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Heretic II
Heretic II
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Heretic II
Cover art by Brom
Developer
Raven Software
PublisherActivision
DirectorBrian Pelletier
ProducerSteve Stringer
DesignerJon Zuk
ProgrammerPatrick J. Lipo
ArtistBrian Pelletier
ComposerKevin Schilder
EngineQuake II engine
PlatformsWindows, Linux, AmigaOS, Mac OS
ReleaseWindows
Linux
  • NA: November 15, 1999
Amiga
  • NA: May 8, 2000
Mac OS
  • NA: January 1, 2002
GenresAction-adventure, third-person shooter
ModesSingle-player, multiplayer

Heretic II is a 1998 action-adventure game developed by Raven Software and published by Activision for Microsoft Windows. It is the fourth game in the Hexen/Heretic series and comes after the "Serpent Rider" trilogy, continuing the story of Corvus, the protagonist of the original Heretic. Although Id Software owns the publishing rights to the previous titles, Heretic II is owned by Activision since they own Raven Software and its IPs.

Using a modified Quake II engine, the game features a mix of a third-person camera with a first-person shooter's action, making for a new gaming experience at the time. While progressive, this was a controversial design decision among fans of the original game,[3] a well-known first-person shooter built on the Doom engine. The music was composed by Kevin Schilder. Gerald Brom contributed conceptual work to characters and creatures for the game.[4] This is the only Heretic/Hexen video game that is unrelated to id Software, apart from its role as engine licenser.

Heretic II was later ported to Linux by Loki Software, to the Amiga by Hyperion Entertainment,[5] and Macintosh by MacPlay.[6]

Plot

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After Corvus returns from his banishment, he finds that a mysterious plague has swept the land of Parthoris, taking the sanity of those it does not kill. Corvus, the protagonist of the first game, is forced to flee his hometown of Silverspring after the infected attack him, but not before he is infected himself. The effects of the disease are held at bay in Corvus’ case because he holds one of the Tomes of Power, but he still must find a cure before he succumbs.

His quest leads him through the city and swamps to a jungle palace, then through a desert canyon and insect hive, followed by a dark network of mines and finally to a castle on a high mountain where he finds an ancient Seraph named Morcalavin. Morcalavin is trying to reach immortality using the seven Tomes of Power, but he uses a false tome, as Corvus has one of them. This has caused Morcalavin to go insane and create the plague. During a battle between Corvus and Morcalavin, Corvus switches the false tome for his real one, curing Morcalavin's insanity and ending the plague.

Gameplay

[edit]

Unlike previous games in the Heretic/Hexen series, which were first-person shooters, players control Corvus from a camera fixed behind him in the third-person perspective. Players are able to use a combination of both melee and ranged attacks, similar to its predecessor. While there are still three weapons the player can collect that each use their own ammo, they also have the ability to use several offensive and defensive spells that draw from pools of green and blue mana, respectively. The Tome of Power is no longer an item scattered around the levels, but a defensive spell that still works in the same manner as the other games in the series by improving damage and granting weapons and offensive spells new abilities for a limited time. Melee combat is also more varied, with the ability to perform several attacks using Corvus' bladestaff and cut off the limbs of enemies, rendering them harmless. Players are also able to utilize magical shrines throughout the game that grant a variety of effects upon use, such as silver or gold armor, a temporary boost in health, a permanent enhancement to the bladestaff, etc.

The game consists of a wide variety of dark fantasy medieval backdrops to Corvus's adventure. The third-person perspective and three-dimensional game environment allowed developers to introduce a wide variety of gymnastic moves, like climbing up ledges, back-flipping off walls, and pole vaulting, in a much more dynamic environment than the original game's engine could produce.[7] Both games invite comparison with their respective game engine namesake: the original Heretic was built on the Doom engine, and Heretic II was built using the Quake II engine, later known as id Tech 2. Heretic II was favorably received at release because it took a different approach to its design.[8]

Development

[edit]

The game was in development since November 1997 by a team of 20 people.[9] Inspired by the Tomb Raider series, Raven Software decided to make use of the Quake II engine to create a third-person action game. A major step in the early development was Gerald Brom's concept art. In a month, the company had programmed the game's camera system. After Activision's approval of the game's demo, Raven Software aimed to get the full game finished by Christmas (it would release just prior to that Thanksgiving). To add to complications, they needed a software renderer to make the game playable to 16-bit users (especially in Europe).

