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{{Construction}}
 
{{Infobox game
 
{{Infobox game
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|image = [[File:R6 Rogue Spear.png]]
|image = [[File:2373145-rogue_spear_front_cover.jpg]]|developer = Red Storm Entertainment|publisher = Red Storm Entertainment|director = <!--The director of the game.-->|designer = <!--The designer of the game.-->|composer = Bill Brown|engine = <!--The engine the game was built on.-->|platform = [[Wikipedia:Microsoft Windows|Microsoft Windows]]<br />[[Wikipedia:PlayStation (console)|Sony PlayStation]]<br />[[Wikipedia:Mac OS|Mac OS]]<br />[[Wikipedia:Dreamcast|Sega Dreamcast]]<br />[[Wikipedia:Game Boy Advance|Game Boy Advance]]|released = August 31st 1999}}
 
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|developer = |developer = [[Red Storm Entertainment]] <small>(PC)</small><br/>[[Saffire Corporation]] <small>(PS1)</small><br/>[[Pipe Dream Interactive]] <small>(Dreamcast)</small><br/>[[Ubisoft Milan]] <small>(GBA)</small>
'''''Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six: Rogue Spear''''' is a tactical first-person shooter computer game developed and published by Red Storm Entertainment. It is the sequel to the critically acclaimed ''Rainbow Six'' game based on the Tom Clancy novel of the same name.
 
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|publisher = Red Storm Entertainment
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|composer = Bill Brown
 
|platform = [[Wikipedia:Microsoft Windows|Microsoft Windows]]<br />[[Wikipedia:PlayStation (console)|Sony PlayStation]]<br />[[Wikipedia:Mac OS|Mac OS]]<br />[[Wikipedia:Dreamcast|Sega Dreamcast]]<br />[[Wikipedia:Game Boy Advance|Game Boy Advance]]
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|released = August 31st 1999}}
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[[File:Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Rogue Spear Intro|thumb|300px]]
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'''''Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six: Rogue Spear''''' is the second installment in the ''[[Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Franchise]]'' and was developed and published by [[Red Storm Entertainment]]. It was released on August 31, 1999 for PC.
   
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The game was later ported to the Mac OS, Dreamcast, and PlayStation between 2000 and 2002. A PlayStation 2 port was also announced at the time, but it was later canceled. A [[Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six: Rogue Spear (GBA)|Game Boy Advance]] version was developed and released in 2002, serving as a continuation of the game's story.
''Rogue Spear'' is based on the same game engine and features gameplay and presentation similar to that of the original ''Rainbow Six''. The game pits the counter-terrorist unit, RAINBOW, against global terrorist organizations that in some cases have taken hostages or have armed themselves with weapons of mass destruction. ''Rogue Spear'' focuses on realism, planning, strategy, and teamwork. ''Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six: Rogue Spear'' was released for the PC on August 31, 1999, with versions for the Mac OS (2000), Dreamcast (2000), PlayStation (2001) and Game Boy Advance (2002) released later. A PlayStation 2 port was also announced at the time, but it was later canceled.
 
   
== Plot==
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==Singleplayer==
 
''Rogue Spear'' is based on the same game engine and features gameplay and presentation similar to that of the original ''Rainbow Six''. The game pits the counter-terrorist unit, RAINBOW, against global terrorist organizations that in some cases have taken hostages or have armed themselves with weapons of mass destruction. ''Rogue Spear'' focuses on realism, planning, strategy, and teamwork.
[[File:Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Rogue Spear Intro|thumb|330x330px]] Following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the economic situation in Russia and the former Eastern Europe falls into chaos. Terrorism in the region is commonplace as people fight a seemingly endless stream of battles for supplies and other necessities.
 
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===Plot===
 
Following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the economic situation in Russia and the former Eastern Europe falls into chaos. Terrorism in the region is commonplace as people fight a seemingly endless stream of battles for supplies and other necessities.
   
 
The counterterrorism organization, [[Rainbow]], prevents several terrorist attacks, including Egyptian terrorists taking hostages at a museum in New York, Japanese terrorists threatening to blow up a tanker to cause an oil slick that would destroy Japan's power grid, and terrorists threatening to release a toxin into Oman's local water supply. It is clear that these terrorists are getting help from a higher power; when terrorists hijack an airplane, the man behind the terrorist attacks is identified as [[Samed Vezirzade]], a rich and powerful leader of the [[Oil Mafia]] in Azerbaijan who hates the west and helps other terrorists in their attacks against it by supplying them with weapons.
 
