Difference between revisions of "List of game modes"

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{{Quotation|'''The Heavy'''|Onward, great bomb-cart!|sound=Heavy_cartmovingforwardoffense17.wav}}
 
{{Quotation|'''The Heavy'''|Onward, great bomb-cart!|sound=Heavy_cartmovingforwardoffense17.wav}}
  
In '''Payload''' maps, [[BLU]] team must escort a [[Payload#Carts|cart]] full of explosives through a series of checkpoints and into [[RED]]'s base within a certain amount of time. BLU team members move or 'push' the cart by standing next to it - the more people near the cart, the faster it moves. Any RED team member standing near the cart will stop it from venturing further. If no BLU player pushes the cart for 30 seconds, the cart will start moving backwards slowly until it reaches a checkpoint/BLU spawn, a uphill in the way (just in some maps) or a BLU player who stands next to it again. The cart functions as a level 1 Dispenser for BLU team (and disguised enemy Spies) to restore health and ammunition to those pushing it. Ammunition is not restored to players standing at the front of the cart.
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In '''Payload''' maps, [[BLU]] team must escort a [[Payload#Carts|cart]] full of explosives through a series of checkpoints and into [[RED]]'s base within a certain amount of time. BLU team members move or 'push' the cart by standing next to it - the more people next the cart, the faster it moves. Any RED team member standing near the cart will stop it from venturing further regardless of the number of BLU team members on the cart. If no BLU players push the cart for 30 seconds, the cart will start moving backwards slowly until it reaches a checkpoint, BLU spawn, an uphill slope (in certain maps) or is pushed by BLU team members again, which will also reset the timer. The cart functions as a level 1 Dispenser for BLU team (and disguised enemy Spies) to restore health and ammunition to those pushing it. Ammunition is not restored to players standing at the front of the cart.
  
Some maps have one-way routes from the BLU side, sometimes closed off until a specific point is taken.
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Some maps have one-way routes from the BLU side, which are sometimes closed off until a specific point is taken.
  
Some maps, such as Gold Rush, Hoodoo, and Thunder Mountain, are split in three stages that the BLU team must advance through and win. Stages one and two have 2 checkpoints and stage three has 3 checkpoints (2 for Hoodoo), including the final point. Badwater Basin and Upward maps have a single round with 4 checkpoints, including the final point. Advancing the cart to the next checkpoint gives the BLU team extra time. Advancing it to the final point moves the map onto the next stage. When the cart reaches the final point on the final stage, the Payload explodes and destroys RED's base, indicating BLU's victory.
+
Some maps, such as Gold Rush, Hoodoo, and Thunder Mountain, are split into three stages that the BLU team must advance through and win. Stages one and two have 2 checkpoints and stage three has 3 checkpoints (2 for Hoodoo), including the final point. Badwater Basin and Upward maps have a single round with 4 checkpoints, including the final point. Advancing the cart to the next checkpoint gives the BLU team extra time. Advancing it to the final point moves the map onto the next stage. When the cart reaches the final point on the final stage, the Payload explodes and destroys RED's base, indicating BLU's victory.
  
 
'''Payload maps''':
 
'''Payload maps''':

Revision as of 21:54, 25 November 2012


The world of Team Fortress 2.
For a full list of all maps, see List of maps.

This is a list of game modes in Team Fortress 2. Initially, the game shipped with only three game modes: Capture the Flag, Control Point, and Territorial Control. Numerous updates have added seven new game modes (Payload, Arena, King of the Hill, Payload Race, Medieval Mode, Special Delivery, and Mann Vs Machine) making ten official game modes, along with two training maps. These game modes are spread across 53 official maps and offer a great variety of play styles and games in Team Fortress 2.

Arena

Main article: Arena
See also: Arena tips
I say this to you with the unvarnished factualism of plain talk: I love Arena Mode.
Abraham Lincoln, Second Inaugural Address, 1865

Arena maps are designed to keep the class diversity of Team Fortress 2 while focusing goals around combat between two teams. Whereas other game modes lean towards a broad, overall strategy for the team, Arena concentrates on the specific tactical choices the teams make in a single fight. Arena maps carry the arena_ prefix.