For the animation, the main character Corvus was provided with a backbone for realism and had a total of 1600 frames. Most of the animations were done using Softimage. The static world objects and simplified animations were done with 3D Studio Max.[10] The engine was capable of showing up to 4,000 polygons on screen.[11]

Following ZeniMax Media's acquisition of id Software in 2009, the rights to the series have been split between id and Activision Software; Activision holds the development rights, while id holds the publishing rights.[12]

Reception

[edit]

Despite positive reception from critics, Heretic II was a commercial failure. According to PC Data, its sales in the United States totaled 28,994 units by April 1999. Activision's Steve Felsen blamed this performance on the game's design: he noted that "fans of first-person shooters—the target audience for this game—stayed away due to the third-person perspective".[18]

Next Generation reviewed the PC version of the game, rating it three stars out of five, and stated that "Heretic II has a lot going for it. It easily earns it space on the shelf with the heavy hitters this season, but it also serves as a reminder to all that every aspect of game design needs to be pushed if you want your project to truly stand out".[15]

Edge praised the game for its mixture of platform and shoot 'em up action, saying that Heretic II is different enough to stand out from both first-person and third-person games like id Software's first-person shooters or Core Design's Tomb Raider games.[14] Heretic II was a finalist for Computer Gaming World's 1998 "Best Action" award, which ultimately went to Battlezone. The editors wrote that Heretic II "proved that the Quake II engine could work in a third-person game and that a spell-casting, shirtless elf could actually kick ass".[16]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Heretic II is a third-person action-adventure developed by and published by . Released on November 24, 1998, for Microsoft Windows, it is the to the 1994 Heretic and continues the story in the of the Hexen series. Players control the elf warrior , who returns to his homeland of Parthoris to combat a mysterious plague afflicting the land, using a combination of medieval weapons, magic spells, and acrobatic maneuvers to navigate large fantasy environments and solve puzzles. Powered by a modified version of the 2 engine originally used in , the game emphasizes fluid third-person gameplay, environmental interaction, and intense combat against monstrous foes. As a pivotal entry in Raven Software's fantasy action series, Heretic II shifted from the first-person perspective of its predecessor to a third-person view, allowing for more dynamic character movement including jumping, climbing, and dodging, which enhanced exploration in its detailed 3D worlds. The narrative follows , protected from the plague by the Tome of Power obtained in the original Heretic, as he uncovers the source of the corruption spreading across Parthoris, battling through diverse levels inspired by medieval and eldritch themes. Key features include a variety of weaponry such as the Phoenix Bow, Hellstaff, and spells like the Flaming Fist, alongside spell-casting abilities, and support for both single-player campaign and multiplayer modes like cooperative play and deathmatch. Ports were later released for in 1999 and Mac OS Classic in 2002, expanding its accessibility beyond the initial PC platform. Critically, the game received praise for its atmospheric design and innovative controls, though it was somewhat overshadowed by contemporaries like upon release.

Story and Setting

Plot

Heretic II is set in the land of Parthoris, where a mysterious plague has spread, causing insanity and death among the elven inhabitants known as the Sidhe. The story continues from the original Heretic, following Corvus, the elven warrior who defeated the Serpent Rider D'Sparil. Upon returning from banishment in another dimension, Corvus finds his hometown of Silverspring devastated by the plague; though infected himself, he is shielded from its effects by a genuine Tome of Power, an ancient artifact that also serves as the game's narrator. Corvus embarks on a perilous quest for a cure, fleeing the ruins of Silverspring and traversing diverse landscapes including plague-ridden swamps, crumbling city ruins, a , a canyon, an insect-infested hive, treacherous mines, and a foreboding mountain castle. Throughout his journey, he uncovers clues about the plague's origins and collects additional Tomes of Power to bolster his strength against the corrupted creatures and undead forces spawned by the affliction. The plague's architect is revealed to be Morcalavin, an ancient and malevolent —a long-extinct race of powerful mages—who seeks by harnessing the seven Tomes of Power. To achieve his ritual of ascension, Morcalavin has forged a false Tome of Power, which unleashes the plague across Parthoris as a byproduct of his corrupted magic. In the climax atop Morcalavin's mountain stronghold, Corvus confronts the during his ascension ritual. By swapping the false tome with his authentic one, Corvus disrupts the ceremony, curing Morcalavin of his madness and instantly ending the plague, thereby saving Parthoris and restoring peace to the land.