The counterterrorism organization, [[Rainbow]], prevents several terrorist attacks, including Egyptian terrorists taking hostages at a museum in New York, Japanese terrorists threatening to blow up a tanker to cause an oil slick that would destroy Japan's power grid, and terrorists threatening to release a toxin into Oman's local water supply. It is clear that these terrorists are getting help from a higher power; when terrorists hijack an airplane, the man behind the terrorist attacks is identified as [[Samed Vezirzade]], a rich and powerful leader of the [[Oil Mafia]] in Azerbaijan who hates the west and helps other terrorists in their attacks against it by supplying them with weapons.
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Barsukov is granted immunity for helping Rainbow stop Vezirzade and Kutkin, and acquires Kutkin's mansion, claiming to be done working with the mafia. He makes a short speech to Rainbow in front of the bug they planted there, and then shoots the bug, preventing Rainbow from monitoring him.
 
Barsukov is granted immunity for helping Rainbow stop Vezirzade and Kutkin, and acquires Kutkin's mansion, claiming to be done working with the mafia. He makes a short speech to Rainbow in front of the bug they planted there, and then shoots the bug, preventing Rainbow from monitoring him.
   
==Missions list==
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===Missions===
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''Rogue Spear'' features eighteen available story missions. Each mission can be played alone or with another player. They can also be played in the [[Terrorist Hunt]] and [[Hostage Rescue]] gamemodes. The Game Boy Advance version of the game featured fifteen missions that were substantially different from the PC counterpart.
*[[Pandora Trigger]] / The Met - New York, USA - 08.04.2001 / 01:30 Hours
 
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*[[Arctic Flare]] / Oil Tanker - Japan - 09.09.2001 / 03:00 Hours
 
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{{Columns
*[[Sand Hammer]] / Desal Plant - Oman - 10.04.2001 / 05:45 Hours
 
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|col1=*[[Pandora Trigger]]
*[[Lost Thunder]] / Ruined City - Djakovica, Kosovo - 10.24.2001 / 19:15 Hours
 
 
*[[Arctic Flare]]
*[[Perfect Sword]] / 747 - Brussels, Belgium - 11.13.2001 / 18:45 Hours
 
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*[[Sand Hammer]]
*[[Crystal Ark]] / Chalet (fall) - Georgia - 11.19.2001 / 02:30 Hours
 
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*[[Lost Thunder]]
*[[Silent Drum]] / TV Station - London, UK - 12.19.2001 / 17:45 Hours
 
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*[[Perfect Sword]]
*[[Feral Burn]] / Docks - St. Petersburg, Russia - 01.14.2002 / 23:30 Hours
 
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*[[Crystal Ark]]
*[[Diamond Edge]] / Storage Facility - Murmansk, Russia - 01.21.2002 / 00:30 Hours
 
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|col2=*[[Silent Drum]]
*[[Silver Snake]] / Chalet (winter) - Georgia - 02.02.2002 / 06:30 Hours
 
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*[[Feral Burn]]
*[[Oracle Stone]] / Casino (winter) - Smolensk, Russia - 02.12.2002 / 01:00 Hours
 
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*[[Diamond Edge]]
*[[Temple Gate]] / Opera House - Prague, Czech Republic - 02.23.2002 / 02:30 Hours
 
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*[[Silver Snake]]
*[[Sargasso Fade]] / Siberian Base I - Siberia - 03.03.2002 / 13:15 Hours
 
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*[[Oracle Stone]]
*[[Majestic Gold]] / Siberian Base II - Siberia - 03.03.2002 / 14:45 Hours
 
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*[[Temple Gate]]
*[[Frost Light]] / Casino (spring)- Smolensk, Russia - 03.19.2002 / 18:30 Hours
 
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|col3=*[[Sargasso Fade]]
*[[Hero Claw]] / Train Yard - Moscow, Russia - 03.22.2002 / 23:30 Hours
 
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*[[Majestic Gold]]
*[[Ebony Horse]] / Castle - Azerbaijan - 03.24.2002 / 05:45 Hours
 
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*[[Frost Light]]
*[[Zero Gambit]] / Power Plant - Cherkasy, Ukraine - 03.27.2002 / 02:00 Hours
 
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*[[Hero Claw]]
{{Rainbow Six Rogue Spear missions}}
 
