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Phoenix Point
Developer(s)Snapshot Games
Designer(s)Julian Gollop
Artist(s)Borislav Bogdanov
(Art Director),
Svetoslav Petrov
(Concept Artist),
Aleksandar Ignatov
(3D Sculptor),
Samuil Stanoev
(3D Computer Modeler)
Writer(s)Allen Stroud,
Jonas Kyratzes
Composer(s)John Broomhall
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows,
OS X, Linux
ReleaseQ4 2018
Genre(s)Turn-based strategy,
Turn-based tactics
Mode(s)Single-player

Phoenix Point is a global, turn-based strategy video game with turn-based tactical combat that is being developed by Snapshot Games for release in the fourth quarter of 2018. Snapshot Games's founder and lead designer, Julian Gollop, created the X-COM franchise, a series of games that focus on a player-controlled organization fighting to save Earth from invasions of extraterrestrial aliens. Phoenix Point is intended to be a spiritual successor to X-COM. The game is the sophomore project of Snapshot Games following their release in 2015 of Chaos Reborn.

Phoenix Point begins in 2057. Earth is in the midst of a world-wide invasion in which alien, Lovecraft-inspired horrors are on the verge of wiping out all of humanity. Players start the game in command of a lone base, Phoenix Point, and face a mix of strategic and tactical challenges as they try to save themselves and the rest of humanity from annihilation by the alien threat. For example, aliens will encroach on human-controlled lands with city-sized, alien land-walkers while their combat forces are led by bus-sized boss monsters. Between battles, the aliens will adapt through accelerated, evolutionary mutations to the tactics and technology which players use against them. Meanwhile, multiple factions of humans will pursue their own objectives as they compete with players for limited resources in the apocalyptic world. How players resolve these challenges can result in different endings to the game.

Setting

[edit]

In 2022, Earth's scientists discovered an extraterrestrial virus in permafrost that had begun to melt.[1] Only about one percent of the virus's genome matched anything recorded by scientists up to that time.[2] Named the Pandoravirus, humans and animals who came in to contact with it mutated in to horrific abominations.[1] By the late 2020s, a global apocalypse began when melting, polar icecaps released the Pandoravirus in to the world's oceans.[3] The alien virus quickly dominated the oceans, mutating sea creatures of every size in to hybrid alien monsters capable of crawling on to land.[3] The oceans transformed in alien ways after which the Pandoravirus began to infect the world's landmasses with an airborne mutagenic mist.[2] The mist was both a microbial contaminant and a conduit that networked the hive-mind of the Pandoravirus.[3] Humanity was not prepared; everyone succumbed to the mist who failed to reach high-ground where it could not reach.[3] The monstrosities of this apocalyptic, future world are intended to evoke themes of tentacles and unknown horror familiar to fans of H. P. Lovecraft.[4] Likewise, the works of John Carpenter such as The Thing influence the themes of science fiction horror,[5] as do elements of lurking horror from Stephen King's The Mist.[6]

The game starts in 2057.[3] The alien mist and monsters created by the Pandoravirus have overwhelmed and destroyed worldwide civilization, reducing the remnants of humanity to isolated havens that are sparsely spread across the planet.[1] The Pandoravirus controls the oceans, contaminating all sea life, and has brought humans to the brink of extinction on land.[7] Various factions control the havens of humanity, and they each have very different ideas of how to survive the alien threat.[2]

Phoenix Project

[edit]

Players begin the game as the leader of a cell of the Phoenix Project, a global and secretive organization.[3] The Phoenix Project was founded in 1945 to research and prepare for catastrophic contact with hostile, extraterrestial life.[8] By the twenty-first century, Phoenix Project organized itself to be ready to help humanity in a time of worldwide peril.[3] The Phoenix Project activates the members of players' cell who then gather at a base called Phoenix Point.[3] The cell includes some of the world's best remaining soldiers, scientists and engineers;[9] however, after they assemble under the players' leadership, no further instructions come from the Phoenix Project.[3] Gameplay focuses on players' strategic and tactical choices in finding out what has happened to the rest of the Phoenix Project while also trying to save humanity from total annihilation.[10]

Disciples of Anu

[edit]

