Wolfenstein (2009)

Raven Software

PC (Microsoft Windows) · PlayStation 3 · Xbox 360

3.20 from 556 ratings

1277 members have it in their collection · 33 playing now · 248 backlogged · 232 wish listed

How long? Main story 22h · with extras 11h (from 4 logged playthroughs)

Wolfenstein is the direct sequel to Return to Castle Wolfenstein and Spear of Destiny/Wolfenstein RPG. It featured a "re-imagined" disguised dark-haired B.J. Blazkowicz, retaining the unshaven look seen in Return to Castle Wolfenstein and dressed in civilian clothes rather than his usual military uniform. The game mainly consists of the player shooting his way through hordes of different types of … Read more
Wolfenstein is the direct sequel to Return to Castle Wolfenstein and Spear of Destiny/Wolfenstein RPG. It featured a "re-imagined" disguised dark-haired B.J. Blazkowicz, retaining the unshaven look seen in Return to Castle Wolfenstein and dressed in civilian clothes rather than his usual military uniform. The game mainly consists of the player shooting his way through hordes of different types of Nazis, ranging from normal soldier to ninjas. To deal with the large amount of enemies, the player has access to many typical WWII-weapons like the German MP40 or K98 rifle. In addition, during the course of the game he finds the medallion and learns four powers. While at first entering the Veil only allows him so see enemies more clearly and use strange flying creatures as bombs, he is later able to slow down time, surround himself with a protective shield or make himself stronger. However, the medallion's powers drain its energy, which needs to be refilled at power-spots that are nearly invisible in the real world. Read less
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Release dates

  • Aug 18, 2009 (North_America) PC (Microsoft Windows), PlayStation 3, Xbox 360
  • Aug 19, 2009 (Australia) PC (Microsoft Windows), PlayStation 3, Xbox 360
  • Aug 21, 2009 (Europe) PC (Microsoft Windows), PlayStation 3, Xbox 360
  • Oct 13, 2009 (Worldwide) PC (Microsoft Windows)
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Featured in lists

Planned by OtakuGamer729 · 147 games · 0

Rating distribution

5 stars
43
4 stars
144
3 stars
269
2 stars
83
1 star
17
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Community All Reviews Statuses

Luitenant_Gruber

Review Luitenant_Gruber 4/5 · Mar 18, 2023

*Warning: spoilers* Kind of misplaced standalone game, but still fun for what it is

When I wanted to play all the games in the Wolfenstein series, I eventually came across this one, simply called “Wolfenstein”. It serves as a loose sequel to Return to Castle Wolfenstein but can be, as far as I am concerned, treated like a standalone game.

In Wolfenstein, you play as the hero we know and love, William B.J. Blazkowicz. …

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When I wanted to play all the games in the Wolfenstein series, I eventually came across this one, simply called “Wolfenstein”. It serves as a loose sequel to Return to Castle Wolfenstein but can be, as far as I am concerned, treated like a standalone game.

In Wolfenstein, you play as the hero we know and love, William B.J. Blazkowicz. It takes place in some town called Isenstadt in the setting of World War II. If you thought that the original Wolfenstein and Return to Castle Wolfenstein had some wacky and crazy stories, you haven’t seen this one. Here, the Germans are excavating some ancient site in order to harvest rare “Nachtsonne” crystals, which they need to access the so called “Black Sun” dimension in order to harvest great power, used for turning the tide in the war. As the game progresses, the town of Isenstadt changes for the worst and normal German patrols are replaced by supernatural, ghost-like monster things.

In the previous game, Blazkowicz acquired a strange artifact called the Thule Medallion. William meets up with a resistance group called the Kreisau Circle and enters the town of Isenstadt. Here he learns of the strange voodoo that the Germans are pulling of with the excavations and the purpose of the Medallion. He learns that he can use the power of the Thule artifact to enter “The Veil”, a barrier between Earth and the Black Sun dimension, introducing the unique mechanic of the game in which you can run faster, spot enemies in the dark and go through doors with the Black Sun symbol on it. Blazkowicz eventually faces General Zetta, who is actually some kind of abomination when viewed through the Veil dimension. William whoops his ass and returns to town, in a new location that the resistance has set up, to avoid retaliation from the Germans. His buddy Caroline Becker is captured by the Germans, now lead by Blazkowicz’s arch enemy, general Deathshead. Like usual, Deathshead is building some kind of superweapon with the crystals. William travels to the castle that Caroline and Deathshead are in, confronts many enemies and some bosses who all guard the superweapon and eventually reaches Deathshead himself. In true Wolfenstein fashion, Deathshead escapes and William blows up the castle and rescues his chick. He goes after the Zeppelin that Deathshead escaped in and manages to bring it down. In the end credits, a wounded Deathshead crawls out of the crashed Zeppelin and the game is ready for the next follow up.

