10 MOST VENOMOUS SNAKES ON EARTH

10 MOST VENOMOUS SNAKES ON EARTH
From the lethal bites of Australian serpents to the fatal sting of the India's National Reptile, today we look at the Most Venomous Snakes On Earth.

10. Belcher's Sea Snake


Unlike some of the highly aggressive entries featured on this list, Belcher's Sea Snake, or the faint-banded sea snake as it's also called, is much more docile. A mistake in a 1996 first edition of a Smithsonian guide to snakes started the rumor that this was actually the most poisonous snake in the world. In reality, it's venom is much less dangerous than ones belonging to the majority of snakes on this list, and even then it will refrain from injecting venom in most of its bites.

Venom is measured by the amount of toxin required to prove lethal for half of a sample group of animals. This is called an LD50 test. This is a relatively crude, barbaric experiment for testing venom lethality, as well as rife with outstanding variables such as how the toxin is administered with varieties ranging from muscle to vein to fat injections, or even forced inhalation or feeding. But despite this, it remains the main route by which the world measures the deadliness of venom. The true danger of the snake's venom is uncertain as data surrounding its LD50 results are scarce and difficult to compare to other venoms, while rumors continue to run rampant regarding its danger. Many online sources still frame the Belcher's sea snake as the deadliest, but in reality, it has nowhere near the most lethal of snakebites in the world.

9. Green Mamba


Not quite as nasty as it's notorious onyx-colored cousin, the brilliant Green Mamba is still quite dangerous. Armed with a mix of neurotoxins and cardiotoxins , the green mamba's bite targets the body's organ functions, first causing disorientation through dizziness and nausea before graduating to a swollen throat, a shift in heartbeat patterns, and eventually convulsions and respiratory paralysis.

Fatal results aren't always guaranteed once bitten, however untreated bites are thought to have a high mortality rate. Thankfully, the afflicted area bit by a green mamba tends to swell, making the danger associated with its venom a bit easier to identify and hopefully allow for the application of an antidote. Still, this species has very long front fangs that the snake actually has some control over, making more severe envenoming strikes a likely occurrence. In this case, more often than not the effects set in rapidly, and the bitten victim may perish in as little time as 30 minutes.

8. Boomslang


Hanging from the trees of Sub-Saharan Africa is a green and black serpent with a subtle yet treacherous bite. Known as the Boomslang, this species of snake is the only one of its family to prove harmful to humans. Normally found to have a set of inept fangs and a compact venom gland, the boomslang is the outlier among the Colubridae family with massive syringe-like injectors that protrude from the back of its mouth. The venom it produces takes time to process, but the symptoms are severe and can consist of headaches, sleepiness, and even mental disorders.

Mostly a hemotoxin , the boomslang's volatile injection can also stall the coagulation of wounds, leading to a lethal end by external or internal bleeding. It can also cause hemorrhaging of the brain and other muscles.  Due to the hours it takes for the symptoms to set in, victims are often lulled into a false sense of safety, thinking it to be a venomless strike called a dry bite. As a result, those struck by a boomslang's venom sometimes fail to receive the antivenom they need in time. Luckily for the public, though, this snake remains relatively tepid, not too territorial, and will only strike if handled or threatened directly.

7. Gwardar


Often referred to as the western brown snake, the Australian colloquially named Gwardar was christened as such after the Aboriginal advice given to those who would run into such a snake, translating to: "go the long way around." While it may be typically shy, this would still serve as great advice given this snake's penchant for speed. Quick to take the defensive, and even quicker to strike, this highly alert species doesn't need much to get nervous. The gwardar comes in a small variety of looks, but will on average grow close to six feet in length.