The Disciples of Anu are a human cult with beliefs that synthesize parts of Abrahamic religions with aspects of pre-Pandoravirus doomsday cults.[11] Their world-view sees human nature as inherently corrupted by human biology.[11] The Disciples of Anu worship an alien god,[2] which they refer to as "the Dead God".[11] Cultists view the alien mist as both punishment and salvation.[11] They have found ways to develop human-alien hybrids.[12] The process for doing so seems to involve the Disciples deliberately exposing humans to the mist in a way that can allow for the humans' intelligence to remain.[11] The Disciples of Anu typically locate their havens in caves,[13] and their haven leaders are called Exarchs.[11] Disciples are led with absolute authority by a leader, the Exalted, who seems to exhibit highly advanced and stable mutations.[11]

New Jericho

[edit]

New Jericho is a militaristic, human faction which seeks to fight the alien threat directly by building a superior force.[2] They are led by Tobias West,[14] a former billionaire who also is a veteran mercenary.[2] West gained his prominence in the 2020s as the head of Vanadium Inc., a technology and security firm which provided escorts for container ships as they traveled the world's oceans when the Pandoravirus mist and mutations first began to appear.[14] Being a league of human-focused survivalists,[12] New Jericho seeks to wipe out every trace of the aliens on Earth.[15] Their leaders consider warfare and military technology, including enhancement of humans through technology, as the only solution to the alien threat; however they have conflicting ideas among themselves that threaten to splinter their faction before they can realize their objectives.[14] New Jericho havens typically are fortresses at abandoned industrial or hilltop locations,[13] and they have an extensive manufacturing base for military technology.[14]

Synedrion

[edit]

Synedrion have the most advanced technology of all the human factions.[2] They are radical ecologists who seek to build a new and better human civilization out of the detritus of the old.[2] They value knowledge and seek to form a global nation that exists in partnership with both its citizens and the environment.[16] Viewing aliens as part of Earth's environmental landscape,[16] Synedrion seek to coexist with the aliens by using technology such as a wall that can repel the alien's mist.[12] Synedrion generally place their havens on elevated hi-tech platforms.[13] Overall, they are a decentralized organization that mostly is interconnected through shared philosophy and stable communication networks; however, havens that become disconnected from others prioritize self-sufficiency.[16] The organizational decision-making of Synedrion is slow.[16]

Gameplay

[edit]

Phoenix Point is described as a spiritual successor to X-COM.[17] In the 1990s, the original X-COM video games introduced and integrated global strategy and tactical combat through which players try to save Earth from extraterrestrial, alien invasions.[18] Julian Gollop designed their gameplay systems.[18] With Phoenix Point, Gollop returns to the X-COM genre he created.[10] Having an open-world environment in which multiple AI-controlled human factions act on their own agendas, Gollop's 1997 X-COM: Apocalypse provides a foundational example of the type of strategic gameplay that Gollop is developing for Phoenix Point.[19] In designing improvements to the strategic gameplay systems that Gollop developed in the 1990s, Gollop seeks to add a grand strategy view.[9] His plans for Phoenix Point borrow from grand strategy video games with procedural generation elements and emergent gameplay like Crusader Kings II.[12] Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri from the Civilization series similarly influences how Gollop plans to develop more 4x-like dynamics in to the open-world strategy aspects of Phoenix Point.[19] As for combat, the 2012 X-COM reboot, XCOM: Enemy Unknown, by Firaxis Games and its sequel, XCOM 2, inspire the turn-based tactical combat systems and user interfaces found in Phoenix Point.[20] In particular, the visual presentation of tactical combat missions will look similar to these X-COM games of of the 2010s;[21] however, the underlying tactical gameplay mechanics continue to draw inspiration from Gollop's original X-COM, his 1994 UFO: Enemy Unknown.[4] Phoenix Point also draws inspiration from the Fallout video game series with how players can target specific body parts of enemies during combat.[9] Gollop will be introducing novel ideas, too, such as a gameplay system in which aliens mutate and evolve in semi-random ways as they try to adapt to players' tactics and technology.[22] Though a multiplayer gameplay mode has not been ruled out, a survey answered by likely players has Snapshot Games focused on developing Phoenix Point as a single-player game.[19] Altogether, Phoenix Point is described as adding new and improved gameplay dynamics to the X-COM genre.[23]

Mutating aliens

[edit]

