SiN (1998, FPS) Review

Gear Diary is independently owned and operated. We receive compensation through advertising and from the companies whose products we review, usually in the form of the reviewed product. We test the products supplied to us, and the opinions expressed are our own.

Gear Diary is also reader-supported. When you buy through links posted on our site, we may earn a commission at no cost to you. You can learn more by clicking here.

sin_box_front

Context is everything. I hadn’t touched SiN since replaying SiN Gold when it was released for the Mac in 2000. Then they released the first ‘episode’ of SiN Episodes, called ‘Emergence‘ in 2006, which came with a Steam copy of ‘SiN 1? as it was called. Naturally I played some then as I waited for the release of the episode, but didn’t make it all the way through. Since it is now more than ten years since the original release, I thought it only appropriate that I should do a Retrospective for a franchise that has spent its’ life in the shadow of Half Life.

sin001

I say that ‘context is everything’ because this is the first time I have had the opportunity to truly look at this game in the context of all of the other shooters released in the 1998 time frame. Sure I played it sometime around when it was released, but my life was so scattered because when this game was released we had ‘two kids under two’ … so I am happy to have remembered to buy and play the game at that point!

sin002

The way I have recently been replaying games means being able to objectively evaluate SiN against its’ peers of the ‘Class of 98? – games like Unreal, Jedi Knight and Mysteries of the Sith, Quake II, and of course Half-Life. Before I get into detailed comparisons and an evaluation of whether SiN’s life in the shadow of Half-Life is deserved, let’s look at the Good, Bad and Ugly of this classic shooter.

sin004

Good: Branching levels. The way in which you accomplish things in one area impacts where you go next. If you succeed at stealth you can get a different level progression than if you just blast through with the alarms sounding.

Good: Interactivity. Most stuff you’d find in a FPS in 1998 was just for show. Occasionally you could destroy something, but it was rare. SiN integrated destroyable elements and environmental interactivity nicely within what was possible at the time.

Good: FPS Innovations. Many things you take for granted now in most FPS games were fairly rare in 1998, such as stealth, underwater areas and harpoons, sniper rifles, and so on. While not groundbreaking in any of these areas, it was nice to see so many inclusions of ‘leading edge’ features.

Good: Music. In many online-centric shooter games, players simply mute the game soundtrack and put on pumping music to fuel them through the carnage. In this game – that IS the soundtrack. I can’t remember if the original sounded so good, but I do know that I thoroughly enjoyed blasting the music the whole way through this time.

Bad: User Interface. It is nice that you can log in as different users and have different visuals, controls, and so on. However, having it go all the way to the first screen is just strange. I used a login other than ‘Blade’ and always had to re-login to play, it never remembered that I was the only user with a save game, for example. And the mouse-unfriendly menu system is unforgivable for a 1998 game … though it seems to be more common in this new console-port-laden era.

Bad: Bland level design. You will see the same thing again and again and again and … well, you get the picture.

Bad: Dumb enemies. All shooter enemies are dumb, and going back in time just serves to show how much less dumb they are now. SiN’s enemies stand out for their dumbness even after blasting my way through herds of brain-dead stormtroopers!

Ugly: ‘Smack Talk’. You are battling through a chemical factory to uncover a nefarious plot, so what does Blade say when he kills someone? ‘School’d ya!’ That is right – time and again you are treated with lines that sound like they are out of a typical deathmatch game played in the office of the developers back then.

Ugly: Blockheads Part Deux. I complained how the graphical elements of Unreal had not aged at the same rate. In SiN, everything looks a decade old, but the characters are extra ugly for some reason.

Ugly: Stale gameplay. The core shooter element feels more a part of the Duke Nukem 3D era than the post-Quake 2 era.

Ugly: Load Times. It is hard for me to believe that I *still* get load times more than 30 seconds long a decade later … I timed it and SiN areas load slower than those on the (infamously slow loading) Postal 2 … which was released five years later!

Ugly: Graphical oddities. In what is a very rare occurance, I was unable to snap screenshots using any of the 3 methods I have used through the years. The best I could get was completely black screens at full resolution. (Which is why I had to make use of MobyGames for screenshots!) It is yet another way the game feels more like a 1996 game than a late 1998 release.