Characters and Lore

The protagonist of Heretic II is Corvus, a Sidhe elf warrior from the world of Parthoris who serves as the survivor of the events in the original Heretic. As a member of the elven Sidhe race, Corvus possesses a tall, slim yet muscular build, depicted without upper armor in a rugged, battle-ready form that emphasizes his agile, skirmishing style of combat. His immunity to the plague ravaging Parthoris stems from the protective influence of a genuine Tome of Power, an ancient artifact that shields him from its corrupting effects. The primary antagonist is Morcalavin, an ancient mage of the Seraph race who seeks immortality through forbidden rituals. As the last of the true Seraphs—a once-dominant race of powerful beings whose descendants devolved into the less magically potent Sidhe—Morcalavin's hubris leads him to create the plague using a corrupted, false Tome of Power, unleashing it across Parthoris in pursuit of ascension. Though driven mad by the artifact's influence, he ultimately regains his sanity upon encountering the true Tome, expressing remorse for his actions before departing the world. Supporting elements in the lore include the plague's victims among Parthoris's inhabitants, who become bloodthirsty and mindless, as well as insect-like spawned from the corruption, representing the land's descent into barbarism. The are portrayed as ancient, ethereal beings intrinsically linked to the Tomes of Power, artifacts of immense magical potency that once empowered their rule but now serve as both tools and narrators in the world's mythology. Parthoris itself is a evoking medieval , fraught with magical shrines, enchanted tomes, and eldritch threats tied to the broader Heretic series mythology, where invasive forces like the Serpent Riders have previously devastated its seven great nations and elven enclaves. The plague's impact briefly underscores this turmoil, transforming verdant lands into wastelands of insanity and decay, compelling survivors like to seek ancient remedies amid the ruins.

Gameplay

Core Mechanics

Heretic II employs a third-person perspective with a fixed chase camera positioned behind the protagonist, , providing an over-the-shoulder view that emphasizes his animations and environmental interactions while maintaining fluid controls reminiscent of first-person shooters. This setup allows players to see Corvus perform actions in real-time, enhancing immersion in the world, and includes options like a toggleable combat camera for overhead views during battles. Movement in the game centers on acrobatic and gymnastic capabilities, enabling to climb walls, execute back-flips for evasion, pole-vault across gaps, and navigate complex 3D environments through rolling, sidestepping, and automatic ledge-grabbing during jumps. These , powered by a flexible system, support fast-paced traversal and dodging, with intuitive controls that adapt Quake II-style to the third-person format for seamless exploration and combat positioning. Health and resource management revolve around scattered pickups for restoring vitality and magical shrines that grant temporary boosts, such as protective armor or accelerated mana regeneration, encouraging strategic placement and conservation during intense encounters. These elements promote careful navigation to avoid depletion, as resources like and mana remain limited, forcing players to balance aggression with caution. Level design features a hub-based structure divided into four main hubs—Silverspring, Andoria, K'Chekrik, and Cloud Fortress—with linear progression through interconnected levels set in expansive medieval environments, including ancient ruins, murky swamps, and foreboding castles, where platforming challenges and environmental puzzles integrate with survival-focused combat. The single-player campaign structures these as cohesive, intuitively laid-out levels within each hub that emphasize of detailed and hidden paths, punctuated by in-game cutscenes to advance the narrative while sustaining momentum through varied terrain.