Its scales feature an orange-brown hue and the head will either feature a small black V shape on the back or be covered entirely by a coat of black scales. Found all across the continent of Australia, these deadly reptiles are found in forests, grasslands, and urban areas alike. It doesn't have the most deadly venom around, but the gwardar delivers it in high doses through its tiny fangs. This can turn fatal as bleeding complications, abdominal pain, and even kidney damage will occur with severity dependant on the amount of venom injected. But instead of risking it and hoping for a low dosage, next time you're in the outback, just follow the advice and gwardar !

6. Rattlesnake


Infamous for its namesake noisy appendage, the Rattlesnake is actually a type of pit viper, and a highly venomous one at that. Populating forests and deserts from Alberta down to Argentina, all 36 species of the rattlesnake are endemic to the Americas. Unlike other snakes who may take time and maturity to develop their complex venoms, adolescents of this species are born with functioning fangs and venom able to execute at birth.

The venom, like others, results in decaying tissue and blood clotting impediments. But some species of rattlesnake have even been known to cause paralysis with their penetrating strike. Rattlesnake venom is very complex in general, usually containing a mixture of up to 15  different enzymes. The toxins contain immobilizing and digestive components as well, making sure to not only injure their prey but also to slow down and tenderize it as well. But even with all their neat tricks, many species of rattlesnake are endangered today as a majority of their native habitat has been invaded for the past century by what may be their greatest threat: the automobile.

5. Black Mamba


This snake is considered to be the most dangerous and fear-inducing snake in Africa. But their seclusion and timidness keep Black Mamba snakebite rates low, luckily for the public. These snakes are often identified by their coffin-esque heads and long slender bodies which average at around 8 feet in length and max out at almost 15 feet! One feature you can't rely on to recognize a black mamba, though, is its color. Somewhat of a misnomer, black mamba's are rarely black, often appearing in olive, brown, khaki or grey shades. Adolescents can be found wearing lighter hues of these colors with adults darkening as they age.

If you can't spot a black mamba from its look, though, hope you never have to try to identify by its venom. Before the advent of antivenom for this species, its bite was 100% lethal. Without treatment, its victims will typically pass within seven to fifteen hours of being bitten, and some reports as recent as 2008 tell of victims having a heart attack within one hour of envenomation. Those struck by a black mamba's bite will experience abnormal skin sensations like pins pricking them or a limb falling asleep. They'll then often begin to lose motor functions until an erratic heart rate will set in, often leading to cardiac or respiratory failure.

4. Tiger Snake


Usually sporting a thick, blunt head and even thicker, yellowish-striped body, the Tiger Snake of Australia also has numerous variations in physical appearance depending on its inhabited region. Tasmanian tiger snakes, for example, are typically dark brown or black with faint banding stripes. Meanwhile the Western tiger snake is a much deeper black with bright yellow bands and a yellow stomach.

But no matter the look, these snakes at least share one thing in common: their terrifying venom. The mortality rate of untreated tiger snake bites is about 40 to 60 percent, though given their common occurrence in Australia, fatalities are few and far between. This wasn't always the case, but since the introduction of a specific Tasmanian antivenom used to treat all Tasmanian snakebites, tiger snake casualties have lessened considerably in the 21st century.

3. King Cobra


As the longest venomous snake at a maximum length of more than 19 feet, armed with a grizzled, growling hiss and its iconic hood, the King Cobra is truly majestic. And in proper fashion, its venomous bite is a royal pain in the keister . Sometimes only taking a matter of 30 minutes to set in, the symptoms induced from the venom of India's national reptile can send a victim from feeling a bit tired and dizzy to paralysis and into a coma in no time. Some antivenoms exist, but they are luckily rarely needed as very few envenomed snakebites occur with this breed. In fact, king cobras are mainly interested in eating other snakes like rat snakes, pythons and pit vipers. Still, snake charmers are commonly found throughout India and they make up a good portion of all reported king cobra bites.

2. Saw-Scaled Viper


While relatively small in size, this snake is at the top of the big four of India and one of the deadliest in the world, contributing to more snakebite mortalities than any other serpent. Found often in populated areas, the Saw-Scaled Viper crawls low and deliberate with acute alertness, giving inspiration to its other name: the carpet viper. These creatures sidewind to make there way around, keeping part of their body ever still in case of a potential predator...or prey.