In Phoenix Point, the alien threat evolves as part of a procedural gameplay system designed to generate a wide variety of challenges and surprises for players in tactical combat.[3] Aliens encountered by players will be procedurally generated on two basic levels: first, aliens will draw upon a pool of available, interchangeable body parts; second, aliens can change in size and shape.[6] When the Pandoravirus encroaches on new regions, animals and other biological material found, including humans, will be recombined to increase the pool of available body parts for the the creation of new, aliens through mutations.[3] For example, in Africa, the procedural generation mutation system might mash-up the body of a lion with body parts of humans and other animals to create alien monsters that resemble a Sphinx.[5] When aliens are victorious in combat, they may mutate more in order to use captured weapons and other technology.[3] In contrast, aliens that are consistently defeated will continue to mutate in a natural selection process which mimics evolution.[22] For example, a mutation might generate aliens with a new melee attack ability or a new defensive counter to certain types of weapons used by the players' soldiers.[22] These mutations are somewhat random; however, the game's AI is working in the background to find mutations that can defeat players' soldiers by discarding iterations that are unsuccessful.[5] Aliens will continue to evolve until they develop a mutation that allows them to prevail in battle.[22] Aliens with successful mutations then will be deployed in increasing numbers.[22] Thus, the Pandoravirus will respond and adapt to the tactics and technology used by players.[5]

Fog of war

[edit]

Among its abilities, a Crab Queen will be able to create a microbial mist which reveals to the aliens on the battlefield any soldiers who enter it and which can buff or revive aliens.[3] This mist will create a literal fog of war which actively works to advantage aliens in battle and otherwise bolsters the horror themes of the game.[5]

Competing factions

[edit]

While players contend with the alien threat, there will be AI-controlled human factions in Phoenix Point that interact with the game's world much like players.[5] The Disciples of Anu, New Jericho, and Synedrion with their conflicting ideologies are the major non-player factions in the game.[2] These factions control most of the world's remaining resources;[23] however, there are independent havens who the major factions will try to recruit, and there isolated survivors that still can be found scavenging outside of havens.[13] The three major factions have unique technologies, traits, and diplomatic relations with each other.[4] They have short-term and long-term goals consistent with their ideologies, and they act to accomplish these goals.[5] For example, the factions will be working to expand and develop their havens while players do the same.[4] Players can obtain unique technology from the other factions through conquest or trade.[1] Each of the three major factions also has secrets that can help resolve the alien threat.[2] The major factions thus offer three different ways that players can end the game.[13] Players can ally with only one of the major factions;[1] therefore, players will not be able to get all technologies and secrets from all of the non-player factions in the same playthrough.[5] Players will have to choose one narrative path of the game that forsakes other options.[13] This means that players will not be able to obtain access to all of the ways to defeat the aliens in a single campaign.[3]

Global strategy

[edit]

The world for each Phoenix Point campaign will populate by means of procedural generation.[1] Just to survive, players will need to locate and acquire scarce resources and make smart strategic choices in how they obtain and use the resources.[5] Players will not have a global reach initially, so they will have to expand thoughtfully.[7] How players acquire resources can have dynamic ramifications for their relations with non-player human factions.[2] Players can engage in open hostilities with other havens by either raiding them for resources or conquering their bases.[5] Players can exploit the conflicts of other factions through kidnappings, sabotage, assassinations, and military coups.[24] Players also can pursue more diplomatic options such as mediating conflicts between factions, defending havens from attacks of aliens or rival factions, forming alliances, or trading.[2] Resource scarcity compels players to deal with non-player factions one way or another, or else the factions will deal with the players.[7] How players choose to interact with other factions will determine substantially the narrative that players experience in their gameplay.[2] Meanwhile, non-player factions will fight or ally with each other regardless of what players do.[6] Players will interact with non-player factions much like in a 4X video game from the Civilization series.[4]

In making strategic choices, players will use a globe-shaped strategic user interface called a Geoscape.[5] The Geoscape is a more complex version of the strategic user interfaces used in previous X-COM games, though it will be less complex than the interfaces found in Civilization games.[5] Time will advance on the Geoscape in turn-based increments of about a week in which a number of events can occur that players will need to address.[13] The Geoscape serves as the nexus for players to monitor their exploration and make choices concerning strategic operations, development, and relationships with other human factions.[2] Players will use the Geoscape to track the spread of the Pandoravirus mist, which will correlate with alien activity.[2] The mist on the Geoscape represents both the presence of alien hordes and the corruption which the Pandoravirus is spreading across the world.[6] Players also will use the Geoscape to deploy squads of soldiers on tactical combat missions to different locales spread around the world.[2] For example, mission locations could be havens of other factions, scavenging sites at abandoned military or civilian infrastructure, alien encampments, players' bases, and other Phoenix Project facilities.[2] Players will even have missions where soldiers must venture on to the backs of city-sized alien land walkers while the mammoth monsters are moving and trying to rid themselves of the players' soldiers.[3]

