Codemasters joins forces with Spark Unlimited for ‘Fall of Liberty’
announces Fall of Liberty, which is the working title for an alternate-history
World War II first-person shooter in the works at Spark Unlimited (Call of Duty:
Finest Hour) slated for release in fourth quarter of 2007. The
Fall of Liberty Product Section is live, and here's word:
Codemasters
today announces a publishing agreement with Spark Unlimited, the U.S. studio
responsible for Call of Duty: Finest Hour, for ‘Fall of Liberty’ (working title)
an intense and cinematic next-gen first-person shooter epic set in an unnerving
World War II alternate reality.
Codemasters will publish Fall of Liberty as a major Q4 2007 title for the
PlayStation®3 computer entertainment system, the Xbox 360™ video game and
entertainment system from Microsoft and PC.
Fall of Liberty will take players to new battlegrounds in World War II - ones
born from a changed moment in history that led to the Nazi invasion of 1950s
America. Presenting this scenario as a powerful and realistically crafted
alternate history, Fall of Liberty will deliver an explosive action experience
in a world where famous real-world locations appear startlingly different under
Nazi occupation.
“Spark is very excited to be working with Codemasters to bring to life an event
gaming experience that will dramatise what might have happened if history had
taken a different course,” says Craig Allen, CEO of Spark Unlimited.
“We share a desire to immerse players in an incredible and intensely realistic
vision of an alternative world history that will uniquely define Fall of Liberty
in the FPS genre. Codemasters is providing Spark the opportunity to present
something radically different than typical WWII scenarios as the player is not
cast as a liberator of Europe but as a defender of freedom in enemy-occupied
America.”
Fall of Liberty changes reality by twisting one historical fact: In 1931,
Winston Churchill was hit by a taxi on 5th Avenue in New York. In reality, he
survived the accident but walked with a cane for the rest of his life. But what
might have followed if Winston Churchill had been killed in the accident?
Without his voice to lead a country to war, the events of WWII change
dramatically; the Normandy invasion never happens and the UK and all of Europe
come under Nazi rule by 1945.
Building on the successful conquest of Europe, Nazi intelligence develops
superior weapons and vehicles so that on December 7, 1951 they are able to
launch an all out surprise attack on America - beginning with a mass invasion of
New York.