Weapons and Magic

In Heretic II, combat revolves around a blend of attacks, ranged weaponry, and a dual-mana spellcasting system, allowing players to adapt to various enemy encounters and distances. The protagonist, , begins with basic tools and acquires more advanced options as the game progresses, emphasizing strategic to survive hordes of plague-ridden foes. The primary melee weapon is the Durhnwood Staff, a versatile bladestaff available from the start that serves as the sole close-range option. It features varied attack combos, including slashes and spinning strikes, which can deal significant damage and even dismember humanoid enemies, rendering their limbs useless and preventing further attacks. The staff requires no ammunition and can be upgraded twice at special shrines encountered in levels, dramatically increasing its power to rival the game's strongest tools when fully enhanced. When empowered by the Tome of Power, the staff's strikes become more potent, amplifying overall effectiveness. Ranged combat is handled by three distinct weapons, each with unique ammunition types that encourage selective use based on enemy positioning and numbers. The Hellstaff functions as a rapid-fire energy weapon, launching clusters of explosive projectiles ideal for targeting single foes or groups at medium range, though it excels against isolated threats like early-game disease spreaders. It consumes Hellorbs as ammo. The Storm Bow launches arrows that detonate on impact to unleash a lingering lightning storm in a fixed area, making it effective against stationary or clustered enemies but less so against mobile ones; it uses Storm Arrows. The Phoenix Bow fires explosive arrows with a large blast radius capable of clearing multiple targets, but its self-damage potential requires careful positioning; it relies on Phoenix Arrows. All ranged weapons are switchable at will, and the Tome of Power modifies them—for instance, accelerating the Hellstaff's fire rate, intensifying the Storm Bow's storm, and expanding the Phoenix Bow's explosion. These weapons are discovered progressively in levels, such as the Hellstaff in the Silverspring Warehouses and the Phoenix Bow in Andoria's academic quarters. The divides spells into offensive and defensive categories, powered by separate mana pools: green offensive mana for damage-dealing abilities and blue defensive mana for protective or utility effects. Offensive spells include the , a enhancement; the Thunder Blast, a versatile bolt effective against groups or close singles; the chargeable Sphere of Annihilation for high-damage area bursts; the wide-ranging but low-damage Firewall for crowd or ; and the ultimate Iron Doom, a high-cost spell reserved for bosses like the T'chekrik. Defensive spells encompass the Ring of Repulsion, which emits a shockwave to push back surrounding enemies; Teleport for quick evasion from peril; Meteor Swarm, summoning orbiting rocks to auto-target flyers like harpies; Morph Ovum, temporarily transforming foes into harmless chickens; and Lightning Shield, which deploys circling electric orbs to shock nearby attackers. Spells are unlocked throughout the campaign and cast via hotkeys, with the Tome of Power—a key defensive spell—temporarily supercharging any active or spell at the cost of substantial blue mana, ideal for overwhelming situations but demanding precise timing. Ammunition and mana are finite resources acquired primarily by defeating enemies, which drop them sporadically, or by exploring environments for pickups like scattered orbs, arrows in crates, and restorative Mana Shrines. This scarcity promotes mixing for intimate engagements, ranged options for distance, and spells for or defense, often integrating gymnastic maneuvers to reposition during fights. Limited slots further incentivize tactical choices, preventing over-reliance on any single tool.

Multiplayer

Heretic II's multiplayer component includes deathmatch and team-based variants, supporting up to 8 players in competitive sessions. These modes share the core weapons, magic spells, and third-person movement from the single-player campaign, adapted for multiplayer with an emphasis on fast-paced and instant respawns to maintain continuous action. Network play is facilitated through LAN and connections using the engine's built-in multiplayer framework, including modem support for dial-up, though no dedicated servers were implemented. In contrast to the single-player experience, multiplayer emphasizes quicker encounters without narrative progression, utilizing repurposed campaign maps that often prioritize exploration over arena-style balance. Despite these features, the multiplayer mode remains underdeveloped relative to the single-player content, offering only a handful of maps without dedicated deathmatch arenas or additional unique modes.