Tactical combat

[edit]

Tactical combat mission environments will be procedurally generated and destructible.[1] Soldiers can deploy on combat missions with a large variety of weapon systems including flamethrowers, chemical weapons, and ordinary explosives.[3] With the right technology, players will be able to deploy aerial and ground-mobile drones.[2] Players also can obtain access to vehicles with customization options that their soldiers can bring in to battle for heavy weapon support and tactical transportation.[25] Players can deploy squads of four to roughly sixteen soldiers, though limits on squad size will be determined mostly by players' availability of healthy soldiers and transportation capacity.[13] While players try to defeat their alien or human enemies in combat, enemies will have their own objectives.[13] For example, enemies who attack a haven or base will seek and try to destroy its vital functional elements.[13] Aliens also will try to kill, eat, or abduct civilians they find on the battlefield.[13] If players assault an enemy facility, soldiers can use stealth to avoid alerting the enemy to their presence; however, once alerted, enemies will seek out and attack the soldiers.[13]

Combat occurs through turn-based moves which involve tactical options that are similar to those found in X-COM games.[2] Each soldier will have two basic actions to take in a turn such as moving and firing a weapon.[13] Weapon fire that misses its target will hit something else and potentially injure or damage what it hits.[13] Basic actions can be extended under two circumstances: first, if an enemy is spotted during a movement action, then the soldier halts so that the player can choose to react by firing or moving; second, soldiers will have special actions that add to what they can do in a turn.[13] Examples of special actions available to soldiers include overwatch and return fire options.[2] Return fire allows units to retaliate to enemy weapon fire with their own weapon fire.[26]

Soldiers have a willpower attribute which determines how many "will points" that a soldier has.[13] Soldiers expend will points to take special actions.[26] Soldiers lose will points from injuries, a comrade dying, encountering a horrifying monster, and special enemy attacks.[13] A soldier whose will points fall below zero may panic or lose their sanity.[13] Will power can be regained through rest or through some special abilities such as a leader's rallying action.[13] Willpower and will points relate to a system in Phoenix Point where combat can inflict lasting physical and even psychological injuries on soldiers.[2] While soldiers can be injured, disabled, and knocked unconscious in battle, soldiers will be difficult to kill.[7] The permanent death of soldiers, also called permadeath, will not be a significant concern for players;[7] however, the injuries which soldiers suffer and even just the ordinary experiences of battle can lead to drug addictions, permanent physical disabilities, or even insanity that will require players to research new technologies to rehabilitate.[2]

During combat missions, players will face a wide variety of enemies, including an evolving assortment of aliens.[1] Some of the most challenging enemies that players will face are bus-sized, boss aliens.[3] For example, one alien boss is called a Crab Queen.[3] Among its abilities, a Crab Queen will be able to create a microbial mist which reveals to the aliens on the battlefield any soldiers who enter it and which can buff or revive aliens.[3] A Crab Queen also will be able to spawn new aliens during combat that will quickly mutate in to threats for soldiers on the battlefield.[3] These abilities of the Crab Queen and those of other aliens often will be locked to their use of a particular body parts that can be targeted by weapons.[4] Tactical targeting therefore will be able to help players to defeat giant boss aliens like a Crab Queen.[2] Early screenshots of a game prototype show that Phoenix Point will have a targeting system which will work similarly to the Vault-Tec Assisted Targeting System (VATS) used in Fallout.[21] This targeting system will provide a wider selection of tactical choices that players can make in combat to take down difficult foes.[3] For example, a soldier might target a claw of an alien boss to disable a melee attack, an arm to disable a weapon, or an organ that gives the alien boss a special ability.[21] These tactical options allow players to combat adversaries which may be significantly tougher than those found in more traditional X-COM games.[21]

Development

[edit]

