Originally published on Set The Tape
The Metal Gear Solid series has had its ups and downs. Since the revamp of the series launched onto Playstation in 1998 fans have been in love with the weird and over-the-top stories, the unusual villains, and Solid Snake (David Hayter).
Of course, the removal of Snake as the main protagonist in Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty led to grumblings from fans that resulted in that being one of the least favourably remembered entries. This is why Hideo Kojima was clever in having the prequel antagonist, Naked Snake/Big Boss, also played by Hayter to the point where they’re almost the same person. As such, even when Solid Snake’s story came to an end the series could continue in the past with Big Boss at the helm.
However, 2014’s preview of Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain, a small stand alone prequel called Metal Gear Solid V: Ground Zeroes, is where things really began to go wrong. Originally planned to be a part of the main game, Hideo Kojima made the decision to release Metal Gear Solid V: Ground Zeroes as a separate game in order to reduce the overall length of the finished piece; which considering the extensive length of Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain it feels like next to nothing was portioned off as a time/space saver.
Metal Gear Solid V: Ground Zeroes put players into the role of Big Boss once again, this time with the iconic voice actor replaced by Hollywood actor Kiefer Sutherland. Allies of Big Boss have been captured by the US government, and are being held in a remote detention centre where they’re being subjected to torture, interrogation, and degrading conditions. Big Boss must infiltrate the Black Site, find his two allies, and extract them; all whilst the base for his private military force is being inspected by the UN for nuclear weapons. However, the mission goes awry, Big Boss’s base and forces are destroyed, and the small game ends with Big Boss being blown up and lost at sea, setting the stage for the main portion of Metal Gear Solid V.
Whilst the new game displayed a number of impressive new gameplay elements, and showed off the graphical quality that would be coming in the next years main release, there was relatively little in the game itself. The mission to save Big Boss’s allies could be completed very quickly, and after your first playthrough the mission could be finished in less than twenty minutes.
The game does unlock six more missions, all of which play out in the same location, but these are all equally as short and feature a great deal of repetition. Whilst a couple of fun modes were added to the Playstation and XBox versions, each getting their own different one, these failed to pad the game out in any significant way. Even with finding hidden audio files and searching for the extra bits and pieces around the map there’s relatively little in the game to justify releasing it on its own other than to perhaps create hype around the main game.
The question of whether or not it succeeded in creating that hype is hard to answer, however, as the game received very mixed reviews upon release. The new features that were added, along with the versatility of the Fox Engine, were singled out as high points, and it did promise new innovations to the series that would come in the follow-up. But the short length of the game was a key factor for many.
Even with repeated playthroughs and a few extra missions thrown in the game could be fully completed within a few days, with little there to encourage a re-visit. This, for some fans, had the result of leaving something of a sour taste behind, where it even lowered excitement for Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain. The replacement of David Hayter for Kiefer Sutherland was also a factor, with almost all fans disappointed that Hayter had been dropped from the franchise he helped make a success for a big name replacement that was, at best, well below Hayter’s quality.
Another area in which the game caused itself some issues was in the depictions of sexual assault and rape within the game. At one point in the game the player is able to find an audio log, a log simply labelled as ‘Interrogation’, that goes into detail about the torture that characters Paz (Tara Strong) and Chico (Antony Del Rio) suffer at the hands of the main villain, Skullface (James Horan). The audio log depicts Chico, a child, being made to watch as the villain rapes Paz, before forcing Chico to then do so himself.
The game would later continue sexual violence against the character of Paz, as she’s ultimately killed by a bomb that is heavily implied to have been inserted into her genitals. The fact that the game only contains a warning of ‘violence’ and doesn’t include a content warning for sexual violence is discouraging. It’s also discouraging that sexual assault and the sexualisation of female characters is a staple of the Metal Gear Solid series, with a female character being sexually assaulted in the first game, and a focus on scantily clad women across all games, with the next release Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain having the most egregious example of this in the form of Silence. However, it’s the shocking inclusion of a child rape scene in Metal Gear Solid V: Ground Zeroes that is perhaps the most disgusting point in the series.
Having been a fan of the Metal Gear Solid series since I was eleven years old, with it being something I wanted to play so much that my mother bought me a Playstation for Christmas that year just so I could, I was hoping for great things from Metal Gear Solid V: Ground Zeroes. Unfortunately, it’s a game that I just didn’t enjoy, and it’s a game I even forget exists when I think about the franchise. More of a marketing stunt for the main game than a game in its own right, it was, for me, the beginning of the end of my love for new entries in the series.
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