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LTTP: Thief (Series)

Shifty

Member
I was writing up this post as a reply to bati bati 's thread from back in February, but it ended up becoming so long and series-encompassing that I figure I might as well make a new LTTP topic on it.
For context, this was originally meant to be a couple of sentences for Thief 1, 2 and Deadly Shadows followed by a longer breakdown of my take on the reboot, but it's kind of blossomed into a full series retrospective so there you have it. This is going to be long.

So, the aformentioned thread combined with a recent squeenix steam sale pushed me to play through the Thief series in (almost) its entirety.

The Originals

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Thief 1 and 2 are sublime. Stealth games developed by Looking Glass Studios and set in a dark medieval fantasy setting that feels fresh even today, they're a tour-de-force of mission design, composed of sprawling environments packed with unique and interesting things to see, secrets to find, and featuring a fantastic Goldeneye-style difficulty system that gives you more objectives instead of tougher enemies.

You play as Garrett, a master thief trained by The Keepers - a shadowy group that works to keep the world in balance - who left due to his disinterest in their ideology. Voiced by Stephen Russell, he's cynical, witty and charismatic, rendering him a likable character despite his illegitimate profession. He provides pre-mission voiceovers and the occasional quip at key points during gameplay, both of which are well written and believable- a pleasant rarity in the face of most modern video game character writing.

The gameplay is first-person stealth with a focus on light, shadow and sound. If a guard is unalerted and you're fully in shadow (indicated by the light gem at the bottom of the screen) you're effectively invisible, though they'll still hear you if you sprint or perform other noisy actions. Garrett is equipped with a non-lethal bludgeon called the blackjack, a shortsword, and a bow. However, you'll largely be avoiding enemies as he is very much mortal- you can't take on more than one guard at once without serious risk of damage or death. If an enemy is unaware then you have the option to knock them out with the blackjack, but if they are then it's time to choose fight, flight, or to reload a quicksave.

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Thief Trivia: The engine that powers Thief (known as The Dark Engine) uses a similar movement system to the one created by John Carmack for Quake, so you can bunnyhop your way through levels like a pro if you know how. (Un)fortunately, they fixed it in the sequel.

When you're not dealing with guards you'll be exploring wide open levels taking anything valuable that isn't nailed down while accomplishing various objectives, such as retrieving a particularly valuable item, breaking someone out of prison or finding evidence with which to blackmail someone, among many others. In pursuit of this, you'll be poking around every nook and cranny looking for hidden rooms, hidey holes, and notes from the inhabitants detailing their daily lives and dirty secrets. The games strike an even balance between guided exploration and exploration out of player curiosity by combining a coarse map with a compass in the UI. The maps' detail varies mission-by-mission depending on how much information Garrett has on the locale, but they give a vague zone-by-zone indication of where you are without becoming more important than using your eyes and looking around.

I feel that level design is one of the things that Thief does best- each location feels rich and cohesive, like it could actually be a functional space rather than simply a set of video game rooms for you to move through. If you find a note mentioning some valuable trinket that's been hidden away, then it's likely that you'll be able to root it out and swipe it with a bit of critical investigation, something that I really enjoyed after years of text logs in other games that act purely as window dressing.

As mentioned above, a Goldeneye 64-style difficulty system is present that changes your objectives based on difficulty rather than simply bumping up enemy health and damage numbers. This makes each difficulty feel unique- for example:
On normal you may be required to infiltrate a mansion and steal a valuable scepter, after which the mission will end.
On hard, you'll have you get in, steal the scepter and 350 gold's worth of loot without killing any innocent servants, and then get back out to the city streets.
On expert, you'll have to get in, steal the scepter and 700 in loot, kill nobody, then get back out.

And that's a fairly simple example- missions can scale from a simple get-in-and-find-thing all the way to instances of sabotage and kidnap on top of that core objective. I almost regret playing the first two games on Expert and seeing everything on my first go round, because I would happily run through both of them again twice over.

While exploring, your primary method of interaction with the world is the 'interact' button. Interactive objects have been common in games for ages now, but Thief leans on them as a mechanic in a considerably deeper sense than most- they're a core part of the level design, allowing for a variety of unique mechanisms such as doors that can be cracked open to peek through, switches that open hidden doors, levers, chests, hidden panels, and even a fully-functional iron casting forge that you can use to create a variety of items during a certain mission. It may sound mundane, but these elements tie into the structure of each area and help embody the cohesion that makes them feel like real spaces. This interaction also covers the act of grabbing loot, which may in some cases be attached to an enemy such as the key on a guard's belt, the purse in his pocket or the arrows in his quiver.

