Players take the role of gunslinger El Tejon and embark on a quest of revenge, in this shooter from Atari. El Tejon, the hero of Dead Man's Hand, was betrayed and nearly killed; left for dead by a band of outlaws known only as 'The Nine.' Now he must travel the frontier, from the rivers of the East, to the deserts of the South, and the mountains of the North, seeking out each traitor and making him pay. As he proceeds, a selection of authentically modeled Western weapons become available to aid the hero in his grim task, including pistols, rifles, and shotguns, as well as knives, Gatling guns, cannons, and dynamite. Developed by Human Head Studios (Rune), the game runs on a state-of-the-art version of Epic Games' Unreal Engine and boasts detailed graphics at a smooth frame rate. Coming to market in the same year as Rockstar's Red Dead Revolver and Sammy's Darkwatch, Atari's Dead Man's Hand may indicate a renewed interest in applying a theme of 'vengeance in the Wild West' to first-person shooter gameplay.
The Punisher War Journal #46 - Dead Man's Hand Part 6: Hot Chrome and Cold Blood Nomad #5 - Dead Man's Hand Part 4: Suicide Kings Daredevil #309 - Dead Man's Hand Part 7: Cards On The Table. The dead man’s hand is a slang term used in poker for a two pair of black aces and black eights, although its meaning has changed over time. The story goes that lawman and gambler “Wild Bill”. Dead Man's Hand isn't a complete write-off - the game does exude some degree of charm and the music's quite catchy. Its main problem lies in offering nothing that you haven't seen a thousand times before and falls short in just about every department. The fact that it's only 20 quid doesn't really do enough to help matters either. Dead man's hand According to legend, Wild Bill Hickok was shot to death in the middle of a poker game with 2 pairs: black aces and black eight's. Noone knows for sure what the kicker was, but from then on black aces and eight's has been called dead man's hand. 'Pushing up the ante, I know you've got to see me.
Dead Mans Hand is an action-oriented first person shooter set in the grandeur and danger of the American Old West.
Chock full of gun fights and dripping in frontier lore, Dead Man's Hand thrusts players into the spurs of El Tejn, a master gunslinger riding with one of the roughest gangs in the West, known as The Nine. When the ruthless leader of The Nine betrays El Tejn, he turns to a life of vengeance, vowing to put every member of his former gang six-feet under. Through an epic single player story of vengeance and betrayal, the player will travel the American Frontier, experiencing bar fights, shoot outs, stagecoach chases and other definitive Western scenes. Dead Mans Hand captures the action and drama of the Old West with six-shooters, rifles, black hats, horses, hombres, dancing girls, riverboats, saloon poker and many other iconic images. Dead Man's Hand incorporates unique gameplay elements taken from the Old West. Gamers will try their hands at blasting desperados from the back of their trusty steed and shooting it out on a moving train. In addition, as the game progresses, players will acquire a unique scoring system that awards points as the player blazes a path into Western folklore. When accumulated, Legend will allow the player to pull off amazing trick shots and death-defying feats.
Players will also be able to pick their own path through the game, selecting from mission choices to meet their abilities.
Dead Man's Hand is an enjoyable, original FPS game that deserves your attention. Dead Man's Hand plays out like one of the famous spaghetti westerns that are popular here in the states. I'll resist on naming some of my personal favorites because naming them would have John Wayne rolling over in his grave and Clint Eastwood coming after me with one of his many characters famous guns. The story in Dead Man's Hand isn't nearly as good as a full-fledged movie, but it keeps you entertained throughout most of the experience. Dead Man's Hand casts you as Tejon, a former member of the most notorious gang in the west, 'The Nine.'
It seems that Tejon never had the stomach for killing because soon after joining up, Tejon wants out of 'The Nine.' Of course, there's no retirement for cowboys except for a trip to the great frontier that is the afterlife, so when he confronts his co-workers about his decision, they fill him with lead and leave him for dead. After lying around in the desert for a few hours, the General Juan Jacinto Blanco stumbles across him and places him in prison. This is where the game opens up. Inevitably, Tejon escapes from prison and decides to get revenge against 'The Nine' and hopefully ride off into the sunset.
Dead Man's Hand utilizes what I like to call a 'constant combat system.' What this means is that all fighting in the game requires that you're always jumping, crouching, running, or walking. If you aren't always moving, you'll die, plain and simple. This also means that you're always fighting someone in Dead Man's Hand. In its emulation of traditional western gun fighting, demands that you shoot fast and first or face certain death.
It'll only take you about ten minutes to conquer any level of Dead Man's Hand. The brevity of the levels is probably the saving grace of of this game. While the gameplay is very similar to Serious Sam, where you simply shoot and shoot at waves of enemies over and over and over again until your fingers are tired of clicking, you're only doing it in ten minute increments, so there's hardly any time to actually get bored with the level that you're on. As soon as the level is completed, you're whisked off to a new location that's very different than your previous one. The speed of the game helps fend off feelings of repetition, even though it is very repetitive.
