Thief: The Dark Project

Thief: The Dark Project
In a dark area, a cloaked man holds a bow and pulls back on a notched, glowing arrow. Above him, the word "THIEF" is jaggedly written. Between the two are smaller, cleaner letters that read "THE DARK PROJECT".
Developer(s)Looking Glass Studios
Publisher(s)Eidos Interactive
Director(s)Greg LoPiccolo
Producer(s)Josh Randall
Designer(s)Tim Stellmach
Programmer(s)Tom Leonard
Artist(s)Mark Lizotte
Writer(s)
Composer(s)Eric Brosius
SeriesThief
EngineDark Engine
Platform(s)Microsoft Windows
Release
Genre(s)Stealth
Mode(s)Single-player

Thief: The Dark Project is a 1998 first-person stealth video game developed by Looking Glass Studios and published by Eidos Interactive. Set in a fantasy metropolis called the City, players take on the role of Garrett, a master thief trained by a secret society who, while carrying out a series of robberies, becomes embroiled in a complex plot that ultimately sees him attempting to prevent a great power from unleashing chaos on the world.

Thief was the first PC stealth game to use light and sound as game mechanics, and combined complex artificial intelligence with simulation systems to allow for emergent gameplay. The game is notable for its use of first-person perspective for non-confrontational gameplay, which challenged the first-person shooter market and led the developers to call it a "first-person sneaker", while it also had influences in later stealth games such as Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell and Hitman.

The game received critical acclaim and has been placed on numerous hall-of-fame lists, achieving sales of half a million units by 2000, making it Looking Glass' most commercially successful game. It is regarded as one of the greatest video games of all time and helped popularize the stealth genre. Thief was followed by an expanded edition entitled Thief Gold (1999) which modified certain missions and included a few brand new levels, two sequels: Thief II: The Metal Age (2000), and Thief: Deadly Shadows (2004), as well as a reboot of the series, Thief (2014). Thief was one of two games in the series that Looking Glass worked on before it was forced to close.

  1. ^ "Britain's Biggest Choice of Software". Evening Standard. December 4, 1998. p. 204. Retrieved June 11, 2023. Thief the Dark Project...Out Today...inc. vat £34.99
  2. ^ Dunkin, Alan (December 1, 1998). "Thief on the Loose". GameSpot. Archived from the original on June 5, 2000. Retrieved September 20, 2019.