameplay.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 5/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.