Redneck Rampage

Ken Silverman’s Build engine really was a work of art. Compared to the mazes or “suggested” locations featured in previous games, Build’s high-resolution detail and extreme level of interaction meant that worlds could be realized in a way previous FPS games couldn’t have dreamed of. There was finally enough detail in the levels to effectively pull off gags and reasonable facsimiles of real locales, which led to the various Build parodies of the mid to late 90s. And, with Hong Kong films, horror creepshows, and action/sci-fi well taken care of, what fertile ground was left unplowed? According to Xatrix, redneck jokes.

Pesky alien varmints have invaded town.

In short, Redneck Rampage is exactly what you think it is. It’s a commercial hillbilly-themed total conversion of Duke Nukem 3D. Lighthearted? Yes. Campy? Yes. Dumb as a sack of bricks? Dumber.

Every stereotype of the deep American South is paraded out for your enjoyment. Playing as Leonard (a wiry, Jim Varney-a-like), you travel through poultry packing plants, pig farms, a trailer park besieged by tornadoes, the backwoods, a drive-in, and plenty of similar spots that might feature in a Jeff Foxworthy set. Aliens have invaded the area and turned the local Skeeters and Billy Rays into murdering clones. You’ll shoot through hordes of them while scarfing down Moon Pies (here, “Cow Pies”) and licensed Goo-Goo Clusters® to regain health. Your ultimate goal is to find your dipshit, slobbering cousin Bubba at the end of each level and whack him on the head with your crowbar. It’s hard to find a cliché that didn’t make the cut – and in many ways, good on Xatrix for doing their homework (if the credits are to be believed, they had some legitimate adventures getting reference materials in the real South).

The primary new mechanic here is the way you manage your health. There are no health kits; like any good American, you use alcohol and junk food to restore lost vitality. Intoxication and hunger are shown by two meters. Every time you slug back a shot of “cheap ass whiskey” to recover 10 HP, your intoxication meter goes up. Drink into the red zone, and your movement starts strafing erratically as if you were stumbling drunk. Keep at it and your view will blur, you’ll vomit, and sporadically pass out – making you an easy target if there’s enemies about.

Intoxication wears off slowly on its own, or can be lowered by eating food, which also restores health. As your gut meter fills from food, you’ll start farting uncontrollably. This allegedly alerts nearby enemies, but I was too busy shooting them to notice. If either meter is red, you can consume no more, leading to situations where you’ll have to sit and wait before you can heal yourself.

It’s a… strange system that seems more tactical than it actually is. Most health items are carried in your inventory (an immediately-gobbled bag of pork rinds being the exception), letting you choose when to take a nip of whiskey or munch on a Cow Pie to balance your health and biological meters. In practice, it just comes down to “don’t get drunk” – which just means a more frequent willingness to walk around with less than a constant 100% HP. You can also find toilets to pee in (by facing forward) or dump in (by crouching on them) to lower the appropriate meter, but the system just isn’t important enough to manage in practice. I read vague suggestions in promos that keeping your liquor and gut meters in the green (middle) zone has some beneficial effect, but I never saw it reflected in game, the manual never references it, and I suspect that feature got pulled.

The game’s biggest Build feature? A fully working bowling alley.

If you’re familiar with any of the other Build games, then you’ll know how the engine makes these maps come alive. Redneck Rampage sports a wide variety of excellent texture work and faked lighting across the board. Windows and other breakable objects shatter, scripted explosions blow out walls, wandering chickens splatter into floating clouds of feathers if tagged by a stray bullet, and pickup trucks zip through backroads (and anyone in their way). Not all the locations are winners – the indoor areas like mansions or factories reuse textures too often and often look bland – but there’s generally enough here to keep you interested in what’s around the next bend.

The gunplay, unfortunately, is a different story. For starters, there’s not enough enemy variation. Your two main foes are a “skinny old coot” with a six-shooter, and a fat guy in overalls with a shotgun. They make up the majority of your opposition in every single level, so facing them gets awfully repetitive. Because these two contribute the most to any level’s population, it also means that their weapons – the pistol and the shotgun – end up being the ones you use the most. The shotgun is a terror up close (with the ability to tap “fire” for one barrel or hold for two), while the pistol has excellent range and power. However, both are slow, and frankly, boring. Ammo for the punchier weapons is usually too scarce to use on the regular folk, so much of Redneck Rampage consists of shooting the same two enemies with the same two weapons.