In some cases, you can also use your bow to interact with the environment:

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Thief trivia: The act of interaction is referred to by the game engine and DromEd level editor as 'frobbing'. At first glance you'd think that is stands for "function rob" or some other arbitrary code term, but it turns out that it's a real word that came out of MIT and Silicon Valley:
frob (third-person singular simple present frobs, present participle frobbing, simple past and past participle frobbed)
  1. (jargon, MIT) To manipulate objects considered to be frobs.Hey, frob the switch.
  2. (jargon, MIT) To manipulate equipment without any knowledge.Hey! Stop frobbing that oscilloscope! You'll break it.
  3. (jargon, Silicon Valley) To perform a task that is clear to the speaker but too complex or tedious to be explained, so that outside help is not helpful.Why don't you go get lunch? I need to frob with this thing for about 30 minutes and then we'll be good to go.


Your secondary means of interaction is your thieving tools, some of which are purchased between missions as you fence off your ill-gotten gains. This incentivises you to steal as much as possible from each level in order to prepare yourself for the next, and allows you to tailor your experience by controlling which tools you start with.

Arguably the most important of these are your lockpicks, which allow you to access places that you shouldn't be without the requisite key. You have two, and each lock requires you to use them in a different order to set each tumbler. It's a simple system - select the appropriate pick and hold the interact button on a lock - but switching back and forth necessitates a degree of concentration and creates tension when you're mid-pick, fully lit up, and hear footsteps approaching.

The second most prominent is collection of special arrows for your bow which can extinguish torches, create a footstep-silencing moss carpet, attach a climbable rope to wooden surfaces or create a distracting noise among other things. These turn your ranged weapon into a utility and represent the core of your sneaking tools:

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Lastly, there are inventory items such as flash bombs, mines, and a bottle of holy water that will imbue your remaining water arrows with undead-exploding properties. These tend to be more situational, but can be potent when used strategically:

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These come together to give the player a large and varied toolkit, which couples with the open 'wide corridor' level design to allow for many different approaches depending on your loadout and playstyle.

The first game's levels are extremely varied, and come across as products of an experimental time in 3D game design for both better and worse. They range from opulent manors populated by servants and guards, to underground caves and crypts full of all sorts of strange fauna and supernatural creatures. Said creatures are a divisive point for some players, as they tend to be harder to read from a stealth standpoint and stray away from the game's apparent core concept: robbing the rich and giving to oneself. Personally I found them a good way to mix things up, but there are a few points in the game that provoke the feeling of "oh no, another monster level" before you dig in and discover that they're actually pretty good.

There are high highs such as:
(I'll tag this as it was a really cool surprise when it happened, but I need to talk about it for the sake of analysis. Light spoiler for the premise of a certain early-game mission.)
"Assassins", a mission in which a simple plan to rob the local hammerite temple is derailed when a pair of bumbling assassins ordered to kill Garrett accidentally murder his supplier mid-purchase in a case of mistaken identity, prompting a pursuit across town (with just enough time to clean out the shop if you're quick- it's not like the recently deceased proprietor needs all of that stock anymore, right?) and the ensuing robbery and humiliation of their employer.

To me, this is a fascinating piece of game design because the mission briefing and objective screen don't take it into account. Normally such things are 'non-diagetic', in that they're user interface elements that have an omnipresent level of knowledge about the game world and your objectives therein. Not here- in this case those elements are diagetic, because they represent Garrett's intentions and update on the fly as events unfold and his priorities change.

Unforunately, it also has some low lows such as "Thieves' Guild" from the gold edition, in which a plan to rob two rival gang leaders of their ill-begotten goods turns into a lengthy slog through an underground hideout that is a little too maze-like for an early-game mission and, on expert, contains the game's single piece of genuinely bad loot design: an unhinted mandatory item that's well-hidden enough to make discovering it difficult.
(You might as well read this because it's a goddamn boondoggle when approached blind but I'll tag it just in case)
A jeweled bracelet hidden behind a small secret panel at the base of a firepit in one of the gangs' offices.

Overall I think it's the richer game of the two. From a story and world perspective, it explores of the conflict between the Hammerites and the Pagans - two opposing religious factions - and the gods that they worship. Each mission briefing is preceded by an ominous quote from texts that range from dogmatic scripture to whimsical nursery rhymes with a dark undercurrent. These add texture to the setting and let the player know what kind of ideologies they'll be encountering while sneaking through the world:

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The story is veiled in mystery and its major narrative beats are paced perfectly, gradually revealing its true nature to the player through subtle foreshadowing. It all culminates in a final boss encounter that is one of the most unusual and thematically resonant that I've ever seen in a game, a rarity even among less nuanced genres and something that I was not expecting going in.

The second game shares the same core mechanics as Thief 1 with some additional tools and refined mission and interaction design. Garrett can now obtain scouting orbs- throwable cameras that allow you to look around corners and can be retrieved for later use, and vine arrows- a sibling to the rope arrow that can attach to metal grates. Enemy AI has been tweaked to be a little more intelligent and the knockout requirements for the blackjack have actually been reduced slightly, allowing a nimble player to dart into the shadows behind an alerted guard and KO him providing that they are completely concealed and out of enemy sight.