Most of the levels in the game see our hero Tejon simply running through from Point A to Point B to get to Point C, which is typically a member of 'The Nine' that needs to be eliminated. While most of the level design is typical, including many cliché western towns, some are unique like a level that has Tejon traversing a redwood forest that is booby trapped. Another has him cutting down enemies in a lumber mill operated by two members of 'The Nine,' capped off with a shootout in the lumber yard.
These would quickly grow old on there own, so thankfully the developers had the brains to include horseback missions which play a lot like light gun games. You can't control where you go, but you're allowed to look around and shoot while riding. These missions can be a challenge, more so than the other missions, but they're arguably more exciting. I would have liked them even more if there was some variation in the speed of the horse but sadly you only travel at one speed.
Since we're on the topic of variation, variation is something that's sorely lacking with the weapons in Dead Man's Hand. In each level, you'll have a pistol, a rifle, and a shotgun. As you progress, you'll gain access to new pistols and rifles and shotguns that have different characteristics and you'll even get your hands on some TNT and whiskey bombs, but ultimately I was able to get through most of the levels with just a rifle. I would have liked to have seen more enemies that required different techniques to take them done.
![Dead man Dead man](/uploads/1/3/5/8/135861438/935567427.jpg)
As I said before, most of the levels end with some sort of final boss battle, usually taking out a member of 'The Nine' (though some have you eliminating random thugs or friends of your enemies). I actually liked a lot of the boss battles and I thought they were really nicely done. At one point you confront two brothers in a lumber yard and have to battle it out between pallets of wood. In another, you're blocked off and have to shoot TNT at a big hulking member of 'The Nine.'
Unfortunately the AI in the game isn't the best and I was able to beat some of the boss battles by simply getting behind something and shooting at them while the enemy stood in the opening trying to shoot me. There's a fairly heavy amount of scripting in the game (like in Medal of Honor), which helps offset the AI, but it can be particularly terrible at times. In one instance, I picked up several foes while they were running to where they were supposed to stand. Meanwhile, they ignored me and I was able to effortlessly kill them. It was like shooting fish in a barrel.
Dead Man's Hand manages to get past these faults by just being a fun game to play. You can blast through it in just a few hours, but even still it's not a bad purchase. Each level begins with you playing a poker game where you bet it all on a hand of cards. Should you win, you'll get more bullets for all of your weapons, plus special power for your special shots (you can shoot faster with some guns, more accurately, more bullets in one shot). If you lose, you have to start the level with just the basic stuff. It was a pretty fun mini-game and many times I restarted the levels just so I could start off with more stuff. I wish it were unlockable as a mini-game after you finally beat the game.
It isn't too hard to tell that Dead Man's Hand is a budget title by the graphics in the game. The cutscenes that tell the story are a little basic and run at a very low resolution. For some reason, even though they seem like they're tiny videos, they can often take several seconds to load up and you're stuck staring at a blank screen for a few moments. It's not too bad, but when you're in the middle of a level and you're waiting for it to load up, the rocky transition can be a little disorienting. The character models and textures are pretty repetitive, but there are some nice explosion effects to offset those issues. It's only in the sound department that I felt that Dead Man's Hand had some of its worst problems. The music was a fine recreation of most of the stuff that's found in old westerns, but the voice acting was pretty crappy. It's pretty obvious that most of the accents were faked to say the least.
So, I hope I justified my opinion well enough. Yes, Dead Man's Hand is certainly not one of the best games of the year. Well, perhaps one of the best budget first person shooters, but no where near a game of the year candidate. But it's fun, and that's what is most important. Where a game like Serious Sam or Will Rock is just a repetitive mindless shooter, Dead Man's Hand tries new things and tries to break the mold, and proves that even at a low price tag a company can make an entertaining game that doesn't regress.
People who downloaded Dead Man's Hand have also downloaded:
Call of Juarez, Dead to Rights, Deadly Dozen: Pacific Theater, Evil Dead: Hail to the King, Deadly Dozen, Crimson Skies, Evil Dead: Regeneration, D.I.R.T.: Origin of the Species
Call of Juarez, Dead to Rights, Deadly Dozen: Pacific Theater, Evil Dead: Hail to the King, Deadly Dozen, Crimson Skies, Evil Dead: Regeneration, D.I.R.T.: Origin of the Species
On August 2, 1876, Wild Bill Hickok was playing poker in Deadwood, South Dakota. Suddenly, a pistol fired. Hickok died instantly. His hand at the time, “aces and eights,” has become known as the Dead Man’s Hand. But is that a legend? Or is it real?