Arena features smaller maps that play out for a shorter time period. The round ends once one team has no players left in the arena, or when the central capture point has unlocked and been captured. The central capture point unlocks after one minute has passed in the current round. Rounds tend to be very fast and highly competitive, with an emphasis on your team's class makeup and your plan to counter the opposing team's class choices. Arena mode is suitable for smaller matches of three vs. three players, while still comfortably supporting huge knockdown twelve-on-twelve brawls. Arena works much like Sudden Death - respawning is disabled and there are no resupply lockers. There are usually very few health kits available, often located far from the main action and/or near high-risk hazards. This forces teams to rely more on Dispensers and Medics.

Players on the losing team may have to sit out to keep team numbers equal or to allow spectating players (who may had to sit out due to team number limits) to play. Players on the winning team, however, never have to sit out the next round.

The First Blood buff is unique to Arena Mode, and is awarded to the player who scores the first kill of the round. This buff gives the player a five second critical boost. Note that a Spy using a Dead Ringer provides the First Blood buff to whoever "kills" him even if he is still alive.

Arena maps:

Capture the Flag

Gamemode ctf.png
Main article: Capture the Flag
Wave goodbye to ya secret crap, dumbass!
The Scout

Capture the Flag features both RED and BLU bases, each containing its own Intelligence briefcase (known as the flag). The goal for both teams is to capture the enemy's Intelligence until they have reached the game's capture limit (default limit is 3 captures) while preventing their enemy from achieving the same.

Both team's Intelligence are typically located deep within their territory, usually in a symmetrical location from each other, in an area known as the "Intelligence Room". To pick up the Intelligence the player must touch the enemy's briefcase. While holding the enemy's Intelligence, the player must bring it to the location of their Intelligence where they must enter their 'capture zone' (indicated by the yellow and black lines) in order to successfully capture it. After each successful capture, your team will be rewarded with ten seconds of crit boost.

If the Intelligence carrier is killed or the Intelligence is intentionally dropped,the Administrator informs the teams over the loudspeaker and the Briefcase will remain stationary for 60 seconds, with a timer shown above the Intelligence indicating how much time is left before it is returned to the Intelligence room. During that time the Intelligence can be picked up as normal. Each time the Intelligence is dropped, the timer is reset. The enemy cannot move or reset the Intelligence themselves. The intelligence cannot be carried by players with an invulnerability buff, i.e. ÜberCharged players and Scouts under the effects of Bonk! Atomic Punch, and Intelligence carriers cannot receive an invulnerability buff. The intelligence also may not be picked up by a Soldier wielding the Rocket Jumper or a Demoman using the Sticky Jumper. Cloaked Spies cannot pick up Intelligence until their Cloak has been turned off. However, if a Spy does acquire the Intelligence then they will lose their disguise and no longer be able to change their disguise or Cloak. An exception to this is the Dead Ringer, which will force the Spy to drop the Intelligence, and Cloak as normal.

If the Intelligence carrier dies in a normally inaccessible part of the map, i.e. falling into a pit or off a cliff, the Intelligence is immediately returned to its starting location in the Intelligence room. If no team completes the capture limit before time runs out, the match will enter Sudden Death mode.

Unlike variants of Capture the Flag in other games, you can make a capture without actually having your Intelligence at your base.

Capture the Flag maps:

Control Point

Gamemode cp.png
Main article: Control Point (game mode)
See also: Control point (objective)
This point ain't gonna cap itself! Get over here!
The Engineer

Control Point maps have two main types of game modes.