This time, the narrative focus is on the mechanists- a splinter faction of the Hammerites that worship the purity of mechanical engineering over the limitations of the mortal human form. They come across as significantly more sinister and cult-like than their construction-focused brethren, having forcefully infiltrated many aspects of society in the city and created monstrous automatons to act as guards and broadcast 'The Word of Karras, The Woooord of Karras' to anyone within listening range:

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The game dials down on the use of 'monster levels' in favour of these automatons, and has a greater focus on city environments such as a set of dock warehouses complete with their own pirate ship, a bank full of mechanist security systems, and an opera house built above dangerous caverns.

Overall the bar of quality is a bit higher and more consistent than the first game, but Thief 2 is more about the journey than it is the destination. The missions themselves range from okay to excellent and the way the story and world progress from the first is fascinating, with your past actions having had a profound and measurable effect upon the city. Unfortunately the narrative climax doesn't pay off to the same degree as its progenitor, focusing more on the mechanics that cause it than the event itself, but Thief 2 is still a fantastic game despite this.

Thief 1 and 2 are definitely my joint favourites in the series. In fact, trigger warning controversial opinion ahead, I'd go as far to say that I enjoy them more than the original Deus Ex as entries in the Immersive Sim genre. To my eye, they've aged better from a mechanical standpoint and are more digestible thanks to the mission-based structure.

The Black Sheep

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Developed by Ion Storm following the closure of Looking Glass due to financial troubles following the release of the nonetheless successful Thief 2, Deadly Shadows starts off as a huge shock to the system (doi hoi pun not intended) because of how janky the mechanics are relative to pure simplicity of the first two.

Built in a new engine, the game is a product of the XB / PS2 / GC era of consolized PC games. The sneaking toolkit of the older games has been shuffled around, sacrificing rope and vine arrows for a more restrictive climbing mechanic that only appears in the late game, and upgrading the moss arrows with the ability to temporarily incapacitate a guard in exchange for alerting them after the fact:

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Garrett now has a character model and animations designed to enable third-person view. While this sounds like a nice addition on the surface, it ends up acting in detriment to the core first-person gameplay by giving animation priority over movement. Turning, climbing, leaning and switching gear are all now slower and less responsive, and it feels imprecise. And to make matters worse, guards now function differently and are more alert- if a guard is even slightly suspicious, they become immune to the blackjack until a timer expires and they comment that it must have been nothing.

Despite the first impression, I pushed through for the sake of seeing the end of Garrett's story, and once I'd left the enclosed tutorial section of the game and acclimatized to the jank, it began to feel more like a Thief game.
There are a lot of new ideas, such as an open-city hub with various burglary opportunities, sidequests, and going to shops to manually fence and purchase gear. The open city is the most promising of these and is the most well-executed, adding the hub world aspect of the immersive sim genre to the game, but it falls short of its potential with many pieces of loot respawning in the same places as you progress through the story's nine in-game days, reducing the act of stocking up to a repetitive trip around areas that are known to be profitable.
The game also has a rudimentary faction system, allowing you to improve your standing with the hammerites and pagans by performing certain tasks in the hub area. This only really effects the faction NPCs' disposition toward you- hostile, neutral or friendly to the point of assisting you in combat, and doesn't make a lot of difference outside of some end-game sequences when things start to kick off.

The missions themselves are similar to those in the original games- sneak in, accomplish an objective, sneak out. However, the map has now been reduced to a vague single-page overview of the location that longer gives you an indication of where you are. This makes orienting yourself difficult, and results in a more chaotic 'get through' mentality than the structured 'see, do and steal everything' encouraged by the first two games. In addition, the difficulty modifiers are now simpler, being limited to AI perceptiveness and specific loot requirements such as "get 1800 loot total, at least 400 in gems, and find 3 special loot items" rather than the specific in-world tasks of the first two.

The story this time focuses on a prophecy of an oncoming dark age, and a mysterious serial killer known as "The Hag". It feels more meandering than the first two games, but by the end ramps up to a worthy climax that caps off Garrett's story well and could also have served as a jumping-off point for Thi4f. The writing and voice direction isn't as good as the original games, in particular the loss of nuance in the pagan faction's patois, but it's still recognizable and enjoyable.

Honourable mention goes to Robbing The Cradle, one of the missions toward of the end of the game. Set in an orphanage that was converted into an insane asylum while the orphans were still living there, it's possessed of an atmosphere as thick as treacle and extremely unsettling denizens. Lauded by some as one of the scariest levels ever made, I went in with my expectations set high and still came away quite impressed. I've player other, scarier games (REmake, RE2, RE3, and that one haunted crypt section in Arx Fatalis come to mind) but for the time and genre it's an impressive piece of horror design.

