That'd be my guess. This is really a video of plot elements and graphics being shown off, not really a playable demo.Illuminatus Primus wrote:
The guys in MGS2 definitely could hear the PSG-1; its probably not complete.
Again, I agree. Unless Ocelot was pulling an MGS2 and already going solo, which is a tad impossible at his age there given he's obviously still a soldier of the state who knows little on Metal Gear.Also, I think this enemy Colonel guy is a rogue; since Khruschev called up Johnson about it and they sent in the "Ocelot unit" of Spetsnaz to clean house.
I don't know quite who you're expecting to do the voice, but given it's the same guy who has done Snake in the previous Japanese games (Akio Otsuka; does Bateau in the Ghost in the Shell movies), then my money is on Hayter especially when he's a proven VA in this instance. The reason for different voices in the other two Snakes would be down to upbringing in this case. Liquid was brought up in the UK with the SAS and in the Middle-East. Solidus was a puppet for the US gov't and then turned rogue.I also hope they don't get David Hayter to do Big Boss' voice; that would be to the retarded movie brain bug in AOTC that all clones would have the same voice, and more over be obviously self-contradictory since Solidus, Snake, and Liquid all had different voices.
You're looking at early to mid thirties, typically. You need to be young and fit and usually serve only a couple of years in the units anyway.Here's some thoughts.
Snake and Liquid both served in the Gulf War, which means they had to join and be trained with the Green Berets and SAS respectively before insertion in Desert Storm; what's a realistic lower limit on their age, Skimmer, Vympel, etc.?
Spot on.The Outer Heaven insurrection occurred in 1995; the Zanzibar Land action in 1999; In the Darkness of Shadow Moses as part of MGS2, Nastasha remarks something about 2004.
Desert Storm was in 1991; Outer Heaven in 1995; Zanzibar Land in 1999; Shadow Moses in >2004; Tanker sinking in >2006; Big Shell in >2008.
If you remember, the Secretary of Defense for the US said that Solid and Liquid were "just another reject from the 1970s" so the project likely did start that early to get around this.We know from Liquid's line in MGS that he and Snake are both thirty as of then (maybe a little more): "After thirty long years, finally, the two us meet." This is a problem; 2005 - 1991 = 14; 30 - 14 = 16. Too young. So I guess Liquid was either rounding down some or Shadow Moses was as late as 2007 or later even, depending on realistic projections of a SAS operative's or Green Beret's minimum concievable age in Desert Storm.
The Snake Eater Mission was in 1964; ten years later he was "in his late fifties" and had Liquid, Snake, and Solidus made from him. Somehow to me though; I don't see him looking like he was in his 40s already. And the "Le Enfants Terribles" Project had to be in the pretty early 70s in order for Snake and Liquid to realistically participate in Desert Storm.
In MGS3, it looks like Big Boss could be getting on a bit, think of it (as painful as it is) like Rambo or something where the military calls on a great soldier to come back and do one more op before retirement. It doesn't seem all that different to hauling Solid away from his home and shipping him off to the Fox Archipelago, only he didn't really have a choice (though I doubt Big Boss did either).
It's early days still, like the MGS2 videos, this is simply something you won't piece together so early on. It should be pretty clear when you play and even then there may be gaps like MGS2 which still has many integral plot points left unanswered. MGS3 could be a story that delves into the Patriots as well as the past of that bothersome machine, Metal Gear.