At a maximum of length of just under three feet and brown, gray, or olive patterned skin flecked with white, the saw-scaled viper lurks unseen near cities throughout Africa, India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and the Middle East. Another unique trait of this species comes from one of its primary defense mechanisms. Living up to its namesake, these vipers will grind their scales together like a rigid saw when threatened, creating a coarse, foreboding warning sound towards the aggressors.

Though they still won't give you time to react as they prove notoriously easy to agitate. Victims that suffer a bite from the saw-scaled viper experience profuse bleeding as chemicals in the venom block blood from clotting. These bites can result in permanent damage or loss of an organ, necrosis, extreme pain and swelling, and even a cerebral hemorrhage , making this tiny snake's bite as violent as it is lethal.

1. Inland Taipan


Commonly called the fierce snake, this Australian native is definitively the most venomous snake in the world. Based on venom measurements, it only requires two and a half hundredths of a milligram per kilogram of the target's weight to cause ones demise, and in some tests only one hundredth of a milligram was needed. That means an average 75 kilogram, or about 165 pound, person would only require, at most, about a 1.875 milligrams of venom to meet their end. To make matters even more frightening, the Inland Taipan can administer an average of 44 milligrams per bite, and has a maximum recorded dose of 110 milligrams!

15 MOST VENOMOUS SNAKES IN THE WORLD

TOP 10 DEADLIEST SNAKES IN THE WORLD

TOP 10 MOST VENOMOUS ANIMALS ON EARTH

TOP 10 DEADLIEST SNAKES NOT TO MESS WITH

10 MOST DANGEROUS VENOMOUS SNAKE IN THE WORLD

TOP 5 MOST VENOMOUS SPIDERS IN THE WORLD


10 MOST DANGEROUS VENOMOUS SNAKE IN THE WORLD

10 MOST DANGEROUS VENOMOUS SNAKE IN THE WORLD
If we are scared of a bite, it surely has to come from a snake. Well, that’s when we aren’t considering the ones inflicted by a shark that’ll probably chomp off your entire foot, the focus is on an “innocent” bite that just leaves you paralyzed or dead! Even though not all snakes are venomous, some are and that is enough for us to be scared of them all. The scary bit is that some of them have the potential to inflict a death sentence within 30 minutes! Wanna know about the most venomous snakes in the world? ut first you need a good news, so know that most of the snakes aren’t coming to get you- they just need privacy and if you don’t come in the way, you are safe!

Number 10 Rattlesnake
The name comes from the rattle located at the end of their tails, which makes a loud rattling noise when vibrated. Take that as a warning bell, when you hear it- you run! Being a mixture of five to 15 enzymes, their venom is hemotoxic, destroying tissue, causing necrosis and coagulopathy. Rattlesnakes use their venom to immobilize and disable the prey, where their digestive enzymes break down tissue to prepare for later ingestion. If you aren’t already trembling, remember that rattlesnakes are the leading contributor to snakebite injuries in North America. Scary!

Number 9
Death Adder When a snake is named after death, you have no choice but to be scared or rather VERY scared! Native to Australia, this snake has a broad flattened, triangular head and a thick body with colored bands and reaches a maximum body length of 70–100 cm. Death adders possess the longest fangs of any Australian snake and is one of the most venomous land snakes globally. Its venom contains neurotoxin which can cause paralysis or even kill, that too within six hours after the bite. It can deliver the fastest strike among all venomous snakes recorded in Australia. Shouldn’t we be scared?

