Hitman 3 stands as the culmination of IO Interactive's reboot of the series, which took stealth and assassinations into a bunch of intricate, elaborate sandboxes. Though the Hitman series is done (for now), we know IOI's next move: a James Bond game, tentatively titled Project 007. The details on what exactly that game will entail are pretty thin at the moment, but with its three most recent Hitman games essentially forming one big, expansive package, we have a lot of material through which to search for clues as to what the developer might have in mind for an interactive take on 007.
We've played a ton of the World of Assassination series, and some aspects of its levels seem like they could work pretty well in a 007 game. At the very least, we've got some ideas about which we can speculate wildly. Take a look below at our notions of how Hitman might inform James Bond when players turn in their ICA 19 for a Walther PPK.
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Now Playing: Top 007 Things We Want From The IO Interactive Bond Game
IO's Hitman games are all about finding unconventional ways to kill your targets, like electrocuting them with frayed wires or tricking them into leaning against faulty railings. Those intricate and interesting dispatches would be perfect if combined with Bond's various gadgets. We know IOI is great at coming up with creative assassination scenarios, so it's not a stretch to expect them to offer players a handful of Bond gadgets that allow for some out-of-the-box thinking for their uses.
That's already a lot of what happens in a Hitman mission. You know your assassination target, and you can see where they are at any given moment--but you don't know how to get to them or how you might dispatch them without getting caught. Hitman missions are replayable to give you a chance to learn all their secrets, track where your targets go and what they do, and uncover a variety of vulnerabilities and options. IOI could put a lot of that sort of game design into the Bond format, encouraging you to use stealth, misdirection, and charm to get into high-security areas and learn important information. Hitman's missions are extremely nonlinear in this way, so we could be looking at a non-linear Bond game as well--at least in moment-to-moment gameplay. Imagine your mission parameters and targets changing and being dictated by how good a spy you actually are.
The final mission, Untouchable, balances sneaking, fighting, and planning in a way that shakes up the formula you've been dealing with for 20 missions, and it feels like something that would be right at home in a Bond game. This isn't just a level where you shoot your way through everyone you see (although you can, in fact, do so). Some train cars are filled guards in numbers that will overwhelm you; others are patrolling in places that make them inopportune to eliminate or dispose of without getting caught. If you want to take out everyone, you have to use various tools like flashbangs, grenades, and even soda cans. Untouchable is a mission that feels like a perfect mix of Agent 47's preternatural powers for murder and his status as a real person who must protect himself--making it seem like something that would translate extremely well into a Bond game. IOI could be testing how it'll hit the Bond set pieces while still making him feel human (as opposed to some unstoppable super-soldier) and encourage players to rely on dealing with enemies in clever ways as well as with straight-up shooter skill.
Bond movies aren't just about Bond--he interacts with other agents, finds allies, and relies on others to help him over the course of a mission. So it's not much of a stretch to see how The Farewell might show us what IOI is thinking in having a secret agent working with other secret agents mid-mission. Finding Diana at key moments (and in particular disguises) gives you opportunities to enlist her help to maneuver your assassination target to a particular location and set up possible kills. And if you follow through with the Mission Story called "The Tour" and the hidden follow-up one, you can see instances where there's more of a reliance on carefully scripted events, rather than the interactions of metaphorical cogs in the larger mechanism of the entire level. The combination of a larger scripted set piece, other characters and their actions, and the opportunity to work with other agents or assets on the ground feels like a perfect mixture for a larger design philosophy for 007.
Bond movies aren't just about Bond--they're also about villains who are often over-the-top in their evil schemes and brilliant machinations. Hitman has demonstrated its ability to add nuance and dimension to characters who exist for one level, just to be shot in the head (or crushed, electrocuted, thrown off a roof, and so on)--some of those characters are extremely interesting and their stories are pretty damn detailed. It seems very likely that we can expect to see IOI deploy this sort of approach (and solid writing skill) on a much larger scale on a Bond villain. With, say, 10 hours of game length, IOI has the opportunity to give us a lot more time to learn about its antagonist villain through spying, overhearing info, talking to other characters, and spending time with the villain in particular. That could mean that we could see one of the most fascinating, fleshed-out villains in the Bond pantheon.