Julian Gollop and David Kaye founded Snapshot Games to create Chaos Reborn,[27] which they released on October 26, 2015.[28] Less than six months later, on March 18, 2016, Gollop used Twitter to provide the first teaser for the development of Phoenix Point.[29] A team of eight, Snapshot Games developers led by Gollop worked on designing and producing the game over the course of the next year.[19] After investing $450,000 into this first year of development, Snapshot Games launched a Fig crowdfunding campaign to obtain the $500,000 they budgeted to complete the game.[3] In Bulgaria where the studio is based, video game development costs are about a third of what they are in the US.[3] The campaign ended successfully on June 7, 2017 in US time zones, raising $765,948 from 10,314 contributors.[30] Crediting the success of the campaign, Snapshot Games announced on June 8, 2017 that they had hired four developers and planned to grow their team to include around thirty by the end of the year.[31]

Phoenix Point is expected to be released in the fourth quarter of 2018 through Steam and GOG for Microsoft Windows, OS X, and Linux platforms.[23] Snapshot Games aims to sell at least one million copies of Phoenix Point.[4] Julian Gollop set this goal based on his confidence in the quality of the game being development and his belief that there is strong interest in another X-COM game from its creator.[4]

Contributors

[edit]

Julian Gollop is the creative lead for Phoenix Point.[25] Music is being composed by John Broomhall, the music composer for many video games released in the 1990s such as UFO: Enemy Unknown, X-COM: Terror from the Deep, X-COM: Apocalypse, and Transport Tycoon.[32] Narrative content and lore are being developed by writers, Allen Stroud and Jonas Kyratzes.[32] Stroud provided world-building and novelization for other games, Chaos Reborn and Elite: Dangerous.[32] Kyratzes provided writing for the story and premise of The Talos Principle that was noted for being as much responsible for its success as its gameplay mechanics.[33] Artists for the game include Svetoslav Petrov, who drafts and illustrates concept art;[34] Aleksandar Ignatov, who sculpts concept art in to Plasticine sculpture as a foundation for rendering 3D computer models;[35] Samuil Stanoev, who creates 3D computer models;[36] and Borislav Bogdanov, the game's art director.[37] Petrov and Bogdanov previously worked in similar artistic roles on the development of Chaos Reborn.[38]

Stories

[edit]

Phoenix Point writers, Allen Stroud and Jonas Kyratzes, wrote short stories which help establish the setting and narrative themes for the game.[39] Other writers who contributed stories include Thomas Turnbull-Ross[40] and Chris Fellows.[41] With these stories, the writers seek to develop the dystopian world in which Phoenix Point occurs with tales of individuals from around the world who experience different aspects of the alien invasion at various points in the years leading up to the start of the game in 2057.[42] Snapshot Games made many of these stories available for free on the game's official website.[43] Snapshot Games plans to produce a compendium of Phoenix Point stories for publication in ebook and print formats.[30]