Ugly: Alexis Sinclair. OK, Alexis herself is certainly not ugly, Ritual made sure of that – but the concept is quite ugly. Sure she got a Source-engine upgrade in SiN Episodes in 2006, but the intent was there back in 1998 – Sinclair was smart, evil and impossibly proportioned. They knew that the sex-factor would attract the core audience of mostly male FPS gamers. Look no further than the boxart.

singold_box

The bottom line is this: SiN is a pretty good shooter with a cliched plot and cardboard cutout characters that has not aged well.

So, how does it compare to the rest of the ‘class of 98?? Not very well at all. Indeed, pretty much every other shooter mentioned above makes SiN feel antiquated. The narrative style in Half-Life and the Jedi Knight games flows much more naturally and immerses you in the world. The graphics of Unreal have scaled much better – even when playing SiN from the Source release! All of that would be forgivable if SiN retained some fun as a thrilling shooter, but it doesn’t. The movement feels loose, the aim is sloppy, and the enemies are dumb meat-bags who just absorb bullets. I criticized Unreal for having levels that felt too much like they were prepping for deathmatches, but what SiN does is much worse – it wraps a story around levels that makes sense to that story, then give everything else a deathmatch feel. Having the last thing Blade says before the epilogue be simply a repeat of one of his taunts ‘die you ugly SOB’ just accentuates the point further.

sin003

In the class of 1998, which was truly a great a great year in the history of shooters, SiN faded to the background despite the hype and the massive ’sex sells’ campaign. In 2006 it once again failed to attract enough attention to get the episodic series continued. And looking back, fading in the background is just what it deserved. Few remember Eradicator from the Doom era or Chrome from more recent years – both were decent games that were fun to play but lacked enough distinctive features to differentiate themselves from the herd of other releases. SiN has spent a decade with fans shouting ‘unfair – we get ignored because of Half-Life‘. And while I have had some sympathy due to the fact that SiN is a decent game, the time has come to tell those fans to just be quiet already. SiN is a decent shooter, but would not even qualify as one of the top-5 FPS games released in 1998.

sin005

RetroGamer Perspective: Given the wide availability as a digital download for cheap prices, this is definitely worth a look. It is a fun and solid game that is interesting to look at in retrospect with better perspective. This will NOT be the best $5 you can spent on gaming, nor the best use of your time playing games from that era.

Netbook Gamer Perspective:
– Digital Download / CD version? – the CD version can still be gotten, but usually through used game channels at this point. It is more easily available through digital download sites such as Steam, where I got it as part of a pre-order bonus when SiN Episodes was launching back in 2006.

– Installation Notes: CD-install and digital install are still one-click procedures that work fine for any OS from Windows XP to Vista to Windows 7. On my netbooks I have simply used the Steam installer as it eliminates the need for a CD.

– Disk Space Requirements: full-install takes ~500MB.

– CD Required to Play? The CD version requires the disc in place to run.

– Control Considerations? Be prepared to fiddle with the controls, as they are a sort of hybrid of first- and second- generation shooter controls. Fortunately (unlike many current games) you can remap everything, so it is easy to get settled.

– Will it run on a VIA C7? Yes!

– Will it run with 1GB RAM? Yes!

– Special Considerations for running in Windows XP? The game launches and runs perfectly in WinXP.

– Does it work with Vista? Yes, without any issues or special requirements.

– Compatible versions for other OS such as Linux or Mac OS? Sort of – the MacOS version of SiN Gold got an update to work with OS X, but not on an Intel Mac, which precludes anything made in the last ~5 years.

– Notes on the Digital Version: The Steam version includes the expansion and all of the updates for the original version without having to fiddle around or search for them. Nothing else special of note.

Conclusion: Sometimes you just really want to play a good classic shooter, and perhaps with the renewed interest in the SiN franchise you might think it is a good option. And given that it is available for pretty cheap, it really isn’t a bad choice – just make sure you temper your expectations as it is a very average game that offers little but some puerile innuendo and smarmy smack-talk to differentiate it from most of the games of that era.

As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases. Thanks for your support!

About the Author

Michael Anderson
I have loved technology for as long as I can remember - and have been a computer gamer since the PDP-10! Mobile Technology has played a major role in my life - I have used an electronic companion since the HP95LX more than 20 years ago, and have been a 'Laptop First' person since my Compaq LTE Lite 3/20 and Powerbook 170 back in 1991! As an avid gamer and gadget-junkie I was constantly asked for my opinions on new technology, which led to writing small blurbs ... and eventually becoming a reviewer many years ago. My family is my biggest priority in life, and they alternate between loving and tolerating my gaming and gadget hobbies ... but ultimately benefits from the addition of technology to our lives!