So, while the game comes good by the end if you can get there, it's deeply flawed and the victim of an obviously rough development cycle. It's highly ambitious, but executes poorly and as a result ends up feeling more limited than the first two in a lot of ways.
Even fully patched up with the Sneaky Upgrade fan mod, something that improves things enough that I may not have finished without it, it has a common bug that causes Garrett to semi-randomly slide around instead of walking, preventing you from jumping or crouching until you fall off a ledge, activate the climbing gloves ability or reload a quick save, which takes forever in this engine and is a massive immersion-breaker.
I don't regret playing it, but it stands in contrast to the polish of the games that came before it.

The Reboot

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The reboot... It's a well-made game, but I couldn't finish it. Mechanically it's tight if somewhat dumbed-down, graphically it's the best that the series has ever looked, it executes well on the between-missions open city thieving that Deadly Shadows experimented with but didn't do very well, but despite all of that it strikes me as that specific AAA type of bland.

The mechanics are more rigid than they were in the old games. Every action you can do is explicit and is tied to a pre-made set of animations: rope arrow attachment is now restricted to certain pre-placed points in the environment, interactions that would have originally been covered by the frob system are boxed into a limited set of minigames such as picking a lock, or finding the switch hidden behind a painting or in a bookcase. They seem cool the first few times you do them, but after a point the realisation happens that these are the only interactions you'll be having throughout the whole game. This is limited in comparison to the original's systems.

Also, I feel like giving Garrett expert hand-to-hand skills was a mistake. Being able to frontally assault an alerted guard with the blackjack and pull off a flashy KO animation makes him seem like a badass video game action hero rather than the wily mortal that he was originally. It's certainly more approachable, but it contributes to a disconnect between the game's themes and mechanics.

And on the subject of themes, New Garrett has so much less personality than Stephen Russell's portrayal of him. Rebooting and dropping the backstory left him in this awkward place of being a skilled thief without the keepers to act as a narrative foil, and he lacks the charisma to effectively carry that role. Where Old Garrett was a likable anti-hero reluctantly pulled into a larger conflict, New Garrett is a preachy cutpurse who fights The Man because The Man wants to arrest and/or kill every thief in the city. I don't like the new outfit either, because the facemask - while practical - gives him an edgy counter-culture look that would be better suited to someone holding a can of spraypaint than a blackjack.

I mentioned New Garrett being preachy- during the intro Garrett calls out the female lead out on her willingness to kill. This gives the character a narrative bias that was primarily expressed mechanically in the originals, where it was strictly a player choice outside of the higher difficulties at which point it became a mission objective.
And that female lead, yikes. She's an edgy videogame character from top to toe. I get a feeling that the original intent (when the game was still Thi4f) was for her to be
(Deadly Shadows ending spoiler)
The kid that tries to pickpocket Garrett during the "To see a Keeper is not an easy thing, especially one who does not wish to be seen" scene at the end of Deadly Shadows, mirroring child Garrett's interaction with keeper Artemus at the start of Thief 1 and implying that he would take them in as an apprentice.
which would perhaps have contextualized her dynamic with Garrett, but post-reboot she just seems like an edgy asshole for the sake of edgy assholery, which makes her a pretty poor fit for the damsel in distress role that she's placed in for most of the game.

I certainly don't hate or dislike it as a game, but it misses several key points on what it is to be a Thief game, and I lost interest in going back to it after the first few missions. If you haven't played or liked the originals then it's a competent stealth burgle-em-up that you may enjoy, but it likely won't interest fans of the originals who are looking for more.

The Spiritual Successor

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So in lieu of finishing the reboot, I've been giving The Dark Mod a go. It's a fan-made tribute to the originals made in the Doom 3 engine that focuses on user-generated content, and is pretty good. Set in its own universe with lore that's been gradually expanded by the community over time, it feels like a technically modern implementation of the original Thief mechanics.

I've played a few different missions thus far- A New Job, The Tears of St. Lucia, Business As Usual, Lord Dufford's and the first three parts of the No Honor Among Thieves campaign. Mission quality has been mostly good, with all but Lord Dufford's holding up to scrutiny from a level design standpoint and in some cases going above and beyond the original games in terms of density and intricacy.
My main gripe is that the presentation is wildly variable in quality due to its amateur nature. A mission can be well-designed in a structural sense, but have grammar and spelling issues in text copy or painfully amateur voice acting to go along with it. It's still an enjoyable experience, but lacks the polish of the games that inspired it.

I'd love to see a game studio license TDM, get Stephen Russell back and make a proper high-production spiritual successor to the originals in the same vein as 3D Realms with Ion Maiden. It's not going to happen, but a man can dream.