Wild Bill Hickok
James Butler Hickok was originally known as “Duck Bill,” apparently due to a large nose and an upper lip that jutted out from his face. Eventually, he grew a mustache and in 1861, adopted the moniker, Wild Bill.
His exploits in the Old West were legendary. He was a skilled scout and an expert marksman. He fought and killed a bear with his bare hands, suffering severe injuries in the process. He killed Davis Tutt in the first known “quick draw duel.” He acted in a play called Scouts of the Plains with Buffalo Bill Cody and Texas Jack Omohundro. Calamity Jane, the famous American frontierswoman, claimed to have married him.
In July 1876, Wild Bill Hickok and Calamity Jane arrived in Deadwood, South Dakota via wagon train. Some say he had a premonition of sorts regarding his impending death.
“Well, as to that, I suppose I am called a red-handed murderer, which I deny. That I have killed men I admit, but never unless in absolute self-defense or in the performance of an official duty. I never in my life took any mean advantage of an enemy. Yet, understand, I never allowed a man to get the drop on me. But perhaps I may yet die with my boots on.” ~ Wild Bill Hickok to Mrs. Annie Tallent, Several months before his death, Pioneer Days in the Back Hills, John S. McClintock
On August 2, 1876, Wild Bill Hickok entered Nuttal & Mann’s Saloon No. 10. He usually sat with his back to the wall. However, the only available stool required him to put his back to the door. He sat down and started to play five-card-draw. But he was uncomfortable with the arrangement and twice, asked another player named Charles Rich to switch stools with him. Rich refused.
Dead Man’s Hand
During the game, a former buffalo hunter named John McCall strode into the saloon. He parked himself a few feet away from Hickok and drew his pistol. “Take that!” he shouted as he fired it. The bullet careened through Hickok’s skull and Wild Bill died instantly.
According to popular legend, Hickok held two black aces and two black eights at the time of his death. The fifth card, or kicker, is a source of mystery. Some claim it was the queen of clubs. Others say it was the nine of diamonds, the jack of diamonds, the five of diamonds, or the queen of hearts. Still others say no fifth card ever existed, suggesting Hickok was in the middle of drawing a new card when he was murdered.
But what about the “aces and eights” part? Is that accurate? Well, no contemporary sources exist that indicate what cards Hickok was holding at the time of his death. “Aces and eights” was provided by Frank J. Wilstach in his 1926 book, Wild Bill Hickok: The Prince of Pistoleers. Wilstach quoted “Doc” Peirce, the town barber, who was asked to serve as an “impromptu undertaker.”
“Now, in regard to the position of Bill’s body, when they unlocked the door for me to get his body, he was lying on his side, with his knees drawn up just as he slid off his stool. We had no chairs in those days — and his fingers were still crimped from holding his poker hand. Charlie Rich, who sat beside him, said he never saw a muscle move. Bill’s hand read ‘aces and eights’ — two pair, and since that day aces and eights have been known as ‘the dead man’s hand’ in the Western country.” ~ Ellis T. “Doc” Peirce, Wild Bill Hickok: The Prince of Pistoleers
This account was published 50 years after Hickok’s death. It has yet to be collaborated by any outside source.
Guerrilla Explorer’s Take
If Peirce was right, then aces and eights was known as the dead man’s hand in “the Western country.” However, newspapers from that location and period tell a different story. The first known mention of a Dead Man’s Hand, a July 1, 1886 article in the Grand Forks Daily Herald, not only disagrees with the Hand itself but also its origin.
“I was present at a game in a Senator’s house one night and saw him win $6,000 on one hand. It was the dead man’s hand. What is the dead man’s hand? Why, it is three jacks and a pair of tens. It is called the dead man’s hand because about forty seven years ago, in a town in Illinois, a celebrated judge bet his house and lot on three jacks and a pair of tens…When his opponent showed up he had three queens and a pair of tens. Upon seeing the queens the judge fell back dead, clutching the jacks and tens in his hand, and that’s why a jack-full on tens is called the dead man’s hand.” ~ Grand Forks Daily Herald, July 1, 1886
Dead Man's Hand Payday
Later accounts show different versions, including jacks and eights, tens and treys (threes), and jacks and sevens. Regardless, none of these articles connect the Dead Man’s Hand to Wild Bill Hickok.
At this point, the definitive origin of the Dead Man’s Hand remains an unsolved mystery. If the Wild Bill Hickok story could be proved by contemporary sources, it would be the oldest known version of the legend. For those of you in the New York area, consider taking a trip down to the New York Public Library. That’s where Wilstach’s papers are located. Perhaps there’s some additional information in “Doc” Peirce’s letter. Or maybe, just maybe, there’s some other evidence waiting to be found. If you find anything, let us know and we’ll cover your discovery right here on Guerrilla Explorer. Who knows? You just might solve one of history’s most puzzling unsolved mysteries!
Dead Man's Hand Poker
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