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*[[Ebony Horse]]
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*[[Zero Gambit]]}}
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{{Missions/Rogue Spear}}
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===Custom missions===
 
*[[City Street Large]]
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*[[Killhouse Double]]
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===Factions and Characters===
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{{Characters/Rogue Spear}}
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{{Factions/Rogue Spear}}
   
 
==Multiplayer==
 
==Multiplayer==
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''Rogue Spear'' features a multiplayer that supports up to 16 players. The game features twenty multiplayer maps based on campaign mission. This number is further increased through the games three expansions.
*City Street Large - Hereford - 07.23.2001 / 22:15 Hours
 
*Killhouse Double - Hereford - 07.23.2001 / 22:15 Hours
 
   
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===Maps===
== Gameboy Advance mission list ==
 
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{{Columns
*[[Flying Gate]] - New York, USA - 10.01.2002 / 02:30 Hours
 
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|col1=*[[The Met]]
*[[Renegade Thorn]] - Saudi Arabia - 11.17.2002 / 16:15 Hours
 
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*[[Oil Tanker]]
*[[Fraternal Lamp]] - Canada - 12.18.2002 / 18:00 Hours
 
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*[[Desal Plant]]
*[[Derelict Iron]] - Lipetsk - Russia 01.09.2003 / 19:30 Hours
 
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*[[Ruined City]]
*[[Relentless Lancet]] - Kursk - Russia 01.29.2003 / 17:45 Hours
 
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*[[747]]
*[[Reverent Snow]] - Kursk, Russia - 02.26.2003 / 19:00 Hours
 
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*[[Chalet (Fall)]]
*[[Descending Crown]] - Novo Brdo, Kosovo - 03.09.2003 / 18:50 Hours
 
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*[[TV Station]]
*[[Violet Scythe]] - Novo Brdo, Kosovo - 03.10.2003 / 07:00 Hours
 
 
|col2=*[[Docks (Rogue Spear)|Docks]]
*[[Resolute Bridge]] - Dresden, Germany - 03.19.2003 / 01:00 Hours
 
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*[[Storage Facility (Rogue Spear)|Storage Facility]]
*[[Platinum Jared]] - Prague, Czech Republic - 05.04.2003 / 23:00 Hours
 
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*[[Chalet (Winter)]]
*[[Sharpened Iris]] - Plesetsk, Russia - 05.19.2003 / 10:00 Hours
 
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*[[Casino (Winter)]]
*[[Solemn Arrow]] - Plesetsk, Russia - 05.19.2003 / 16:30 Hours
 
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*[[Opera House]]
*[[Mercury Jackal]] - Plesetsk, Russia - 05.20.2003 / 06:00 Hours
 
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*[[Siberian Base I]]
*[[Early Cerberus]] - Dresden, Germany - 05.24.2003 / 00:01 Hours
 
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*[[Siberian Base II]]
*[[Blackened Cygnus]] - Ust' Kamenogorsk, Kazakhstan - 05.26.2003 / 12:00 Hours
 
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|col3=*[[Casino (Spring)]]
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*[[Train Yard]]
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*[[Castle]]
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*[[Power Plant]]
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*[[City Street Large]]
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*[[Killhouse Double]]}}
   
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{{Maps/Rogue Spear}}
==Characters==
 
   
===Control===
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===Gamemodes===
 
Rogue Spear’s online multiplayer consists of two mode types: cooperative and adversarial. In cooperative mode, individuals team up with other players to complete missions against the computer AI in formats similar to the single-player missions. Adversarial mode pits players against one another in various gamemodes with games being limited to sixteen players per server. The game features twelve gamemodes.
*[[John Clark]]
 
=== Advisors ===
 
*[[Susan Holt]]
 
*[[Lukyan Barsukov]]
 
===Rainbow (Assault)===
 
*[[Domingo Chavez]]
 
*[[Santiago Arnavisca]]
 
*[[Daniel Bogart]]
 
*[[Andrew Burke]]
 
*[[Genedy Filatov]]
 
*[[Karl Haider]]
 
*[[Timothy Hanley]]
 
*[[Louis Loiselle]]
 
*[[Jamal Murad]]
 
*[[Alejandro Noronha]]
 
*[[Arkadi Novikov]]
 
*[[Eddie Price]]
 
*[[Kazimiera Rakuzanka]]
 
*[[Renee Raymond]]
 
*[[Jorg Walther]]
 