Stories published on the Phoenix Point website during development.
Announced Story Writer Description Cite
April 9, 2017 The Old Man of the Sea Stroud First person story of a woman in 1995 and her inheritance from her Grandfather. [44]
April 12, 2017 The Hatch Kyratzes Transcript of hearing about a 1973 Phoenix Project mission to the moon. [45]
April 26, 2017 Disciples of Anu Kyratzes Phoenix Project analysis of the Disciples of Anu. [35]
April 27, 2017 New Jericho Stroud Phoenix Project analysis of New Jericho. [15]
April 28, 2017 Synedrion Stroud Phoenix Project analysis of Synedrion. [46]
April 30, 2017 Tomb of the Phoenix Kyratzes First person account of an expedition in 1937 to an island off the coast of Antarctica. [47]
May 2, 2017 Far Out There Kyratzes Transcript of statement to US Phoenix Project investigators in 1978. [36]
May 4, 2017 Recruiting Stroud First person story of a disabled military veteran approached by a recruiter from Vanadium Inc. [34]
May 5, 2017 The Curator Turnbull-Ross Excerpt of translated, Arabic records from the office of a curator at a naval museum in the US. [40]
May 9, 2017 The Claimed Idol Stroud First person story of a European hiker and his guide who come upon a structure in a rainforest. [48]
May 10, 2017 Fragments of Knowing Stroud First person story begins with a man waking up in public toilet without memory of his identity. [37]
May 12, 2017 Hafgufu Turnbull-Ross Transcript of voice recording translated from Norwegian. [49]
May 17, 2017 Semper Fidelis Kyratzes First person account by a marine who has joined the Phoenix Project. [50]
May 23, 2017 Hanamaru Sushi Fellows First person story of a person working at a conveyor belt sushi restaurant. [41]
May 23, 2017 Launch Codes Stroud First person story of a man working at an Indian military base in 2032. [41]
June 2, 2017 The Second Step Kyratzes First person story of a journalist traveling to scientists in Moscow studying the alien virus. [51]
June 6, 2017 Soulstealing Stroud First person story of a English tourist in Romania. [52]
June 7, 2017 Towards Freedom Kyratzes First person story from vantage of several people in Athens as the alien mist advances. [53]
June 7, 2017 Harbinger Stroud First person story of a cancer-survivor in the New American Republic. [53]
June 7, 2017 Dotada Turnbull-Ross Transcript from a translated, Spanish journal found in a cave on the Argentinian coast. [53]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Greenbaum, Aaron (April 29, 2017). "Phoenix Point, the Spiritual Successor to X-COM, Can Be Backed on Fig". Geek Reply. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Emergence (April 27, 2017). "Phoenix Point Preview: X-COM Creator Goes Back To The Roots". FextraLife. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Hall, Charlie (April 25, 2017). "Phoenix Point's Fig campaign promises new take on classic X-COM formula". Polygon. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Peel, Jeremy (June 27, 2017). "How the XCOM remake has influenced original creator Julian Gollop's return to the genre". PCGamesN. Retrieved June 27, 2017.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Smith, Adam (April 25, 2017). "Phoenix Point is now crowdfunding: we spoke to Julian Gollop about standing out in a post-XCOM world". Rock, Paper, Shotgun. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  6. ^ a b c d Smith, Adam (June 14, 2016). "Phoenix Point: Every Detail Of The X-COM Creator's Return To The Genre". Rock, Paper, Shotgun. Retrieved June 30, 2017.
  7. ^ a b c d e Coffee, James (June 27, 2016). "Julian Gollop on new game Phoenix Point". PC PowerPlay. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  8. ^ Kyratzes, Jonas (2017). "The Hatch". Phoenix Point. Retrieved July 1, 2017.
  9. ^ a b c Booker, Logan (April 27, 2017). "Phoenix Point Is The Fusion Of XCOM And Fallout We All Want". Kotaku. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  10. ^ a b Williams, Mike (April 27, 2017). "X-COM Designer Returns To the Genre With Phoenix Point". US Gamer. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
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  12. ^ a b c d Hall, Charlie (June 16, 2016). "Details on Julian Gollop's Phoenix Point, his new take on the original X-COM formula". Polygon. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Infinitron (May 5, 2017). "RPG Codex Interview: Julian Gollop on Phoenix Point". RPG Codex. Retrieved June 27, 2017.
  14. ^ a b c d Stroud, Allen (2017). "New Jericho". Phoenix Point. Retrieved June 28, 2017.
  15. ^ a b Snapshot Games (April 27, 2017). "Phoenix Point Crowdfunding Campaign, Update 2". Fig. Retrieved June 26, 2017.
  16. ^ a b c d Stroud, Allen (2017). "Synedrion Speech". Phoenix Point. Retrieved June 28, 2017.