It’s a shame, because there are some fun weapons in there. If the “hunting rifle” (it’s an AK-47) had more ammo across the board, I doubt I’d be complaining. However, it doesn’t, so I had to keep it on reserve to kill dangerous enemies quickly. The large alien guards must be blown apart after downing, or else they’ll get back up, so the dynamite crossbow gets saved for them. There’s a powder keg that’s utterly useless and a sawblade launcher that’s not particularly deadly; both best forgotten. Finally, the alien arm cannon and the Austin Powers-inspired machine gun jubblies are more creative than useful – both only marginally effective on the aliens, while too short on ammo to use on the clones.

It’s a literal alien’s arm. Yank the tendons to fire.

The auto-aim system is also far more erratic than it should be. Usually, it works as intended; automatically targeting enemies on higher ledges so you don’t have to mess with the distorted freelook fakery. However, it frequently refuses to hit enemies behind objects (like trees, benches, chest-level hay bales) while they can easily shoot you. It also tends to favor the local wildlife, like wandering pigs, cows, or chickens, despite you aiming directly at the geezer firing shells in your face. Chickens especially seem to draw your fire away from whatever you actually need to be shooting, while never actually killing the chicken itself. I don’t know if it’s abnormal hitboxes on the enemies or what, but it was a constant hassle that deserves special note.

Redneck Rampage is also a surprisingly difficult game. Part of this comes from the advanced enemies – namely the vixen, sheriff clone, and alien warrior – who both take and dish out incredible amounts of damage. The vixen especially seemed able to hit me even through some walls, and on the harder difficulties, there were plenty of times when I was dead before I could even spot them. It’s not a great deal of fun to make significant progress through these fairly massive levels, only to get trapped and steamrolled by a giant alien guard blowing through to block your exit. Don’t forget to quicksave.

Equally annoying are some very tricky puzzles. Most shooters give you some idea of what your next goal is (“I need a key for this door”), but here, a number of non-standard setups leave you wandering around confused. Hidden switches will require mouselook to spot them, and every key looks the same, so you’ll backtrack extensively to find the right door. Other barriers require you to do something unique that you’ve never done before, so don’t even know you can. For example, there’s a box you can suddenly push to get to a ledge, which looks like every other box you’ve seen that you can’t push. There’s a spot where you’ll need to shoot a pig to get it to chase you, then lure that pig over to a ledge to give yourself a boost. It’s neat stuff, and sometimes clever, but some of them will almost require a walkthrough.

The game’s also fairly buggy. The jumping dog and alien monkey enemies often get caught inside the level geometry and sometimes warp around to get unstuck. The dog in particular has a bite attack that seems to rip chunks from your health if he’s simply nearby, regardless of his attack animation. Thrown dynamite bounces like a rubber ball, making it unnecessarily dangerous to use. Some sounds (like the toilet noises) always play twice, even after you’ve walked away. The biggest bug/annoyance by far is that all enemy taunts are played at the same volume regardless of where you are, so enemies in the next room sound like they’re right beside you. I can’t count the number of times I spun around wildly looking for the enemy that was there, but not right there.

Some of that excellent lighting and texture work.

Universally receiving (and deserving) of praise is an excellent soundtrack featuring tracks from Mojo Nixon, The Reverend Horton Heat, and The Beat Farmers. It’s thematically dead on – a musical tribute to the same country stereotypes lampooned throughout the entire game. Shooting through a backwoods dirt road while Mojo Nixon howls about how “UFOs are big rigs far from home” is about as perfect a match as you can get, while it doesn’t hurt that all the songs are pretty excellent, energetic, and funny on their own. The only downside, of course, is that there’s 8 songs in total. That will barely last you a few levels and gets very tiring after multiple sessions. Eventually I suspect everyone will need to take the disc out and give the music a rest.

Enemy taunts are various cackles and country-twanged lines (“Git off mah land!”). You can spice these up with the optional “Cuss Pack,” which really isn’t as spicy as it sounds. Lines like “I’m gonna git ya!” and “Ow!” become “I’m gonna fuck ya!” and “Ow, fucker!” respectively. The pack also mixes up some lines, so Leonard talks about how hungry he is every time he collects ammo.

The problem is that such heavily reused sounds as enemy taunts shouldn’t call attention to themselves like the Cuss Pack lines definitely do. Xatrix themselves acknowledge how repetitive this gets in the pack’s readme and include a handy uninstaller. The files also live in the main directory, so you can specifically delete any you get particularly sick of. This triggers the game to use the default taunt – very handy. You could also drop your own audio taunts in the folder and have them used in the game, so it’s great to see that CyberVOX 2000 is alive and well.