Number 8 Viper
The vipers have relatively long, hinged fangs that permit deep penetration and injection of venom. Yikes! Their venom contains an abundance of protein-degrading enzymes that cause pain, necrosis, blood loss from cardiovascular damage and disruption of the blood-clotting system. All this leads to a sudden drop in blood pressure which can cause DEATH! Doesn’t sound nice! Apart from being venomous, why else should you fear the vipers? Simple, they are one of the most widely spread snakes so your chances of encountering them are pretty high! Anybody looking forward to this meeting?

Number 7 Philippine Cobra
This 1m long snake has long cervical ribs capable of expanding, so when threatened, a hood can be formed. But that’s not why the Philippine Cobra has made it to this list, there are some interesting things awaiting your attention! Its venom can cause neurotoxicity and respiratory paralysis which start with symptoms like headache, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, diarrhea, dizziness, and difficulty breathing. You know what’s the most terrifying thing about this snake? They are capable of accurately spitting their venom at a target up to 3m, now that takes the “maintain distance” norm to a whole new level!

Number 6 Tiger Snake
How about we tell you that Tiger snakes accounted for 17% of identified snakebite victims in Australia between 2005 and 2015? A tiger snake’s bite causes localized pain in the foot and neck region, tingling, numbness, and sweating, followed by a fairly rapid onset of breathing difficulties and paralysis. The mortality rate from untreated bites is reported to be between 40 and 60%. That’s already too much to handle but wait for the worse. Tiger snakes give birth to 20 to 30 live young! Well, such venomous snakes should be given family planning lectures, not for them but for our life, don’t you agree?

Number 5 Black Mamba
The longest species of venomous snake indigenous to the African continent, Black Mamba grows to about 2-3m and its skin color varies from grey to dark brown. When you see a Black Mamba opening its inky-black mouth, spreading its narrow neck-flap and hissing, run for your life because the snake is feeling threatened. So what happens when the snake feels threatened from you? It might give you a series of kisses with its fangs! And since its venom is primarily composed of potent neurotoxins, it may cause a fast onset of symptoms. Even though you see them as aggressive beings, they would try to flee from humans unless cornered. Strange!

Number 4 Taipan
These large, fast-moving Australasian snakes are considered some of the most deadly snakes. They possess highly neurotoxic venom with some other toxic constituents that have multiple effects on victims. It may paralyze the victim's nervous system and clot the blood, which then blocks blood vessels. The venom in a Taipan is strong enough to kill up to 12,000 guinea pigs. Like seriously? Another problem associated with this snake is that due to its larger side, it is capable of injecting a large quantity of venom in the victim! OMG, we are scared for life!

Number 3 Blue Krait
The Blue Krait snake may attain a total length of 108 cm, with a tail 16 cm long. Dorsally, it has a pattern of 27-34 dark-brown, black, or bluish-black crossbands on the body and tail, which are narrowed and rounded on the sides. Its venom has caused an untreated mortality rate of 60-70% on humans. The venom is a neurotoxin, 16 times more potent than that of a Cobra which quickly induces muscle paralysis. Another shocking thing about them is that they hunt and kill other snakes, even cannibalizing other Kraits. A snake that is also a cannibal, fear has a new definition!

Number 2 Eastern Brown Snake
If we tell you that 1/14,000 of an ounce of its venom is enough to kill an adult human, what would be your reaction? Fear, obviously- we were just checking if you are still in your senses or have passed out already! Since its preferred habitat is along the major population centers of Australia, you have all the more reasons to fear it! Alright, we know that’s too much to bear so we decided to show you the positives. Even though the venom contains both neurotoxins and blood coagulants, less than half of bites contain venom and they prefer not to bite if at all possible. Finally some good news!

Number 1 Inland Taipan
When we say that the most venomous snake is endemic to semi-arid regions of central east Australia, it comes as no shock, right? Its venom, drop for drop, is by far the most toxic of any snake! Who would want to be anywhere near it, not us for sure! It is estimated that one bite possesses enough lethality to kill at least 100 fully grown men, and, depending on the nature of the bite, it has the potential to kill someone in as little as 30 to 45 minutes if left untreated.