  17. ^ Loeffler, Jordan (April 25, 2017). "X-COM Creator Announces New Title Phoenix Point Now In Active Crowdfunding". DualShockers. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  18. ^ a b Bailey, Kat (January 19, 2012). "Enemy Unknown: An X-COM Retrospective". GameSpy. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  19. ^ a b c d Sinclair, Brendan (April 26, 2017). "There is no Plan B". Gameindustry.biz. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  20. ^ Dring, Christopher (April 27, 2016). "Julian Gollop's new game will be a cross between old and new XCOM". MCV. MCV. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  21. ^ a b c d Benson, Julian (June 3, 2016). "X-COM Creator is Making a New X-COM-Alike". Kotaku. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  22. ^ a b c d e Bratt, Chris (May 2, 2017). "Julian Gollop launches $500,000 crowdfunder for X-COM spiritual successor". Eurogamer. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  23. ^ a b c Palumbo, Alessio (April 26, 2017). "Phoenix Point by X-COM Creator Seeks Funding on Fig". Wccftech. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
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  25. ^ a b Hall, Charlie (May 2, 2017). "X-COM spiritual successor Phoenix Point hits $500K crowdfunding goal". Polygon. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  26. ^ a b Osborn, Alex (June 5, 2017). "Phoenix Point Boss Battle Gameplay Revealed". IGN. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  27. ^ Morrison, Angus (March 18, 2016). "Julian Gollop announces new game, Phoenix Point". PC Gamer. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
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  29. ^ Nunneley, Stephany (March 18, 2016). "X-COM creator Julian Gollop teases new game Phoenix Point". VG 247. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
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  31. ^ Snapshot Games (June 8, 2017). "Phoenix Point Crowdfunding Campaign, Update 19". Fig. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  32. ^ a b c Smith, Adam (March 16, 2017). "Phoenix Point teases horrors, recruits X-COM composer". Rock, Paper, Shotgun. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  33. ^ Gies, Arthur (December 17, 2014). "The Talos Principle review: human interest". Polygon. Retrieved June 26, 2017.
  34. ^ a b Snapshot Games (May 4, 2017). "Phoenix Point Crowdfunding Campaign, Update 7". Fig. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  35. ^ a b Snapshot Games (April 26, 2017). "Phoenix Point Crowdfunding Campaign, Update 1". Fig. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  36. ^ a b Snapshot Games (May 2, 2017). "Phoenix Point Crowdfunding Campaign, Update 6". Fig. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  37. ^ a b Snapshot Games (May 10, 2017). "Phoenix Point Crowdfunding Campaign, Update 10". Fig. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  38. ^ Snapshot Games (2015). "Chaos Reborn Press". Chaos Reborn. Retrieved June 26, 2017.
  39. ^ Kyratzes, Jonas (May 3, 2017). "From X-Com to Phoenix Point". Gamasutra. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
  40. ^ a b Snapshot Games (May 5, 2017). "Phoenix Point Crowdfunding Campaign, Update 8". Fig. Retrieved June 27, 2017.
  41. ^ a b c Snapshot Games (May 23, 2017). "Phoenix Point Crowdfunding Campaign, Update 14". Fig. Retrieved June 28, 2017.
  42. ^ Network Contributor (May 12, 2017). "Phoenix Point Far Beyond Its Goal. Can They Better X-Com?". Sci-fi and Fantasy Network. Retrieved June 28, 2017. {{cite news}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  43. ^ Stroud, Allen; Kyratzes, Jonas; Turnbull-Ross, Thomas (2017). "Phoenix Point Stories". Phoenix Point. Retrieved June 26, 2017.
  44. ^ Stroud, Allen (April 9, 2017). "My first Phoenix Point short story". Facebook. Retrieved July 1, 2017.
  45. ^ Snapshot Games (April 12, 2017). "New Phoenix Point Short Story by Jonas Kyratzes". Facebook. Retrieved July 1, 2017.
  46. ^ Snapshot Games (April 28, 2017). "Phoenix Point Crowdfunding Campaign, Update 3". Fig. Retrieved June 26, 2017.
  47. ^ Snapshot Games (April 30, 2017). "Phoenix Point Crowdfunding Campaign, Update 4". Fig. Retrieved June 27, 2017.
  48. ^ Snapshot Games (May 9, 2017). "Phoenix Point Crowdfunding Campaign, Update 9". Fig. Retrieved June 28, 2017.
  49. ^ Snapshot Games (May 12, 2017). "Phoenix Point Crowdfunding Campaign, Update 11". Fig. Retrieved June 28, 2017.
  50. ^ Snapshot Games (May 17, 2017). "Phoenix Point Crowdfunding Campaign, Update 13". Fig. Retrieved June 28, 2017.
  51. ^ Snapshot Games (June 2, 2017). "Phoenix Point Crowdfunding Campaign, Update 16". Fig. Retrieved June 28, 2017.
  52. ^ Snapshot Games (June 6, 2017). "Phoenix Point Crowdfunding Campaign, Update 17". Fig. Retrieved June 28, 2017.
  53. ^ a b c Snapshot Games (June 7, 2017). "Phoenix Point Crowdfunding Campaign, Update 18". Fig. Retrieved June 28, 2017.
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