Control points are circular platforms with a team-colored light and hologram in the center (neutral points will have a white light and hologram). To capture a point owned by the enemy team, the player simply stands on the point until the capture meter fills with his or her team color. The more players on a point, the faster it will capture, though only to a limited extent. Scouts, as well as Soldiers/Demomen (if the Pain Train is equipped) count as 2 players when capturing control points. Capture progress will not be made when players of both teams are on the control point. If all the capturing players are killed or driven off before the capture is completed, the capture progress will not reset immediately, but instead will slowly fade away.

There are three states for a capture point:

There are three main types of Control Point maps – Standard Control Point, Attack/Defend, and Medieval Attack/Defend.

Standard Control Point

Standard Control Point, or Linear Control Point, maps play symmetrically. Both teams start with two controlled points, and a central point starts out neutral. The team that captures all control points wins. Traditional Control Point maps will go into Sudden Death (or Stalemate) if no team captures all the control points before times runs out. Control points closer to a team's spawn point are captured more quickly by the enemy team.

Standard Control Point maps:

Attack/Defend

Gamemode attackdefend.png

Attack/Defend maps play asymmetrically. RED begins with all the points in their control. BLU wins if it captures all of RED's points. Points may only be captured in a set order (though some maps, such as Gravel Pit and Steel, may make exceptions). RED wins if it prevents BLU from capturing all points before the timer expires. Points captured by BLU are typically locked and cannot be captured again by RED.

Attack/Defend maps can come in various styles. Some maps, such as Dustbowl and Egypt, require the BLU team to capture three stages of two control points each to win the game. If the attacking team fails to win any stage, teams will switch and the defenders will then take turn to be the attackers, beginning with stage 1. Other maps such as Gravel Pit and Junction allow the attacker to capture two points in any order (points A or B) before attacking the final point (point C). Steel is a unique Attack/Defend map in that capturing each minor capture point (points A,B,C and D) will allow better accessibility to the main point (point E), such as allowing more routes into point E or extending bridges to the point so that classes other than the Scouts, Soldiers, Demomen, Pyros with the Detonator or sentry jumping Engineers can capture it. Thus means that one un noticed Scout can capture and win games without the team even realising.

Attack/Defend maps:

Medieval Attack/Defend

How did the manly men of Team Fortress 2 appear at a tenth century battlement? Simple. The Soldier angered a magician.
Valve

Medieval Attack/Defend is a part of Medieval Mode, added during the Australian Christmas update. It plays like regular Attack/Defend, but with one major twist: all guns are removed, and all weapons that are not defined as guns, known as "Olde" weapons, are all the player can use, including Mad Milk, but not Jarate. The only projectile weapons allowed are the Crusader's Crossbow and the Huntsman, with the exception of Melee Weapons that fling projectiles like the Sandman. Text chat is filtered (to Olde English) to resemble the language of the era (though with considerable inaccuracy) and the map is Medieval-themed.

Medieval Attack/Defend maps:

King of the Hill

Gamemode koth.png
Main article: King of the Hill
Since their discovery in 1895, hills have fascinated kings.
The Classless Update

King of the Hill is similar to Arena. King of the Hill focuses on a single control point at the center of the map, which is neutral and locked at the beginning of the round. Teams must make their way to the control point and capture it when it becomes available. Once the point is captured by a team, their team clock will start a three minute countdown. If the enemy team manages to capture the point back, their clock will start counting down while the other team’s clock freezes at the time the point was recaptured. A team wins once they own the point and their three minutes is expired.

King of the Hill maps:

Payload

Gamemode payload.png
Main article: Payload
Onward, great bomb-cart!
The Heavy

In Payload maps, BLU team must escort a cart full of explosives through a series of checkpoints and into RED's base within a certain amount of time. BLU team members move or 'push' the cart by standing next to it - the more people next the cart, the faster it moves. Any RED team member standing near the cart will stop it from venturing further regardless of the number of BLU team members on the cart. If no BLU players push the cart for 30 seconds, the cart will start moving backwards slowly until it reaches a checkpoint, BLU spawn, an uphill slope (in certain maps) or is pushed by BLU team members again, which will also reset the timer. The cart functions as a level 1 Dispenser for BLU team (and disguised enemy Spies) to restore health and ammunition to those pushing it. Ammunition is not restored to players standing at the front of the cart.