7 MOST VENOMOUS SNAKES IN THE EARTH

7 MOST VENOMOUS SNAKES IN THE EARTH
Number 7 Russell’s Viper
For most poisonous snakes the percentage of dry bites is relatively high. But the Russell's Viper always goes for the maximum venom dose. A full grown Russell Viper, also called the chain vibrators India's deadliest snake considering for thousands of deaths each year. Those snakes are found throughout most of the world. But arguably the most venomous are the source caled vibrantly chain Viper found primarily in the center East and Central Asia particularly India China and South East Asia.

6 Tiger Snake
Found in Australia.The tiger snake is a very potent neurotoxic venom. Tiger snake is recognizable because of its width of yellow bands the bites are very accurate and without medicine will result in death nearly three-quarters of the time symptoms can include localized pain in the foot and neck region tingling numbness and sweating followed by a fairly rapid onset of breathing difficulties and paralysis.

5 king Cobra or Indian Cobra
King cobra is one of the largest venomous snake in the world and also one of the aggressive sneaking the plane. This snakes can run fast and bite quickly the another those venoms contain the neurotoxic. So if you get bites of this snakes, your body will be paralyzed and you can't take beating properly three to six hours without anti-venom your blood will be the dilemma and you will die.

4 Black Mamba
this snake is usually found in Africa they are identified to be highly aggressive and strike with deadly shortness. They are also the fastest land snake in the world able of approaching speeds of up to 20 km/h. A single bite holds efficient venom to kill then humans the black member will bite many of time when it attacks if the bite is not treated it is nearly always going to result in death

3 Eastern Brown Snake
If you want to know which snakes is most aggressive venomous sounds deadly combined Eastern brown snake is one of them you can found this deadly snake in Australia, Papua New Guinea and Indonesia this snake venom contains pre and postsynaptic neurotoxins which are bites this snake is fast-moving can be threatening under certain conditions and has been known to chase offenders and frequently strike at them

2 Inland Taipan
Inland Taipan is the most toxic venom of any land snake in the world you can commonly found in semi-arid regions of Central East Australia the highest yield reported for one single  bite is 110 milligrams.

1 Belcher’s Sea Snake
According to various experts the belches see snake's venom is about a 100 times more toxic than any other snakes in the world are several milligrams is robust enough to kill 1000 humans less than one-quarter of bites will include venom and they are relatively docile the fisherman is normally the victims of these attacks as they encounter the species when they pick nets from the sea located in waters off South East Asia and northern Australia. The good thing is that this snake is considered to be very timid and would take a lot of provoking to get it to bite you

TOP 10 MOST VENOMOUS ANIMALS ON EARTH

TOP 10 MOST VENOMOUS ANIMALS ON EARTH
Don’t you just love animals? Cute and cuddly little creatures that you can’t help but nuzzle? Yeah, well, if you tried that with any of these beasts of nature... you’d probably be dead. We’re leaving the snuggly world of lovable fluff behind to warn you of the world's ten most venomous animals!

10. Indian Red Scorpion

Indian Red Scorpion, most venomous animal, most poisonous animal, top ten venomous animal,  top ten poisonous animal

His friends know him as Hottentotta tamulus. You can call him Indian Red Scorpion, the Toxic Terror! This Arthropoda, which can grow up to 3.5-inches long (90 mm), can be found skittering about the lands of India, eastern Pakistan, the lowlands of Nepal, and, rarely, in Sri Lanka, terrorizing anyone that crosses its path with a dangerous, bulbous stinger. One sting from the Indian Red Scorpion can lead to a plethora of uncomfortable symptoms, including vomiting, cyanosis, shortness of breath, cardiac dysrhythmia, shock, hypertension, priapism, loss of consciousness, and death. In clinical studies, the mortality rate of envenomation has been reported anywhere between 8% and 40%.

