Wipeout (video game series)

Wipeout
Genre(s)Racing
Developer(s)Psygnosis
Publisher(s)Sony Interactive Entertainment
Platform(s)PlayStation, Nintendo 64, Sega Saturn, MS-DOS, Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable, PlayStation 3, PlayStation Vita, PlayStation 4, Amiga, Android, iOS
First releaseWipeout
29 September 1995
Latest releaseWipeout Merge
18 January 2022

Wipeout (stylised as wipE′out″ or WipEout) is a series of futuristic anti-gravity racing video games developed by Studio Liverpool (formerly known as Psygnosis).

The series is defined by its fast-paced gameplay, 3D visual design running on the full resolution of the game's console, and its association with electronic dance music (mainly techno and trance) as well as its continuous collaboration with electronic artists (The Chemical Brothers, Leftfield, CoLD SToRAGE, Kraftwerk, Orbital, DJ Fresh, Noisia and others). The series’s distinctive graphic design identity was provided by The Designers Republic for the first three games.

The concept of Wipeout was first discussed during a pub conversation, when a Psygnosis staff member, Jim Bowers, envisioned creating a futuristic racing game which featured anti-gravity ships.[1] Some elements of the game were inspired by Matrix Marauders, an Amiga game released by the Liverpudlian studio in 1990. A beta version of Wipeout appeared in the cult film Hackers, in which the game is played by the protagonists in a nightclub. The game's appearance in the film led to Sony purchasing the studio in the months after its release.

The Wipeout franchise has been well received by critics, with Wipeout 2097 in particular being listed among the PlayStation's best games. Wipeout 2048 was the last game to be developed by Studio Liverpool prior to their closure in August 2012. The series was later revived, with Wipeout Omega Collection released in 2017.

  1. ^ "Wipeout's co-creator looks back at three decades of racing games". Polygon. Retrieved 30 June 2018.