Some maps have one-way routes from the BLU side, which are sometimes closed off until a specific point is taken.

Some maps, such as Gold Rush, Hoodoo, and Thunder Mountain, are split into three stages that the BLU team must advance through and win. Stages one and two have 2 checkpoints and stage three has 3 checkpoints (2 for Hoodoo), including the final point. Badwater Basin and Upward maps have a single round with 4 checkpoints, including the final point. Advancing the cart to the next checkpoint gives the BLU team extra time. Advancing it to the final point moves the map onto the next stage. When the cart reaches the final point on the final stage, the Payload explodes and destroys RED's base, indicating BLU's victory.

Payload maps:

Payload Race

Gamemode payloadrace.png
Main article: Payload Race
Two teams. Two carts. Two tracks. Hilarity ensues.
In-game Summary

Unlike standard Payload maps, Payload Race maps feature both RED and BLU teams issued with a cart; in this way, teams are not defined to an attacking or defending role. To win, each team must simultaneously push their cart through enemy territory to reach the final point while preventing the enemy team from doing the same. As with Payload mode, team members push the cart by standing next to it, with more members increasing the speed of the cart and opposing team members halting it.

Unlike Payload mode, the cart will not move backwards after any duration of time and there is no time limit; the map will only end when one team successfully pushes their cart to the finish point. Each cart works as a Dispenser for their team (and disguised enemy Spies), restoring health and ammunition to those pushing the cart. Parts of the track may feature slopes, on which the cart will quickly roll back down to the bottom unless it is being constantly pushed.

Payload Race maps may or may not be split into multiple rounds.

Payload Race maps:

Territorial Control

Main article: Territorial Control
We have you surrounded, at least from this side!
The Soldier

In Territorial Control, the goal is to take over the entire map by capturing "territories". Each game is randomly selected from the six available layouts in a 'point against point' game where both teams must capture the opposite point while defending their own. After a team successfully captures the opposite point, the next round takes place in a different area of the map which is also randomly selected. After a team captures all four territories, that team must capture the enemy team's base. If the base point is captured (in Hydro, the Radar Dish for RED, the Power Plant for BLU), the attacking team wins the game. When the next round begins, territories are reset and a new random layout is selected. The Territorial Control game mode is not very popular amongst players.

In any game in TC (except in RED/BLU base games), if a control point is not captured within the eight minute time clock, the game then will go into Sudden Death mode.

Territorial control maps :

Special Delivery

Gamemode sd.png
Main article: Special Delivery (Game Mode)

Special Delivery is a Game Mode released as part of the Pyromania Update. In this game mode, a initially neutral briefcase of Australium must be transported to Poopy Joe's rocket before their opponent team can do the same. If a player from a team picks up the Australium and is killed while holding it, only players from the same team can pick it up again. If the team fails to do so within a few seconds, the briefcase is sent back to the drop site. The player who has hold of the Australium must be on the platform that is raised to the compartment at the head of the rocket must place the Australium in the compartment, launching the rocket and winning the round.

Special Delivery maps:

Mann vs. Machine

Main article: Mann vs. Machine (game mode)
Gamemode mvm.png
More rubble, less trouble!
The Heavy

Mann vs. Machine is a Game Mode that was released in the update of the same name. In this game mode, a team of six players must fend off a horde of robots attempting to carry a bomb to one of Mann Co.'s strongholds. Weapons can be upgraded and Canteen power-ups can be purchased at the spawn point. Cash may be picked up by the players upon destroying a robot (with the exception of the first Tank round), which may be used to upgrade your weapons and purchase your power-ups at the spawn point. A bonus amount of cash will be awarded to the team if all the cash from a wave is picked up and not a single cash was missing. Upgrades such as extra firing speed or extra reloading speed may be bought at the power-up station at spawn. All classes and most weapons have different upgrade abilities such as time to charge and amount of ammo the player can hold for the weapon. Upon the completion of a player's first mission, they will receive a Canteen. Surviving all the waves will complete the mission. There are currently 3 operations and 18 missions (6 missions each operation) in Mann vs. Machine.