9. Funnel-Web Spider

Funnel-Web Spider, most venomous animal, most poisonous animal, top ten venomous animal,  top ten poisonous animal

Though the venom from the Australian funnel-web spider was recently linked to the possible prevention of brain damage from strokes, it’s ill-advised to run out and give one of these Atracinae a hug. Thanks to the introduction of an anti-venom, the death rate from envenomation has dropped drastically, but it’s still best to avoid their path. While you may not die, a bite from the funnel-web can cause sweating, twitching, elevated heart rate and  blood pressure, vomiting, confusion, metabolic acidosis, hypertension, unconsciousness, and shortness of breath. It’s no picnic, which is why the male funnel-web replaced the Brazilian wandering spider as the most dangerous arachnid.

8. Boomslang

Boomslang, most venomous animal, most poisonous animal, top ten venomous animal,  top ten poisonous animal

Though its name is quirky and fun to say, the venomous boomslang from Sub-Saharan Africa is far less enjoyable than its moniker. It is one of few members of the Colubridae family that is harmful to humans, thanks to its larger fangs and venom glands. While it’s common for venom to attack the nervous and respiratory systems, that of the boomslang is a hemotoxin that impedes the coagulation of blood in its victim. Along with a headache, sleepiness, and nausea, a boomslang bite can cause hemorrhaging in vital parts of the body. Even with the administration of an anti-venom, it’s possible that a patient may require a complete blood transfusion to survive the bite.

7. Coastal Taipan

Coastal Taipan, most venomous animal, most poisonous animal, top ten venomous animal,  top ten poisonous animal

Known for being the world’s sixth most venomous snake, the coastal taipan or common taipan carries an unpleasant dose of taicatoxin, or a neurotoxin that hinders the ability of blood to clot. Within minutes of being bitten, victims can experience convulsions, internal bleeding, nausea and vomiting, deterioration of muscle, and kidney failure, all leading to death within 30 minutes to 2 1/2 hours. There is no surviving the bite of the coastal taipan if left untreated, as it delivers a dosage 1,000x the amount needed to kill the average adult human. Up until 1956, when an anti-venom was introduced by the Commonwealth Serum Laboratories, anyone bitten by a common taipan likely prepared for an uncomfortable death.

6. Cone Snail

Cone Snail, most venomous animal, most poisonous animal, top ten venomous animal,  top ten poisonous animal

Most of us know snails as a delicious cuisine but the people of the Western Indo-Pacific region, the Cape coast of South Africa, the Mediterranean, and even southern California may recognize snails as a troubling, albeit beautiful, predatory mollusk capable of envenoming and killing humans. The most predominant feature of the cone snail is its outer shell, which is attractive enough to be sought for jewelry or collection. Shell collectors heed caution, however, as the harpoon-like sting of this snail can lead to excruciating pain, paralysis, and respiratory failure. On the plus side, the snail’s venom has been implemented in trials for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease, and epilepsy.

5. Irukandji Jellyfish

Irukandji Jellyfish, most venomous animal, most poisonous animal, top ten venomous animal,  top ten poisonous animal

Ranging from a few centimeters to one meter in length (1 inch to 3 feet) and 4 mm wide, the Irukandji jellyfish from Australia’s eastern coast may be the tiniest creature to grace this list. Despite its size, the Irukandji is best known for having its own syndrome. A sting from this oceanic critter’s tentacles leads to muscle cramps, severe pain in the back and kidneys, burning skin, vomiting, and increased heart rate. Amidst all this, the venom can also lead to death, but typically results in psychological alterations, which may make an otherwise happy person feel morose. The death count attributed to the Irukandji is skewed as it’s unclear how many are misattributed to other incidents.