How to play Thief today
Thief 1 and 2 have a fan patch called NewDark that was created by some of the original developers to clean up certain technical aspects and make the game the best it can be on modern systems. There are also various texture packs with varying degrees of faithfulness to the original style.
Thief: Deadly Shadows has a similar patch in the form of the Sneaky Upgrade, a collection of modifications and fixes designed to make the game playable on modern systems, improve its visuals and mitigate some of the more janky elements.
The reboot works out-of-the-box without any fiddling on modern systems by virtue of being a fairly modern game.
The Dark Mod works fairly well out of the box, but can be tweaked for niceties such as unlocked framerate and better VRAM usage by tweaking some .ini files.

You can find out more on each game's respective PCGamingWiki entry:
Thief: The Dark Project - PCGamingWiki
Thief II: The Metal Age - PCGamingWiki
Thief: Deadly Shadows - PCGamingWiki
Thief (Reboot) - PCGamingWiki
The Dark Mod - PCGamingWiki

In short: Thief is a good series. You should play Thief.

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bati

Member
Excellent thread! Props for writing, very objective breakdown of each individual game. Since I haven't played Thief: TDP beyond the first two missions but plan to revisit it soon I'm curious how you viewed the mission prep in the old games - did you ever have to restart the mission because you failed to grab some specific tools that would've helped you? That aspect to me at the time seemed like it relied on meta knowledge of the game (knowing what lies ahead) so I wasn't exactly on board with it, which is probably why Thief (2014) appealed to me more by having some form of persistence between missions.
 

Nessus

Member
My single biggest disappointment with the reboot was jettisoning the entire world they built, the Hammerites, etc.
 

138

Banned
I would have enjoyed the reboot if the map was useful at all. I couldn't remember which window in which house opened onto a new area.
 

Shifty

Member
Excellent thread! Props for writing, very objective breakdown of each individual game. Since I haven't played Thief: TDP beyond the first two missions but plan to revisit it soon I'm curious how you viewed the mission prep in the old games - did you ever have to restart the mission because you failed to grab some specific tools that would've helped you? That aspect to me at the time seemed like it relied on meta knowledge of the game (knowing what lies ahead) so I wasn't exactly on board with it, which is probably why Thief (2014) appealed to me more by having some form of persistence between missions.
Thanks! I feel like my take on the reboot may be a tad biased since I played the games back-to-back in release order, but I tried to keep an open mind where possible.

I'd say that running out of tools is a valid concern for the old games, but despite not rotating my saves I didn't get caught out to the point of being unable to finish a mission during my playthroughs of Thief Gold and Thief 2.
I did notice a couple of points where I could have missed a secret or taken minor damage due to lack of items, but the only mission-critical one I can remember involves having at least one of each elemental arrow (water, fire, moss, gas) at a certain point in the last mission of the first game.

Thankfully the game will give you the bare minimum of items you need for a given mission as collectibles even on expert where that stuff is more scarce, so the ones you buy from the shop are always 'spare' in that sense. It's possible to waste them before you know they're needed, but I didn't find it to be a problem.
 
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Isa

Member
Very well done m8! I love the first three so much, and I may get flack for this but Deadly Shadows is my favorite, and I played it on Xbox! But granted my comp at the time couldn't run it and I prefer controllers over m+k. Still, the whole lore, mechanics, missions, and atmosphere are just phenomenal.

The only one I regret not giving a solid chance is the Reboot. I bought it at launch but something about it turned me off immediately, maybe it was the lore? I really wanted to see where the game would go after the ending of the 3rd title, and I don't really like reboots. Someday I'll try to dive in. Was the reboot made by the team that did the Deus Ex reboots? I thought they might've because of a picture in the credits of DE:MD.
 

Dark Star

Member
great thread!

tbh i prefer the new one more than originals. I just find the older ones hard to control.
maybe if they somehow ported it to PS4 i'd have more fun playing it :p
 

bati

Member
Thanks! I feel like my take on the reboot may be a tad biased since I played the games back-to-back in release order, but I tried to keep an open mind where possible.

I'd say that running out of tools is a valid concern for the old games, but despite not rotating my saves I didn't get caught out to the point of being unable to finish a mission during my playthroughs of Thief Gold and Thief 2.
I did notice a couple of points where I could have missed a secret or taken minor damage due to lack of items, but the only mission-critical one I can remember involves having at least one of each elemental arrow (water, fire, moss, gas) at a certain point in the last mission of the first game.

Thankfully the game will give you the bare minimum of items you need for a given mission as collectibles even on expert where that stuff is more scarce, so the ones you buy from the shop are always 'spare' in that sense. It's possible to waste them before you know they're needed, but I didn't find it to be a problem.

I think reviewing the games the way you did is the best way to be honest. This way your experience with older titles is still fresh and comparison on mechanical level more accurate. One has to be careful about genre fatigue though - I don't think I could stomach 3 stealth games in a row, let alone four - no wonder you gave up on the new Thief.

Good to hear about the bare minimum items provided in Thief - as I said, this was one thing that really irked me. The other were undead monsters, which was, as much as I'm ashamed to admit, a rather large reason why I shelved the game on the second mission (mines). I'm the type that likes to 'clear' levels and those undead refused to cooperate lol.

