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It’s an exciting time over here at GOG.COM! Next week marks the 20th anniversary of the Red Faction series. The outstanding shooter series from Volition turns 20 on May 22.

Red Faction was originally released in 2001 for the PlayStation 2 and Windows platforms, and the franchise was quickly adapted to other platforms. To celebrate Red Faction’s 20 years in the making, we wanted to dive into a few of the franchise’s games that are available now.



There have been four Red Faction titles so far, and you can find them all on GOG.COM. Let’s start off with a look at the game that started it all, the original Red Faction.

Red Faction

The original Red Faction was released in 2001 for the PlayStation 2 and Windows, and later released on macOS. It was a first-person sci-fi shooter that took place on Mars in the year 2075. You play as Parker, a miner who has come to Mars to seek a better life than what can be offered back on Earth.



Instead, you find a plague sweeping through the colony and a corporation that takes advantage of its workers. You’ll have to fight your way to the top of Ultor Corporation to find who’s behind this plague and stop it from destroying the colony.

Red Faction makes good use of the Geo-Mod engine, which gives players complete control over the destruction of the environment around them. While other games had previously toyed with level destruction through scripted actions, Red Faction was the first title to give players the tools to completely destroy certain landscapes and buildings.

Red Faction II

Following the popularity of the original Red Faction, Volition followed up with Red Faction II for PlayStation 2 in 2002 and for Gamecube, Xbox, and Windows a little later in 2003. Red Faction II takes place five years after the original game.



Ultor Corporation has fallen. In its place has risen the Earth Defense Force (EDF) who aims to put the corporation back together with an emphasis on supersoldier development. But EDF was not careful with its research, and soon its data made its way into the criminal underworld. Working together with allies, you must find and stop these criminals before they can use this information.

Red Faction II also builds upon the series’ already existing local multiplayer, with modes like deathmatch and capture the flag across upwards of 40 different maps.

Red Faction Guerrilla

Red Faction Guerrilla was the Red Faction series’ first jump into next-generation consoles, launching for the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 in 2009. Red Faction Guerrilla also saw the franchise go in a different direction, with a third-person perspective that changed it up from the previous two titles’ first-person gameplay.

Red Faction Guerrilla is set in an open world environment, and you take the role of Alec Mason. Teaming up with the Red Faction, Mason must help to overthrow the tyrannical Earth Defense Force on Mars.



The game shifted to a third-person view to help focus on the beauty of the player’s surroundings. Unlike previous titles, the terrain in Red Faction Guerrilla is not destructible, but buildings and other structures are still fair game. As Alec Mason, you are given the tools to creatively and effectively traverse the game’s dangerous levels on your way to ultimately destroying the EDF.

Red Faction Guerrilla also built on the franchise’s existing multiplayer modes, with a progression system that unlocks cosmetics and other game modes as you continue to play multiplayer matches. The game contains classic multiplayer modes like deathmatch and capture the flag, along with unique modes aimed at causing as much destruction as possible.

Red Faction Armageddon

Red Faction Armageddon is the fourth and latest installment in the series. Armageddon follows Red Faction Guerrilla’s lead, continuing the third-person perspective. In Armageddon, you play as Darius Mason, a descendant of Alec Mason from Red Faction Guerrilla.



This game is set 50 years after the events of Red Faction Guerrilla and follows a more linear path, as opposed to Guerrilla’s open world. The surface of Mars has become uninhabitable and colonists have been forced underground. Five years after the relocation underground, Darius Mason is tricked into opening a long-sealed, mysterious shaft, releasing an alien invasion on the colonists.

As these aliens ravage settlements across Mars, Mason must join up with the Red Faction to right the wrong he has created and clear his name of any blame. Using Red Faction’s distinct environment destruction, you must fight your way through these aliens in order to save humanity once and for all.

Red Faction turns 20!

These are all of the wonderful games from the Red Faction series. The series is celebrating its 20th anniversary on May 22, and if you haven’t experienced the trials and tribulations of the Red Faction’s time on Mars, now is the perfect time.

The series’ innovative and intuitive level destruction helped to place the Red Faction series into a category of its own. Experience the epic Mars saga of the Red Faction today on GOG.COM!

What do you think? Plan on revisiting Red Faction or enjoying it for the first time? Let us know down in the comments!
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OP_2021: I found it, it is called Red Faction: Battlegrounds and was available only for consoles.

redfaction.fandom.com/wiki/Red_Faction:_Battlegrounds
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RedRagan: Ah I see, it's not real time strategic game, it's more like vehicle combat just like Twisted Metal or Interstate 72 but with rock scissor paper.
Yes, you are right. This is indeed a twin-stick type of shooter with a bit of tactics.
I love these series!

Red Faction 1 is a good, enjoyable game, Red Faction 2 is merely OK , but Guerilla and Armageddon are true classics. Both are like a symphony of destuction. Really, toppling towers and bringing down bridges on Mars never gets old...
Post edited May 24, 2021 by Bolch76
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Slick_JMista: the 90% discount is perfect for me and i hope gog does more sales like this in order to compete with steam.
I also like deep discounts, but the chances we'll always get such deep sales is likely rare due to things like GOG operating on a smaller income/having less customers than Steam.
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Slick_JMista: the 90% discount is perfect for me and i hope gog does more sales like this in order to compete with steam.
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GamezRanker: I also like deep discounts, but the chances we'll always get such deep sales is likely rare due to things like GOG operating on a smaller income/having less customers than Steam.
i understand your frustrations, but if we keep buying these collection bundles, then the devs and publishers are more likely to notice that and make offers like these more often.
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Slick_JMista: the 90% discount is perfect for me and i hope gog does more sales like this in order to compete with steam.
I also love these "complete your collection" type of sales (with a high bundle discount). They give me the perfect excuse to buy more games than I actually wanted to buy. :D

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GamezRanker: I also like deep discounts, but the chances we'll always get such deep sales is likely rare due to things like GOG operating on a smaller income/having less customers than Steam.
At least in my case GOG does not get less money, rather the opposite. I often end up buying games from such bundle sales I otherwise would not buy and as a result spend more money than I would have spent on the sale without the bundle discount.
Post edited May 26, 2021 by eiii
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eiii: At least in my case GOG does not get less money, rather the opposite. I often end up buying games from such bundle sales I otherwise would not buy and as a result spend more money than I would have spent on the sale without the bundle discount.
I do a slightly different approach: I stick to mainly games I want/am interested in, but I will sometimes pay a bit more for games I really want....especially those from some indie devs and also those from AAA companies that likely won't get a better discount.

Btw: what I was also essentially trying to say before is that deep discounts are what many gamers are used to & very appealing, but give the rights holder less money for each sale. For some AAA companies I am fine with this, but not so much for a number of indie devs.