4. Dubois Sea Snake

Dubois Sea Snake, most venomous animal, most poisonous animal, top ten venomous animal,  top ten poisonous animal

Aipysurus duboisii, or the Dubois’sea snake is endemic to Papua New Guinea, New Caledonia, and, of course, the coastal regions of Australia. Found in depths of around 262 feet (80 meters) in coral reefs, you’re unlikely to happen across this slithery serpent on land, making it easier to avoid the unpleasant effects on the nervous system from a bite of this otherwise docile creature. In lab tests, the venom of this sea snake killed mice with an injection of only .44 mg/kg of the rodent’s body weight, earning it the title of the most venomous sea snake and second most venomous snake in the world behind… well, you’ll see.

3. Blue-Ringed Octopus

Blue-Ringed Octopus, most venomous animal, most poisonous animal, top ten venomous animal,  top ten poisonous animal

A favorite amongst the Archive team, the blue-ringed octopus is a stunning creature – both visually and physically. While the coloring of the octopus makes it look like a docile creature, its venomous bite distributes a tetrodotoxin vital in the tiny creature’s survival and feeding. This 8-inch (20 cm) Octopoda carries enough venom to kill 26 adults as even the tiniest of nips can cause total body paralysis. It’s fairly easy to not tick off this eight-tentacled wonder, but in case you need a warning, the blue-ringed octopus is known to change its color to bright yellow and flash its blue rings when threatened.

2. Inland Taipan Snake

Inland Taipan Snake, most venomous animal, most poisonous animal, top ten venomous animal,  top ten poisonous animal

If you thought the coastal taipan was a beast, let us introduce you to its land-based cousin, the inland taipan. Just one bite from this east-Australian terror is estimated to pack enough venom to kill 100 adult males or over 250,000 mice! As the inland taipan is indigenous to remote regions, it hasn’t been connected to many deaths, but it would take only 45 minutes from envenomation for a grown person to perish. The taipan’s cocktail of neurotoxins, hemotoxins, nephrotoxins and mycotoxins can lead to multi-organ failure preceded by dizziness, diarrhea, vomiting, and convulsions.

1. Box Jellyfish

Box Jellyfish, most venomous animal, most poisonous animal, top ten venomous animal,  top ten poisonous animal

Harmless and quite squishy looking, the box jellyfish, or sea wasp, sports 15 tentacles, each reaching upwards of 10 feet long (3 meters) and equipped with 5,000 stinging cells. The most fatal of the box jellyfish species is the Chironex fleckeri, which carries a venom potent enough to kill a grown adult within a few minutes. Once envenomed, the jellyfish’s prey may suffer from nervous system damage and, if not treated right away, can go into cardiac arrest.

10 MOST VENOMOUS SNAKES ON EARTH

15 MOST VENOMOUS SNAKES IN THE WORLD

TOP 10 DEADLIEST SNAKES IN THE WORLD

TOP 10 MOST VENOMOUS ANIMALS ON EARTH

TOP 5 MOST VENOMOUS SPIDERS IN THE WORLD

TOP 10 INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT NEPTUNE

10 INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT MARS

TOP 5 STARS THAT PUT OUR SUN TO SHAME

TOP 10 AMAZING FACTS ABOUT THE SUN

10 INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT THE SUN

10 SCIENCE FACTS YOU DIDN'T LEARN IN SCHOOL

TOP 10 SCIENCE FACTS NO LONGER TAUGHT IN SCHOOLS

10 RECENT SCIENCE DISCOVERIES THAT BLEW OUR MINDS

TOP 10 RIDICULOUS SCIENCE MYTHS YOU WERE TOLD GROWING UP


TOP 10 OLDEST ANIMAL SPECIES ON EARTH

TOP 10 OLDEST ANIMAL SPECIES ON EARTH
From jellyfish to the horseshoe shrimp, we count down the top 10 oldest animal species on earth.

10. Martialis heureka

TOP 10 OLDEST ANIMAL SPECIES ON EARTH 10. Martialis heureka

120 Million Years Old: Considered the oldest ant species in the world, the Martialis heureka was found in the Amazon rainforest in the year 2000. Completely blind, this creature lives underground and comes up to forage at night. It can’t dig, so it has to rely on pre-existing tunnels. It’s so strange looking that the Martialis part of its name means “from Mars.” The coolest part of all? Its DNA has barely changed in the last 100 million years.