Redneck Rampage has moments of greatness. But for every expertly-textured, inventive level, there’s another bland, brown factory, mansion, or underground mine level with an obscure puzzle stopping the action. Meanwhile, endlessly shooting the same two basic enemies, while the same music tracks blare over the proceedings, gets tiring quickly. I noticed there’s only two episodes (14 levels) instead of the usual three, and judging by maps like Nut House (which honestly feels unfinished), it seems like nothing created went unused. So to put it another way, I wish they’d spent more time on the game. The repetitive action can’t sustain the interspersed generic levels, and this is among the rare FPSs where about halfway through I’d honestly felt I’d had enough. Good enough if you wanna take a poke at it, but be prepared to lose interest before finishing.

 

The Good

Some excellent texture work. Levels reference all that is iconic about the American south. Funny – mostly juvenile – but funny. Ass-whompin’ psychobilly soundtrack.

 

The Bad

Repetitive minions, tough alien enforcers, weak weapons. An even mix of good levels and pretty boring ones. Liquor/food system feels half-implemented.

 

“I farted, it’s wet, and I don’t wanna move.” – Leonard

 

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8 thoughts on “Redneck Rampage

  1. It’s always sad when a game doesn’t realize its potential by just throwing hundreds of the same one or two enemies at you…you CODED the other enemies, why not use ’em more?

    And the ammo-limits making all the rare weapons too rare to use seems like a bummer too…why not just have a different weapon which feeds off the basic-weapon ammo? Or have an “Easy” mode where you get double ammo on pickup* so you can actually play with the better gear…again, they CODED it, why not let the player use ’em?

    *: the event, not the truck. (rimshot)

    Also the health system (if it was more thoroughly implemented) seems pretty clever — it both plays up the game’s concept AND would have added some nice “too much of a good thing” limits on your power-ups.

    It’s good to see an update, I like reading about all the FPS I’ve never played, especially those that try some different stuff!

    1. I’ve actually jumped right to the expansions (bought that GOG bundle), and so far – which, bear in mind, is not far – they seem better.

      Sorry about the lack of updates, had visitors in town for the last two weeks. And in addition to the expansions, I’ve got two more FPS titles I’m working on. Meanwhile, reviews on Kid Icarus and Streets of Rage sit unfinished for years. I should rename the site “Just FPS Games” 😛

  2. Good shot on that one, indeed!

    I have good memories about this title, regardless the fact that the game seemed a bit too hard to deal with, since Duke and Blood made gold out of the Build engine, with deeper development of locations and characters, and I didn’t play “Rednecks” for enough time, to be fully able to judge… Still, I was fourteen, back then – a perfect age for that kind of title! Nevermind inconclusiveness and multiple deaths from the foes that were shooting from behind the walls and, actually, hitting you!

    Man, if they have treated that one beter, the cards on the table could have been different… But, as you say, there are expantions around!

    Now, the “JGR Build Engine Catalogue” is totally covered up, right?

    Thanks for your commitment!

    Cheers.

    1. “Now, the “JGR Build Engine Catalogue” is totally covered up, right?”

      Well… technically, no. There’s still the Witchaven series, and the games from TNT Team (NAM and the WWII one). Probably more I’m forgetting. And then, of course, the expansions for all of them.

      But, ahh, if you’re saying you’d like to see those reviewed too… 😀

      1. Of course, I’d like to see those reviewed here! This site is still my favourite reference for this kind of things, ya’ know! 😉

        Actually, I too, don’t know even half of the games based on the same engine, so everything is welcome.

        Thanks again!

        Cheers

  3. Holy Crap ! Redneck was/is a fantastic game !
    original, fresh and most o’ time incredibly fun.. but not always fun 🙁
    ..if developers had deleted that orrible frustrating “Sewer” level could have been a masterpiece !

    Anyway I’ve beaten first episode and now really enjoying the better 2nd episode “Downtown” 🙂

  4. updated comment on RedneckRampage:

    ouch.. after herculean efforts and multiple tries I’ve finally reached the last level (close encounters) and ,that’s not new to me, there’s another critical bug! preventing progress in the game !

    Stop, sorry I really wanted to like this game but ENOUGH’S ENOUGH: maze-ish levels, obscure puzzles, glitches and at least 3 critical bugs

    I rate this game 5,5/10 (trusting in the better sequels)

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