===Rainbow (Demolitions)===
 
*[[Lars Beckenbauer]]
 
*[[Roger McAllen]]
 
*[[Gerald Morris]]
 
===Rainbow (Electronics)===
 
*[[Alain DuBarry]]
 
*[[Annika Lofquist]]
 
===Rainbow (Recon)===
 
*[[Antonio Maldini]]
 
*[[Pak Suo-Won]]
 
*[[Kevin Sweeney]]
 
*[[Tracy Woo]]
 
*[[Ayana Yacoby]]
 
===Rainbow (Sniper)===
 
*[[Kure Galanos]]
 
*[[Homer Johnston]]
 
*[[Emilio Narino]]
 
*[[Einar Petersen]]
 
*[[Dieter Weber]]
 
   
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{{Gamemodes/Rogue Spear}}
==Outfits==
 
*[[Woodland Suit Rogue Spear|Woodland Suit]]
 
*[[European Woodland Suit]]
 
*[[Desert Suit Rogue Spear|Desert Suit]]
 
*[[Desert Urban Suit]]
 
*[[Black Suit]]
 
*[[Street Suit Rogue Spear|Street Suit]]
 
*[[Street Desert Suit]]
 
*[[Arctic Suit]]
 
*[[Bio Suit Rogue Spear|Bio Suit]]
 
   
 
==Weapons and Equipment==
 
==Weapons and Equipment==
 
{{Weapons/R6:Rogue Spear}}
 
{{Weapons/R6:Rogue Spear}}
 
==Multiplayer==
 
Rogue Spear’s online multiplayer consists of two modes: cooperative and adversarial. In cooperative mode, individuals team up with other players to complete missions against the computer AI in formats similar to the single-player missions. Adversarial mode pits players against one another with Survival, a mode similar to Deathmatch, and Team Survival, similar to Team Deathmatch garnering the vast majority of play. Rogue Spear does not support dedicated servers, with games being limited to sixteen players per server. An active competitive scene has surrounded the game, with players forming clans and participating in ladder play.
 
   
 
==Add-ons==
 
==Add-ons==
 
===Urban Operations===
 
===Urban Operations===
 
{{Main|Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six: Rogue Spear Urban Operations}}
 
{{Main|Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six: Rogue Spear Urban Operations}}
''Rogue Spear Mission Pack: Urban Operations'', released on April 4, 2000, was the first expansion for ''Rogue Spear''. It was developed and published by Red Storm Entertainment. It added eight new maps and five classic ''Rainbow Six'' maps from the original game, as well as three new weapons.
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''Rogue Spear Mission Pack: Urban Operations'', released on April 4, 2000, was the first expansion for ''Rogue Spear''. It was developed and published by Red Storm Entertainment. It added eight new maps and five classic ''Rainbow Six'' maps from the original game, as well as three new weapons. The expansion was re-released in South Korea and featured two exclusive missions, maps, and weapons.
 
''Urban Operations'' was re-released by KAMA Digital Entertainment in South Korea - this new edition included two exclusive missions and two new weapons.
 
 
====Mod system====
 
With the release of ''Urban Operations'', a built-in mod system was added to manage user-made "mods" or modifications. Previous releases of the ''Rainbow Six'' series did not have this system, and using a mod required overwriting existing game content. With the mod system, mods could be used without overwriting, as they were installed into a separate folder within the installation and could be turned on or off. When a mod was activated, its content would take priority over the default game content. This allowed the addition and/or customization of all game content, allowing new operatives, weapons, maps, missions, etc. to be added.
 
 
Red Storm also released "unsupported" plugins for 3D Studio MAX and Photoshop, to aid in the creation of new content. This enhanced the popularity and replay value of the series for some time, as hundreds of modding teams within a large modding community released new mods constantly. Police and military organizations also sought the customizable game engine for training purposes, due to the realism of planning and mission strategy.
 
 
Because of these effects, a mod management system was later added to Red Storm's Ghost Recon series as well, although it was somewhat more restrictive.
 