Wolfenstein plays in the same style as its predecessor. It is a First Person Shooter in which you hold a variety of weapons and gather more guns as you progress. The game follows a linear path but allows for backtracking during areas. It has some new and unique features however, like the black market, in which you can upgrade your held weapons and the new Thule Medallion, which let you enter the Veil and can be upgraded to use more special abilities like slow time, shielding, and dodging projectiles. For this reason, you need to be on the lookout for crystals and cash, making this some sort of FPS RPG. There are some scripted events of course in which you are forced to use a certain power of the Medallion, not allowing for different approaches to the situation, but this is fine.

The graphics in Wolfenstein are really nice for the time period. They look polished and the lighting and blue smoke effects are stunning. This game felt really next gen for the time. Explosion effects and the detail is all great.

In terms of sound design and music, this game is all right. The voice acting is good and the sound effects, like gunfire, are fine. The music is a little generic but it works.

I have to say that the so called “Motion Comics” where a nice addition, but at the same time, a desperate attempt of tying this game to the main series. In these comics, different pieces of story and past events from multiple Wolfenstein games are shown from The Spear of Destiny, Return to Castle Wolfenstein and the final battle with the Fuhrer himself in the first game.

The biggest problem I had with this game is that it just did not feel like a true sequel, it was just there and did not offer that satisfying feeling of continuing the story like the previous and following games.

The Multiplayer was terrible and broken at release but has been fixed later on with a massive patch. The only problem is that no one played this game anymore in a matter of months, so this can be considered a failure.

Nowadays, Wolfenstein (2009) is some sort of obscure relic, with almost no platform that offers it. It is not on Steam, the PlayStation store or the XBOX Live Store. The only way to experience this game as far as I know, is by buying it physically second hand somewhere, or really search the deepest pits of the internet.

In the end, I think the game was not that bad, but it is certainly not memorable. One does not miss out on anything with this game and for this reason, I would not recommend playing it, unless you wanted to experience every game in the series, like I did back then.

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juicetown

Status juicetown Apr 5, 2020

Just picked this up and I'm a few levels in for $3.00?? Definitely worth it so far. It's so different from the others in the series

Mazinkaiser

Review Mazinkaiser 5/5 · Apr 12, 2019

Wolfenstein (2009): A Wild Ride

I went in expecting this game to be mediocre, but this iteration of Wolfenstein is an action-packed and extra fun modern FPS that continues the Nazi-shooting action and adds a little more along the way.

Taking place in the occupied village of Isenstadt during WWII, you maneuver an open hub area to ten main missions and several side quests. Shooting …

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I went in expecting this game to be mediocre, but this iteration of Wolfenstein is an action-packed and extra fun modern FPS that continues the Nazi-shooting action and adds a little more along the way.

Taking place in the occupied village of Isenstadt during WWII, you maneuver an open hub area to ten main missions and several side quests. Shooting is a quick and exciting affair, with health regeneration and cover mechanics that do their job fairly well. The main weapons are useful, with the sniper being incredibly effective and the exotic weapons capable of mass destruction in a pinch.

The setting and set pieces really shine in this one, though - the village is a semi-open world, with enemies that lurk in every corner and a sense of freedom to search for intel and gold for upgrades and maneuver around enemies. Gone are the bullet sponge enemies - enemies go down in a few shots but on high enough difficulties you do the same, and there's no alarm system that presents frustrating stealth missions like in Return. The missions range from a spooky hospital to an underground series of caves underneath a farm to a gothic church and the depths of the Black Sun itself. Massive structures to take down, exciting boss fights - each mission in this game is a wild one.

Another intriguing aspect is an occult medallion that uses powers from certain crystals - these crystals can slow time, invoke shields and break through defenses. When using them the player occupies another plane of existence that looks gorgeous. Compared to Return to Castle Wolfenstein, this game looks incredible. The faces might not be current-gen up to par, but the environments are lovingly detailed.

Wolfenstein 2009 (Wolfen9?) appears to be just another mediocre modern shooter, but really goes to all the stops to create fun and unforgettable moments, making it well worth tracking down.

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Trooper527

Status Trooper527 Jan 29, 2017

Playing this to clear out the backlog. Not sure if I'm going to bother finishing, though. #Wolfenstein

epeternally

Status epeternally Jun 3, 2015

2009's Wolfenstein is the epitome of mediocrity. It's a functional game, with adequate weapons, forgettable though visually solid levels, and a barely there story that won't hold your attention. The most interesting part may be the supernatural powers that you're given, which lead to some new options for approaching a firefight, but outside of that Wolfenstein doesn't do anything special. …

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2009's Wolfenstein is the epitome of mediocrity. It's a functional game, with adequate weapons, forgettable though visually solid levels, and a barely there story that won't hold your attention. The most interesting part may be the supernatural powers that you're given, which lead to some new options for approaching a firefight, but outside of that Wolfenstein doesn't do anything special. Don't get me wrong, it's not a bad game, it's just the epitome of an average one, and there's no real reason to seek it out unless you're sorely starved for shooters or wondering who Caroline Becker in the infinitely superior Wolfenstein: The New Order is. It does allow you to keep all of your weapons at once, rather than the modern two weapon style of shooter, which is a plus but not enough to set it out from the crowd. I enjoyed Wolfenstein, I just didn't love it. An unremarkable 6.5/10.

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