Mann vs. Machine maps:

Training Mode

Training basic.png
Training offlinepractice.png
Main article: Training mode
I make it look easy.
The Sniper

Training maps are intended to teach the basics of gameplay and advanced techniques. Training mode shipped with the Mac Update, which introduced two official training maps.

Training maps are designed so that player gets taught the mechanics of a class while killing things. The offline practice can edit bots diffucluty to suit the player

Training maps:

Brandon Reinhart indirectly announced on the Official TF2 Blog on July 28, 2010 that Corey Peters is currently working on another official training map,[1] though details are as of yet unknown for which class or what gameplay mechanics it is focusing on.

Current training classes are: Soldier Demoman Engineer Spy

Other modes

Highlander

Highlander tournament prize
There can be only one!
The Demoman

Highlander mode restricts the number of players of each team to 9 players and only allows one player per class on each team. It is applicable to any game mode and can be activated by entering mp_highlander 1 into the console.

The idea behind Highlander mode existed previous to its official inclusion in the game, and had been implemented in server mods. Highlander mode was officially added in the February 3, 2010 Patch.

The game mode's name is a reference to the Template:W film series, where the phrase "There can be only one" was often repeated; this references the limitation of one player per class.

Dueling Mini-Game

Dueling Mini-game
Main article: Dueling Mini-Game
Let's settle this like gentlemen!
The Spy

A mini-game released in the Mann-Conomy Update, the Dueling Mini-Game is an action item that can be purchased in the Mann Co. Store, recieved via trading, or found via drops. When loaded into the action slot, the item can be triggered to pit the user against one person on the opposing team, provided they accept the challenge. Until the end of the round, points are gained by killing, or assisting in killing. Kills of the two players dueling are tracked, and the player with the most points wins the "duel" when the round ends. If one of the players disconnects or leaves the match, a short duel ban will be issued to that player. The item itself has a maximum of 5 uses, and is usable on all official maps. After winning your first duel, a Bronze Dueling Badge will be granted which will level up to Silver, Gold, followed by Platinum as you gain more wins. For every 10 wins, a Dueling Minigame is granted.

Medieval Mode

Gette It Onne!
Main article: Medieval Mode
So grab your swords, and keep your clothes on, because things are about to get clothing-non-optional Medieval on your fully clothed ass!
Medieval Mode publicity blurb

Medieval Mode was originally supposed to be released during the Polycount Update; however, it was held back a couple of months and released during the Australian Christmas update.

It changes gameplay by making it so only Olde weapons can be used and also causes dead players to drop small health kits instead of their weapon.

It also filters the chat's text into "Olde English".

-"Olde English", CAN and WILL censor swearing in the text chat.

Medieval maps:

Tournament Mode

Main article: Tournament Mode
Dominated, hippie! Get a job!
The Soldier

Tournament Mode is used mostly on competitive servers. It allows for the creation of custom teams, and the ability to track the success of a particular team over multiple games. A user interface is present for naming teams, and once team members have been organized, teams must say they are ready to start the game. In tournament mode there is no limit to team player limits and no autobalancing.

Community mods

TF2Ware, a community mod by Mecha the Slag
Main article: Custom Mods

Community game mode mods are custom, unofficial game modes, produced by talented community members. They vary from remakes of Team Fortress Classic game modes to completely original modes, and may change anything about the way a class works from their core mechanics to the weapons they carry. Some modes even add new enemies for the RED and BLU teams to fight, or put the player in the shoes of someone or something they couldn't play in an official mode. Some game mode mods have been honorably mentioned by Valve on the TF2 Official Blog.

Unused content

  • At one point there had been a planned Courier gamemode that got scrapped. There is still an announcer voiceline in the files from this gamemode.

See also

References