   
 
===Covert Ops Essentials===
 
===Covert Ops Essentials===
{{Main|Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six: Rogue Spear Covert Operations}}
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{{Main|Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six: Covert Ops Essentials}}
''Rainbow Six: Covert Ops'', is a stand-alone expansion pack of ''Rogue Spear''. The training simulator was developed by Magic Lantern Playware, six of the levels were done by Zombie Studios and three of the levels were done by Red Storm Entertainment. It was published by Red Storm Entertainment. It was released on September 28, 2000. It included nine new missions, because the product was primarily developed as an educational program on real life counter-terrorism history and tactics.
+
''Rainbow Six: Covert Ops'', is a stand-alone expansion pack of ''Rogue Spear''. The training simulator was developed by Magic Lantern Playware, six of the levels were done by Zombie Studios and three of the levels were done by Red Storm Entertainment. It was published by Red Storm Entertainment. It was released on September 28, 2000. It included nine new missions, because the product was primarily developed as an educational program on real-life counter-terrorism history and tactics.
   
 
===Black Thorn===
 
===Black Thorn===
 
{{Main|Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six: Rogue Spear: Black Thorn}}
 
{{Main|Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six: Rogue Spear: Black Thorn}}
''Rogue Spear: Black Thorn'' was developed by Red Storm Entertainment, published by Ubisoft, and released as a stand-alone add-on on December 15, 2001. ''Black Thorn'' featured nine new single-player maps. Mission eight was edited in the US release (modified from an airport into a coach terminal) and a mission featuring an A380 aircraft was removed in all releases after the September 11, 2001 attacks.<sup class="reference" id="cite_ref-mission8_0-0">[1]</sup> This delayed the release. Six new multiplayer maps, 10 new weapons, and a new multiplayer variation on the "Lone Wolf" game type in which one player takes on everyone else; the winner of the round then becomes the new "Lone Wolf". The plot features a mentally disturbed ex-SAS operative challenging Team Rainbow with reenactments of real-life terrorist attacks, such as the Entebbe raid and the Japanese embassy hostage crisis.{{Games}}
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''Rogue Spear: Black Thorn'' was developed by Red Storm Entertainment, published by Ubisoft, and released as a stand-alone add-on on December 15, 2001. It features nine available missions, six new multiplayer maps, 10 new weapons, and a new gamemode.
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==Soundtrack==
 
{{Main|Rainbow Six: Rogue Spear Original Soundtrack}}
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  +
{{Games}}
 
[[Category:Games]]
 
[[Category:Games]]
  +
[[Category:Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six: Rogue Spear]]

Revision as of 06:39, 10 January 2020

This article is currently under construction. It may contain little or inaccurate information.

Tom_Clancy's_Rainbow_Six_Rogue_Spear_Intro

Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Rogue Spear Intro

Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six: Rogue Spear is the second installment in the Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Franchise and was developed and published by Red Storm Entertainment. It was released on August 31, 1999 for PC.

The game was later ported to the Mac OS, Dreamcast, and PlayStation between 2000 and 2002. A PlayStation 2 port was also announced at the time, but it was later canceled. A Game Boy Advance version was developed and released in 2002, serving as a continuation of the game's story.

Singleplayer

Rogue Spear is based on the same game engine and features gameplay and presentation similar to that of the original Rainbow Six. The game pits the counter-terrorist unit, RAINBOW, against global terrorist organizations that in some cases have taken hostages or have armed themselves with weapons of mass destruction. Rogue Spear focuses on realism, planning, strategy, and teamwork.

Plot

Following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the economic situation in Russia and the former Eastern Europe falls into chaos. Terrorism in the region is commonplace as people fight a seemingly endless stream of battles for supplies and other necessities.

The counterterrorism organization, Rainbow, prevents several terrorist attacks, including Egyptian terrorists taking hostages at a museum in New York, Japanese terrorists threatening to blow up a tanker to cause an oil slick that would destroy Japan's power grid, and terrorists threatening to release a toxin into Oman's local water supply. It is clear that these terrorists are getting help from a higher power; when terrorists hijack an airplane, the man behind the terrorist attacks is identified as Samed Vezirzade, a rich and powerful leader of the Oil Mafia in Azerbaijan who hates the west and helps other terrorists in their attacks against it by supplying them with weapons.

After Rainbow rescues the plane hostages, an anonymous Russian informant gives them the location of Vezirzade's dacha. Rainbow plants bugs in the dacha to listen to Vezirzade's men, and learn that a Russian gangster named Maxim Kutkin is illegally buying weapons from a source in the Russian military. Kutkin is a weapons broker for Vezirzade, and is the insane son-in-law of Lukyan Barsukov "the Russian Godfather", a leader of the Russian mafia. When some of Kutkin's men try to buy another weapon off the Russian military, Rainbow prevents the exchange and recovers the weapon, which is weapons-grade plutonium.