Apparently you can drown them but I only learned that after the fact.
 

Shifty

Member
great insight, +10 for boondoggle
Truly a glorious word. It needs more mindshare.

Very well done m8! I love the first three so much, and I may get flack for this but Deadly Shadows is my favorite, and I played it on Xbox! But granted my comp at the time couldn't run it and I prefer controllers over m+k. Still, the whole lore, mechanics, missions, and atmosphere are just phenomenal.

The only one I regret not giving a solid chance is the Reboot. I bought it at launch but something about it turned me off immediately, maybe it was the lore? I really wanted to see where the game would go after the ending of the 3rd title, and I don't really like reboots. Someday I'll try to dive in. Was the reboot made by the team that did the Deus Ex reboots? I thought they might've because of a picture in the credits of DE:MD.
Cheers! What was Deadly Shadows like on the Xbox- did it use the third-person camera by default? I have a hunch that maybe the PC version got shafted a bit as it's a technical mess pre-fan patch.

And it looks like Deus Ex: Human Revolution and the Thief reboot were both made by Eidos Montreal.
Oddly I prefer the Deus Ex reboots over the original, which is the opposite of my stance on the Thief series. Doubly strange because medieval stuff usually isn't my thing at all, so I wouldn't have expected to get hooked the way I did.

The other were undead monsters, which was, as much as I'm ashamed to admit, a rather large reason why I shelved the game on the second mission (mines). I'm the type that likes to 'clear' levels and those undead refused to cooperate lol.

Apparently you can drown them but I only learned that after the fact.
Wait, do you mean "clear" as in "everything must either be dead or unconscious"? Because that sounds incredibly hardcore if so. I usually have a similar mindset, but resigned myself to disabling or sneaking around the zombies after figuring out that the sword only incapacitates them.

For what it's worth, the zombies are the only enemies in the game that do that. They're pretty prevalent in a few missions, but the game subs in other monster/supernatural enemy types that can be KOed or killed as usual for the rest.
 

bati

Member
Yeah, I like to choke out every last enemy in stealth games. In a non-lethal way of course, because I'm not a monster. Don't want anyone to interrupt me while I rummage through people's stuff and steal things or read their emails. That said, I try to ghost levels in Thief, which means no raised alarms and no knockouts. But undeads and other monsters whose potential demise doesn't affect the character's morality are usually free game - except in TDP you can't permanently dispatch them in the beginning unless you lead them to water and hope the AI is stupid enough to fall in. I don't know if any tools are provided later on for this but I vaguely recall reading something about holy water.

As for Deus Ex (OG) - when was the last time you played it? I remember trying to convince myself that HR was better when I played it at release, but when I replayed the original about 6 months after that it was still unmatched - and HR was excellent. MD was....eh. Solid game on mechanical level (except for the invisibility feat, what a cheap copout), but terrible pacing, uninteresting story and frankly insane characters (your 'rival' on the team for example was just shockingly bad).

Maybe do a Deus Ex series retrospective next lol.
 

Isa

Member
Cheers! What was Deadly Shadows like on the Xbox- did it use the third-person camera by default? I have a hunch that maybe the PC version got shafted a bit as it's a technical mess pre-fan patch.

And it looks like Deus Ex: Human Revolution and the Thief reboot were both made by Eidos Montreal.
Oddly I prefer the Deus Ex reboots over the original, which is the opposite of my stance on the Thief series. Doubly strange because medieval stuff usually isn't my thing at all, so I wouldn't have expected to get hooked the way I did.

I don't actually recall very much third person, which is really my preferred style. Maybe in some contextual situations like against a wall or something? I only remember first person the whole time though. It was pretty though with a more blurred look due to the limitations of the system compared to sharper resolutions on pc. I loved the bump-mapping the system could render, from Halo to other titles such as this. It's crazy how far gfx have come. Maybe others would note frame-rate issues but I don't recall any major drops or anything.
 

Nymphae

Banned
Great thread, I just picked up the PS4 Thief a few weeks ago at EB for 10 bucks, really looking forward to getting into it. Enjoyed reading OP!
 

Dr. Claus

Vincit qui se vincit
Thief 1 and 2 are still some of my favorite games of all time (though fuck Thieve's Guild). 3 and 4 were... awful. 4 in particular pissed me off to no end and I was so disappointed after the idea that the folks behind Human Revolution were rebooting the franchise. They bungled it *so hard*.
 

JCK75

Member
I can't think of a single game that blew my mind in quite the way the original Thief did, really wish they would ignore the reboot and give it one more go with a mission to get it right.
 

mantidor

Member
I don't think Deadly Shadows is *that* bad, it's inferior to the first two of course, but it's enjoyable.

I never bothered with the reboot, everything about it sounded horrible.
 