Development

Production History

Development of Heretic II commenced in late 1997 at Raven Software, shortly after the completion of Hexen II, with a core team of approximately 50 developers contributing to the project over its approximately one-year timeline. The effort was led by project leader and art director Brian Pelletier, producer Steve Stringer, lead designer Jon Zuk, lead programmer Pat Lipo, and composer Kevin Schilder, who handled sound design and the game's musical score. This team drew inspiration from the Tomb Raider series, incorporating third-person action and platforming elements to evolve the fantasy setting beyond the first-person shooter format of the original Heretic and create a more immersive, character-driven experience. A key creative decision was the shift to a third-person perspective from the outset, a concept previously proposed at but deferred due to technological limitations at the time; this change aimed to differentiate the sequel by emphasizing acrobatic movement, , and environmental interaction. Early milestones included commissioning from renowned fantasy artist to define the game's dark, medieval world and creature designs, which heavily influenced the visual style and lore. The team then rapidly prototyped a technology demo, developing the intuitive third-person camera system in just one month using a modified version of the , which impressed and secured approval for a full demo presentation at E3. Production faced challenges in integrating advanced features like physics-based acrobatics and multiplayer support into the licensed engine, leading to code conflicts from multiple programmers and delays in polishing client-side effects. Despite targeting a 1998 release, the game launched just before to meet Activision's schedule, culminating in a polished product after intensive beta testing. Post-development, following ZeniMax Media's 2009 acquisition of , rights to the Heretic series were split, with retaining development control through its ownership of , while held publishing rights to the earlier entries; this split ended with Microsoft's acquisition of in October 2023, unifying the rights under , as evidenced by a 2025 re-release.

Technical Implementation

Heretic II was developed using a highly modified version of id Software's , which served as the foundational architecture despite the game's shift to third-person . Key modifications included an expanded client effects system to handle particle-based magical visuals independently from server processing, reducing latency in multiplayer modes, and enhanced client prediction for seamless animation during online play. The engine also incorporated a buoy-based navigation system for AI entities, allowing for more dynamic in complex environments. These under-the-hood refinements enabled the game's fantasy action elements while maintaining the performance of the original base. The rendering pipeline supported both software and hardware modes to accommodate varying hardware capabilities. A customized software renderer was implemented with optimizations for 16-bit , scaled back from 32-bit textures to ensure compatibility with lower-end systems prevalent in European markets. For users with 3D accelerators, hardware rendering via provided superior visual quality, including improved lighting and . MMX instruction sets were leveraged to boost software rendering efficiency on processors, allowing the engine to manage detailed scenes effectively. Character and environmental assets were created using industry-standard tools of the era. The protagonist Corvus's flex model, built in Softimage, utilized a basic skeletal backbone and comprised approximately 1,600 frames to achieve lifelike motion blending. Static world objects and auxiliary animations were modeled in 3D Studio Max for efficiency. The framework was segmented into layers, permitting concurrent actions like locomotion and spell-casting, which contributed to the responsive third-person controls. Audio integration featured a dedicated system with modular DLLs for flexibility, including support for A3D 1.0 hardware for immersive 3D sound positioning. Composer Kevin Schilder created an orchestral score evoking medieval fantasy atmospheres, complementing the game's dark lore with thematic motifs for levels and events. Sound effects for weapons and magical abilities were designed to deliver distinct, impactful audio cues, enhancing combat feedback and environmental immersion. While the core development targeted Windows, the engine's modular design facilitated subsequent ports: adaptation in December 1999 by Loki Software, version in July 2000 by Titan Computer, and Mac OS release in 2002 by MacPlay. These efforts involved platform-specific tweaks to rendering and input handling for cross-compatibility. A notable technical innovation was the seamless incorporation of a third-person camera system into the engine's first-person framework, developed in roughly one month to provide fluid over-the-shoulder views without compromising core mechanics.

Release and Reception

Release Details

Heretic II was initially released for Windows on November 24, 1998, published by . Subsequent ports followed for on December 3, 1999, developed by Loki Software; on July 10, 2000, ported by ; and Mac OS on January 1, 2002, published by MacPlay. The game was distributed exclusively through retail physical copies, typically on , with no official digital re-releases available as of 2025 on platforms such as GOG or , despite persistent fan requests for modern distribution. Retail packaging included a printed manual detailing controls, lore, and mechanics, along with the game's original soundtrack in CD audio format. A playable demo was released prior to launch, allowing access to initial levels and serving as a promotional tool. Re-release complications stem from historically split rights between (publisher of Heretic II and owner of Raven Software since 1997) and (publisher of the original Heretic). Although ZeniMax acquired id in 2009 and acquired Activision in October 2023—unifying ownership under Microsoft as of November 2025—no official re-releases or remasters have occurred.

