BloodRayne

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BloodRayne
BloodRayne Videogame Cover.jpg
Developer(s) Terminal Reality
Publisher(s) PlayStation 2, Xbox & GameCube
NA Majesco Games
EU Universal Interactive
EU VU Games (GC)
JP Electronic Arts (PS2)
NA SCEA (PSN)
OS X
    Microsoft Windows
    Majesco Games
    Series BloodRayne
    Engine Infernal Engine
    Open Dynamics Engine
    Platforms PlayStation 2, Xbox, GameCube, Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows
    Release date(s) PlayStation 2, Xbox & GameCube
    NA 20021015October 15, 2002
    EU 20030502May 2, 2003
    EU May 23, 2003 (GC)
    JP August 26, 2004 (PS2)
    NA November 1, 2011 (PSN)
    OS X
      Microsoft Windows
      NA 20030913September 13, 2003
      EU 200505May 2005
      NA 20060914September 14, 2006
      Genre(s) Action, hack and slash
      Mode(s) Single-player

      BloodRayne is an action hack and slash video game and the first game in the BloodRayne series. In addition to a sequel, BloodRayne 2, Bloodrayne inspired a series of films and self-contained comic books. It was developed by Terminal Reality, and was strongly influenced by their previous game Nocturne.

      Gameplay

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      Plot

      The game begins in 1933, in a place where it appears that the people believe in vampires, as all the doors and windows show crosses. It shows a man and woman running down a street. The woman trips, and the man pauses long enough to help her up, only to be dragged into a dark alleyway by a chain. His head is thrown from an alley at the woman's feet, with Rayne walking calmly up to the woman. The woman seemingly breaks down crying, but in fact only hides her face to reveal she is in fact a vampire. After a brief fight, Rayne decapitates her and then takes off before a small army of vampires tries to catch her off guard. She drops a grenade on their position as she leaves.

      On top of the buildings, two mysterious men, who were watching the events unfold the whole time, are discussing their reason for being here. One reveals they are here to recruit Rayne, who is trying to find where her father is. The other member does not want a Dhampir with the Brimstone society, regardless of the fact that she is only half-vampire and has fewer weaknesses, as the Society is trying to rid the world of Vampires (and presumably people with Vampire blood in them). Eventually they agree to recruit Rayne, and leave a necklace with their symbol on it (as seen on the game cover).

      Story

      The game consists of three acts:

      • Mortton, Louisiana: the game starts in Mortton, Louisiana, as Rayne's first mission with the Brimstone Society, along with Mynce, her mentor. They are sent there to investigate an outbreak of an unidentified disease in the area.
      • Argentina: after the events in Mortton, the story skips several years ahead. Rayne is sent to infiltrate a Nazi base in Argentina, prevent the G.G.G. from obtaining the mystic artifact known as "the skull of Beliar" and eliminate the organization's head members.
      • Germany: Rayne finds an anonymous letter informing her that a G.G.G. officer in Germany has list of the remaining G.G.G. officers. After obtaining the list, she pursues her targets to Castle Gaustadt, to eradicate the G.G.G., and eventually, Jurgen Wulf himself.

      Characters

      • Rayne is a dhampir looking for her father, and kills any vampire that crosses her path. She is working for the Brimstone Society.
      • Mynce is Rayne's friend and mentor. She helps her with her first assignment, during which she is seemingly killed.
      • Juergen Wulf is the leader of Gegengheist Gruppe (Counter-Ghost Group, abbreviated G.G.G.), a group that aims to bring Hitler into power through use of occult artifacts, including obtaining and reassembling the remains of Beliar.
      • Beliar was the original devil, usurped by Mephisto who tore him apart scattering his body parts around the world. These "relics" retain some of his power, granting their owners supernatural abilities.

      Reception

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      BloodRayne has received mostly mixed to positive reviews. Aggregating review websites GameRankings and Metacritic gave the Xbox version 73.44% and 76/100,[1][2] the PlayStation 2 version 68.91% and 75/100,[3][4] the GameCube version 67.93% and 73/100[5][6] and the PC version 66.00% and 65/100.[7][8]

      References

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      External links