Honourable mention goes to Robbing The Cradle, one of the missions toward of the end of the game. Set in an orphanage that was converted into an insane asylum while the orphans were still living there, it's possessed of an atmosphere as thick as treacle and extremely unsettling denizens. Lauded by some as one of the scariest levels ever made, I went in with my expectations set high and still came away quite impressed. I've player other, scarier games (REmake, RE2, RE3, and that one haunted crypt section in Arx Fatalis come to mind) but for the time and genre it's an impressive piece of horror design.

I quite liked Deadly Shadows. I have very strong memories of this part of the game. Honestly one of the scariest things I ever played.

I have played Thief 1 & 2 as well. But they were not for me.
 

Shifty

Member
As for Deus Ex (OG) - when was the last time you played it? I remember trying to convince myself that HR was better when I played it at release, but when I replayed the original about 6 months after that it was still unmatched - and HR was excellent. MD was....eh. Solid game on mechanical level (except for the invisibility feat, what a cheap copout), but terrible pacing, uninteresting story and frankly insane characters (your 'rival' on the team for example was just shockingly bad).
It's been quite a while, probably a couple of years before MD came out. I think I've attempted about three playthroughs total, but by sheer bad luck I always seem to lose my save before hitting the endgame (OS reinstall, hard drive death, etc.)
I think the furthest I've ever gotten is disembarking the helicopter to Hong Kong. Will definitely have to put in the effort and get all the way through one of these days.

Thinking about it, I don't think I can place MD above the original. HR is my current favourite, but I fell off its sequel the same way I did the thief reboot. As you say, it played well, but I didn't really feel invested in the way they presented Jensen's continued story. I don't remember a single supporting character from that game.

I vaguely recall reading something about holy water.
Yep, it's an inventory usable that turns your water arrows into undead-gibbing rockets for 30 seconds, and you can buy/find it. There are also holy water fonts hidden in certain undead-rich places on lower difficulties that act as an infinite supply of holy water charges.

I don't actually recall very much third person, which is really my preferred style. Maybe in some contextual situations like against a wall or something?
Wall-pressing is a new mechanic in DS, but there was a separate button to switch to third-person when I played.

Awesome thread. Makes me want to give thief 1 another chance with the right context.
Highly recommended! The steam sale is over but Thief Gold should still be pretty cheap.

I quite liked Deadly Shadows. I have very strong memories of this part of the game. Honestly one of the scariest things I ever played.
The game does a great job of foreshadowing it too. I remember discovering the locked gate to the shalebridge cradle when I got access to its part of the hub map, then looking up and seeing the fog subtly optical-illusioning the building's front window into a creepy skull. Really lets you know that whatever's on the other side, it's not friendly.
 
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Kadayi

Banned
I recall playing the first game and really digging the approach, where it really was all about sneaking around. Personally could have done without the zombies myself and the general horror aspects (not really my thing tbh) but some of the level design was pretty incredible at the time. Never got into the sequels due to general busyness but it's definitely one of those titles that stick in your memory.
 

zeorhymer

Member
You hit the nail on the head on why I like Thief 1 and 2 so much and consider it best games of all time. Reboot Thief was garbage. When the developer preview was shown and you saw the number flying over the head of the enemies when they get shot as well as the cards appearing, I was like "WTF did they do with the game?" Lo and behold, they made the reboot a generic corridor in which you can "Play it your way" garbage. You're a master thief, there is no play it your way. I ended up just running through a majority of the map getting to the locations cause I didn't want to be bothered.

I'm still waiting for the resurgence of a Thief game.
 

moniker

Member
I recently finished the first two and they're still enjoyable. The sound design is quite amazing for games that old (thank you Eric Brosius!).

The Dark Engine, a fork of the original Unreal Engine

I don't think this is true. Where does that information come from?
 

Alexios

Cores, shaders and BIOS oh my!
Sorry but I couldn't find a recent relevant thread to post these. No good stealth game threads, no good old school 3D graphics threads, or whatever else I searched with activity in the last year. I almost posted in the retro FPS renaissance thread but, meh. Anyway, this Gloomwood thing looks super cool,. very Thief-like, but also not.


By the way, fan patching the first couple (so, the greatest) Thief games to tip top shape is even easier these days. All you need for Thief 1 is TFix and for Thief 2 T2Fix. That's it. Then you play some of the bestest games. The black sheep is the reboot, 3 was... a bit less so. Edit: ok so there is a thread for it, lol.
 
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Among the best games of all-time, and among the very first games where sneaking as a mechanic was really well thought out and implemented. The dark atmosphere thanks to the engine's lighting, sound design, and the overall dark soundscape and soundtrack are the main elements that compliment the excellent map design and world building. Oh, and the humor is top notch as well.





I don't think the (original) series' influence can be underestimated either.
 
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Ladioss

Member
Also one of the first game to use a software architecture close to the Entity/Component/System model, if I recall correctly - so something important, from a game software engineering point of view.
 