Critical Response

Heretic II received generally positive reviews from contemporary critics, who praised its successful integration of platforming elements with third-person shooting mechanics, creating a fresh take on the fantasy action genre. The game's atmospheric world-building and fluid combat system, featuring a mix of melee weapons and spells, were frequently highlighted as strengths that immersed players in its setting. Critics also commended the innovative adaptation of the to a third-person perspective, which enabled detailed environments, dynamic lighting, and impressive that elevated the experience beyond typical first-person shooters of the era. noted the engine's strong level design and graphical fidelity, describing the game as fun and visually appealing despite some shortcomings. The publication awarded it 7.9 out of 10. However, the shift to third-person gameplay drew mixed reactions, with some reviewers arguing it alienated fans accustomed to the first-person view of prior entries in the series by limiting and . Additional criticisms included occasional camera glitches that hindered and uneven difficulty spikes in certain levels, leading to frustration during exploration and enemy encounters. GameSpot echoed these concerns while still rating the title 8.1 out of 10 for its overall polish and engaging action. In aggregate, reviews lauded the atmosphere and combat but were divided on the third-person innovation, viewing it as a bold but imperfect evolution of the formula.

Commercial Performance

Heretic II achieved modest sales following its release, totaling 28,994 units in the United States by April 1999 according to firm PC Data. Despite this, regarded the game as a commercial failure, with executive Steve Felsen attributing the poor performance to its third-person perspective, which alienated the core audience of fans. He noted that the shift from the series' traditional viewpoint turned off potential buyers who did not give the title a fair chance. The game's launch occurred during a highly saturated market dominated by first-person shooters like and Unreal, further hindering its visibility and appeal to genre enthusiasts. This perspective choice, while praised by some critics for enabling more dynamic movement, was a key factor in deterring the FPS crowd that formed Heretic's primary fanbase. The overall low sales curtailed prospects for a direct sequel, as Activision shifted focus to more lucrative properties.

Legacy

Heretic II demonstrated the potential for third-person perspectives within Raven Software's portfolio, marking a departure from the first-person shooters that defined their earlier works like Heretic and Hexen, though the studio returned to first-person formats in subsequent titles such as Soldier of Fortune (1999). No direct sequel was produced, as the game's commercial performance did not warrant further investment in the storyline continuation featuring protagonist Corvus, despite its technical innovations. The project originated from Raven's earlier concept for a third-person action game, which was shelved until the Quake II engine enabled its realization, influencing the studio's experimentation with hybrid gameplay mechanics in later developments. As an early example of a fantasy-themed third-person shooter, Heretic II blended action gameplay with RPG elements such as an inventory system for spells and artifacts, setting a precedent for genre hybrids that combined fast-paced combat with exploratory freedom in dark fantasy settings. It advanced the use of the Quake II engine by adapting it for third-person camera controls and character movement, including climbing and evasion mechanics, which allowed for more dynamic level interactions beyond traditional first-person constraints. As of 2025, Heretic II has not received any official re-releases or remasters, in contrast to the Nightdive Studios-enhanced bundle of Heretic and Hexen launched in August 2025, which includes modern controller support and mod compatibility. The game remains accessible primarily through archives and emulation setups like Wine or virtual machines for its Windows executable, with ongoing fan demand evident on platforms such as the Dreamlist. The game is remembered for its unique elf protagonist, , and immersive atmospheric design, evoking a medieval with eldritch horrors that distinguished it from contemporaries like through its emphasis on magical combat over platforming. Community efforts have aided preservation, including the open-source Enhancement Pack v1.07, which improves fog rendering, audio, and compatibility for modern systems, alongside mods available on repositories like ModDB and that add new maps and textures. Original Linux ports by Loki Software (1999) and community recreations of the source code facilitate play on contemporary distributions, while Hyperion Entertainment's 2024 AmigaOS 3.x port extends accessibility to retro hardware enthusiasts.

References

  1. https://doomwiki.org/wiki/Parthoris
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