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Storyline
The game begins on the moon Titan, progressing later to Earth and an alien spaceship in the year 2142. It details the journey of Conrad B. Hart, an agent for the Galaxia Bureau of Investigation, and his attempts to recover his lost memory to save the world. Fitting into the cyberpunk genre, there are government conspiracies, bleak world views, and cybernetic enhancements, all squeezed into the dystopian society the game presents. The game also seems to borrow themes from certain films, e.g. the deadly spheres in Phantasm, and many of the dystopian themes developed in Blade Runner. The story is also somewhat reminiscent of They Live, including glasses that allow one to see aliens and an interplanetary transporter.
During one of his investigations, Conrad discovers a plot to take over Earth involving aliens called Morphs who disguise themselves as government officials. Conrad records a holocube for himself and makes a copy of his memory as a precaution against it being erased. As he feared, the Morphs eventually kidnap Conrad and erase his memory but he manages to escape and is left disoriented on Titan.
Conrad finds the cube he recorded earlier, he eventually regains his memory (in the titular 'flashback') and finds out that the people he used to work for have killed his girlfriend to make sure no one would report Conrad missing. In the end, he foils the aliens' plans, once and for all, but at the cost of having to go into suspended animation in space and hope that he is picked up by someone. The sequel, Fade to Black, has Conrad being picked up by his old enemies.
[edit] Version Differences
By default, the MS-DOS version has an extended introductory sequence and more minor cut scenes than the Amiga version (such as when picking up items). In the Amiga version the user can see these scenes by enabling them (although with few seconds of delay every time the animations load) or by playing the game entirely from the hard drive. The game was originally released on 3.5" floppy disk for MS-DOS, re-releases on CD-ROM for systems such as 3DO, CD-i, Jaguar, PC and Sega CD featured redone cinematics with new graphics as well as audible dialogue throughout and new sounds and music.
In North America, the Sega Genesis, Super Nintendo and Sega CD versions featured a Marvel Comics comic book within the manual in order to explain the initial story. The PAL Sega Mega Drive and Super Nintendo releases (there was no Mega-CD version) omitted the comic and instead featured a textual prologue.
[edit] Sequel
A sequel, named Fade to Black was produced by Delphine Software International in 1995 for the PC and PlayStation.
A full polygonal 3D game, it resulted in more slow-paced gameplay and lack of platforming comparing with Flashback, generating mixed reviews from critics who felt that it was too different from the original concept of the series.[citation needed]
[edit] Canned Second Sequel
A third game in the series, Flashback Legends, was in development by both Delphine Software International and Adeline Software International for a planned released in 2003. As opposed to Fade to Black, it was going to be a 2D side-scroller game similar to Flashback, but without transition of non-scrolling areas. It was targeted exclusively for the Game Boy Advance.
The game was cancelled when the company went bankrupt and ceased operations in the end of 2002. However, a prototype ROM was leaked and spread over the net at some point. It features all 16 levels with minor glitches and only one music track for the entire game. Despite its apparent multi-language options, the beta can only be played in French.
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