Rainbow traces the plutonium to a weapons storage facility near Murmansk run by the Russian colonel Viktor Rudenko. Rainbow captures Rudenko, who reveals that he already sold Kutkin enough plutonium to make four nuclear bombs, which Kutkin intends to sell to Vezirzade. Rainbow obtains computer files from Vezirzade's computer, which say that Kutkin is using the plutonium to assemble nuclear bombs at an unknown base in Siberia. Rainbow bugs Kutkin's spa to get an exact location on the base; while they wait to hear this, Vezirzade arranges for his entire terrorist underground to attack an opera house, taking hostages and making extreme demands he knows cannot be met. After Rainbow kills the terrorists and rescues the hostages, they learn the location of Kutkin's bomb-manufacturing base from the bug and blow it up with explosives. They recover two nuclear bombs, but Kutkin escapes with the other two.

Susan Holt of the Strategic Studies Institute discovers that Rainbow's anonymous informant is Barsukov, whom Kutkin has been planning to kill for years. Holt goes to meet with Barsukov, as he has vital information about Vezirzade and Kutkin's plans, but both are captured by Kutkin and held at his spa, from which they are rescued by Rainbow. Afterwards, Barsukov tells Rainbow that Kutkin is personally delivering his two nuclear bombs to Vezirzade's men in suitcases at a train yard in Moscow. Rainbow raids the site, preventing the exchange and killing all terrorists present.

Rainbow interrogates one of Vezirzade's men and learns the location of his base of operations in Azerbaijan. Rainbow forces raid Vezirzade's base, intending to take him alive if possible, but Vezirzade doesn't give them this option so they kill him. Afterwards, Kutkin is revealed to still be alive, as it was really his lieutenant that led the attempted exchange in Moscow. Furious that his plan to manufacture and sell nuclear weapons has failed, Kutkin and a small number of men loyal to him take control of a nuclear power plant, where Kutkin threatens to shut off the reactors' cooling system and trigger a nuclear meltdown, intending to kill as many people along with him as possible, including Rainbow when they come to stop him, as revenge for shutting down his operations. To prevent a repeat of the Chernobyl disaster, Rainbow forces storm the plant, successfully recapture it, and kill Kutkin.

Barsukov is granted immunity for helping Rainbow stop Vezirzade and Kutkin, and acquires Kutkin's mansion, claiming to be done working with the mafia. He makes a short speech to Rainbow in front of the bug they planted there, and then shoots the bug, preventing Rainbow from monitoring him.

Missions

Rogue Spear features eighteen available story missions. Each mission can be played alone or with another player. They can also be played in the Terrorist Hunt and Hostage Rescue gamemodes. The Game Boy Advance version of the game featured fifteen missions that were substantially different from the PC counterpart.

Custom missions

Factions and Characters

Multiplayer

Rogue Spear features a multiplayer that supports up to 16 players. The game features twenty multiplayer maps based on campaign mission. This number is further increased through the games three expansions.

Maps

Gamemodes

Rogue Spear’s online multiplayer consists of two mode types: cooperative and adversarial. In cooperative mode, individuals team up with other players to complete missions against the computer AI in formats similar to the single-player missions. Adversarial mode pits players against one another in various gamemodes with games being limited to sixteen players per server. The game features twelve gamemodes.

Weapons and Equipment


Add-ons

Urban Operations

Rogue Spear Mission Pack: Urban Operations, released on April 4, 2000, was the first expansion for Rogue Spear. It was developed and published by Red Storm Entertainment. It added eight new maps and five classic Rainbow Six maps from the original game, as well as three new weapons. The expansion was re-released in South Korea and featured two exclusive missions, maps, and weapons.

Covert Ops Essentials

Rainbow Six: Covert Ops, is a stand-alone expansion pack of Rogue Spear. The training simulator was developed by Magic Lantern Playware, six of the levels were done by Zombie Studios and three of the levels were done by Red Storm Entertainment. It was published by Red Storm Entertainment. It was released on September 28, 2000. It included nine new missions, because the product was primarily developed as an educational program on real-life counter-terrorism history and tactics.

Black Thorn

Rogue Spear: Black Thorn was developed by Red Storm Entertainment, published by Ubisoft, and released as a stand-alone add-on on December 15, 2001. It features nine available missions, six new multiplayer maps, 10 new weapons, and a new gamemode.

Soundtrack