Wednesday 5 October 2011

Spin Doctor: Story Prologue and Overview - by Gina and Jonny!

.Prologue  (Backstory)


Prologue Overview

- The once great Doctor Reeves is forced out of the medical community for experiments deemed to brutal to human kind.
- Experiments into the study of Brugada Syndrome, of which Elizabeth Reeves (Wife) suffers.
- Reeves builds a cybernetic heart to save his wife.
- Epinephrine (a by-product of Adrenaline) is the only substance capable of maintaining a heart rate needed to sustain the mechanical heart.
- Facility is created designed to mentally and physically challenge the subject, in order to extract quantities of Epinephrine once adrenaline is reached.



Detailed Prologue Explanation
Prior to the events of the game

1852 – Dr Reeves
Dr. Reeves, a once highly renowned scientist in the fields of both medical and psychological science falls deeper into the affects of stress and paranoia. Neglecting what little patients the tired Doctor still keeps, spending more and more time alone in his study designing projects and mechanisms deemed to horrifying and brutal to the rest of the scientific community; Reeves works on his masterpiece.

1854 -1855
The mechanically automated vivisection of various unnamed prostitutes and vagabonds leaves Dr Reeves  officially out-casted from the medical community, left disgraced and battered, the Doctor retreats to his manor to nurse his dying wife Elizabeth, whom slips closer and closer to death as each day passes. Crying out the experiments were necessary in the interest of biological advancements and the study of the rare “Brugada Syndrome” (A defect slowing the blood flow from the heart to the rest of the body); the condition Elizabeth Reeves also suffers.

1855 –
Turned more mad scientist than esteemed Doctor, Reeves slips deeper and deeper into a chaotic state, dealing with his own insomnia and psychosis in coping with his beloved wife’s illness. Wanted by federal state law enforcement for crimes against humanity, Reeves establishes his base inside an old disused railway tunnel complex where his inventions and tests into mechanical human organ transplants continue; developing a cybernetic human heart for his first guinea pig, his wife.
Epinephrine (a by product of adrenaline in the human body) becomes the only substance capable of maintaining the needed hear rate for the early designs of the Drs project. With his wife highly sedated and comatose, the Dr begins the greatest experiment of his life; a live and real-time extraction of Epinephrine from living human hosts. Reeves sets about converting the underground structures and vaults within his lair to substitute such needs. Rooms that spin. Rooms that disorientate and test the subject’s mental and physical agility, removing from them a sense of security and balance, replacing these with disorientation, exhaustion and fear; perfect factors to induce the fight or flight instinct inside humans and as a result, adrenaline.




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Story Overview  - Events of the Game


Setting: Victorian Era (Britain)
                Roughly late 1800s (1860-70)

·       -  Harland, the protagonist works in the mines, one day he goes to work with two other colleagues.

·        - Said two colleagues are told to mine closer to the surface, Harland is told to venture deeper into the mines to discover new materials.

·        - Harland stumbles across something he believes is a new discovery, but it turns out to be something far from it...

·        - After working his way through the supposed newly discovered material, to his surprise he falls over and down, hits the ground and passes out. (Screen fades to black)

·         -When Harland wakes up, he is equipped with a technologically advanced vest with empty tubes attached to it at the back. The vest is impossible to remove and is somehow sewn into his skin.

·        - Harland decides to explore the room he is in, he finds a hidden switch and a door opens and reveals a living nightmare: A rotating room and extremely dangerous traps!




3 comments:

  1. Not keen on using a real-world medical condition in the story (especially not one that wasn't properly discovered and named until 1992), so I think any real medical terms would be best replaced with more fantastical steampunky jargon, but otherwise, the backstory's great!

    I look forward to seeing more work done on the story overview, it's looking good so far. Not sold on Harland tbh...

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  2. Harland is the best name ever, you`re wrong!

    Only reason we used the, "Brugada", thing, was because the affects of the defect were along the lines of reduced blood flow and a slow heart rate, something very related to the story.

    But I don't think the player will ever see this much detail for us to ever name the defect, it was just something I thought the team could work from and have a clear picture.

    The player will probably never learn more than, "Lol the room is spinning".

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  3. pretty detailed. good stuff. also for a name I was thinking like Ashcroft or something. Dunno :P

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