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Man I wish they made a proper successor to this game. No game out rn scratches the same itch that thief 2 did. Dishonored 2 was excellent and was nice having the same voice actor as corvo, but the atmosphere wasn’t there same and there were certain “horror” elements in thief 2 that added to the overall mood.

Its sad will never get a game like thief 2 again
 

anthraticus

Banned
Man I wish they made a proper successor to this game. No game out rn scratches the same itch that thief 2 did. Dishonored 2 was excellent and was nice having the same voice actor as corvo, but the atmosphere wasn’t there same and there were certain “horror” elements in thief 2 that added to the overall mood.

Its sad will never get a game like thief 2 again
Play fan missions. Maybe get a list going.....I'll start...


T2X
Bathory campaign
The Widow's Ire
Thief Gold, play all missions by Skacky
Melan's missions
Tales of the Cleft missions, Vandal and Ladytaker
The Mystic Gems series
Heist Society
A Night in Rocksbourg
Hammerite Imperium: Seven Shades of Mercury
Disorientation
The Sun Within & The Sun Without
Coterie of Smokers
The Night Falcon

140 page codex thread on em'

https://rpgcodex.net/forums/index.php?threads/thief-2-fan-missions-and-campaigns.51965/
 
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The Cradle mission is so memorable for me. The reboot kinda tried to make the same thing but it didnt really work out. Actually Thief 4 (or reboot) was so forgettable.
 

_Ex_

Member
For whatever it's worth, I've been playing video games since 1982, and the original Thief remains my all time most favorite game ever. To me, Thief: The Dark Project was better than anything I'd played before, and has remained better than anything I've played since.

Edit: Yes I have beaten T2 and T3 btw.
 
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Alexios

Cores, shaders and BIOS oh my!
Thief: The Dark Project is 23 years old today (Dec 1st) so I searched for a thread. This will do, all that needs to be added is that to play the two at their vanilla (ish) best you get them via Steam/gog or wherever then apply TFix & T2Fix respectively (but they're okay/have NewDark even without it).
 
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Indyblue

Member
Thief TDP was amazing and Thief 2 is definitely one of my top ten games of all time. Absolutely loved them back in the day.
 
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I'm always amazed by how well Thief 1 and 2 still hold up. Actually, scratch that. They don't just hold up, they're pretty much unsurpassed more than 20 years after their original release. Essentially, the only thing about them that feels noticeably dated are the graphics. The controls, the UI, the writing, the mission design, the gameplay and even the audio are as good as anything you'll find in a modern game, or arguably even better.
 

Susurrus

Member
I haven't played the reboot, but I coincidently played the reboot (PS3 version) which I got from PS+ a long while back. Was enjoyable enough for a playthrough. Could have used some polish in areas, but I made it all the way through.
 
Thief 2 is one of my favorite games of all time, the art, sound, and map design is flawless

it’s so sad we’ll never see another true stealth game come close, dishonored focused too much on combat imo
 
My favorite games of all time. The thief games fan made missions are a blast too. So many good ones. Thief players know how to make levels and some even made a who new game, thief 2x. Dark mod which you mentioned is an extension of this and is still being updated to this day.
 

Fare thee well

Neophyte
'Mechanically it's tight if somewhat dumbed-down, graphically it's the best that the series has ever looked...'

^ Pretty much describes the Triple A trend I've experienced from 2010-2021 minus a few exceptions like Forza 5 or Jedi Fallen Order.
 

Tschumi

Member
Thief 2 is one of my favorite games of all time, the art, sound, and map design is flawless

it’s so sad we’ll never see another true stealth game come close, dishonored focused too much on combat imo
Could you speak to that a bit more? I've never chosen the combat approach in dishonored, and I've completed all the games...
 

Alexios

Cores, shaders and BIOS oh my!
Could you speak to that a bit more? I've never chosen the combat approach in dishonored, and I've completed all the games...
Whether you choose it or not the option is there negating any consequence for failing stealth in anything other than arbitrary self imposed limits. The blink power also negates the nice manual feel of climbing up and finding paths and you can't avoid using that. Still D1 is a great game, just saying.
 

Tschumi

Member
Whether you choose it or not the option is there negating any consequence for failing stealth in anything other than arbitrary self imposed limits. The blink power also negates the nice manual feel of climbing up and finding paths and you can't avoid using that. Still D1 is a great game, just saying.
ah well, i dunno bro i'd only point out that u can reject supernatural powers and, i always reloaded whenever i got spotted (something which i assiduously avoided because i was going for the relevant achievements/feats)

Your point that you could turn to combat if stealth failed is more of a subjective playstyle decision by you than an imperative imposed by the game design, is what i'm thinkin'. just my take.
 
Now that Dishonored 3 will be an Xbox Series exclusive, Thief should come back. More so than ever imho and in a lot better shape than reboot.
 
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