9. Horseshoe Shrimp

TOP 10 OLDEST ANIMAL SPECIES ON EARTH 9. Horseshoe Shrimp

200 Million Years Old: Formerly known as the Triops cancriformis, this ancient shrimp species is no small fry when it comes to staying power. It was around when dinosaurs roamed the planet and shows no signs of slowing down. Adult horseshoe shrimp typically die when their habitats dry up – however, the babies have an advantage. Eggs can survive up to 20 years in extreme conditions. Talk about stubborn!

8. Sturgeon

TOP 10 OLDEST ANIMAL SPECIES ON EARTH 8. Sturgeon

200 Million Years Old: A sturgeon isn’t one type of fish – it actually refers to 27 different species, all as old as time. Sadly, despite their age, sturgeons are card carrying members of the endangered species list. People harvest them for their roe, an ingredient in caviar. It’s believed that four species in the sturgeon family are already extinct. When left alone, sturgeons live up to 60 years and can be found in North America and Eurasia.

7. Lamprey

TOP 10 OLDEST ANIMAL SPECIES ON EARTH 7. Lamprey

360 Million Years Old: This “living fossil” won’t win any beauty pageants, but, boy, does it have a story to tell. Largely unchanged since its beginning, the lamprey  is an eel-like parasite that attaches itself to fish and feeds on body fluids. This action often severely injures or kills the host. Creepy and disgusting, right? But that’s not all. Lampreys can grow up to two feet in length. You wouldn’t want to run into one in a dark room.

6. Coelacanth

TOP 10 OLDEST ANIMAL SPECIES ON EARTH 6. Coelacanth

360 Million Years Old: Originally thought to be extinct, a museum curator discovered one living off the coast of South Africa in 1938. This rare fish is an object of fascination for scientists because of its similarity to the ancient fish that eventually evolved into the first land vertebrae. Many believe the “coelacanth genome” holds the key to learning more about our own evolution. Who knows what the future will bring?

5. Horseshoe Crab

TOP 10 OLDEST ANIMAL SPECIES ON EARTH 5. Horseshoe Crab

445 Million Years Old: You’ve probably seen one of these at your local aquarium, but did you know this creature had such a long history? Horseshoe crabs live in shallow areas of the ocean and come to shore when it’s time to mate. Fishermen sometimes use them as bait to catch eels, and in China eggs are used as food. If you find these guys disturbing, know this – horseshoe crabs are related to arachnids, aka spiders.

4. Nautilus

TOP 10 OLDEST ANIMAL SPECIES ON EARTH 4. Nautilus

500 Million Years Old: The nautilus lives on the “molted skins” of hermit crabs and lobsters and has an amazing sense of smell. It can grow to about 7 inches in diameter and lives for roughly 20 years. Prized for its attractive spiral shell that people like to collect, the nautilus is at risk for extinction. Areas that once housed hundreds of them now have only one or two.

3. Jellyfish

TOP 10 OLDEST ANIMAL SPECIES ON EARTH 3. Jellyfish

505 Million Years Old: In 2007, researchers at the University of Kansas discovered a fossil 200 million years older than the oldest known jellyfish fossil. We’re looking at a squishy blob that existed before the first land plants appeared. Jellyfish can grow about 6 feet in length but have very short lifespans. They feed on plankton, fish eggs, and other jellyfish.

2. Sponge

TOP 10 OLDEST ANIMAL SPECIES ON EARTH 2. Sponge

760 Million Years Old: Who lives in a pineapple under the sea? Actually, the sponge has been around since before pineapples existed. Found in both tropical and polar waters, the sponge usually attaches itself to firm surfaces like rocks. Believe it or not, some can live up to 200 years. Sponges are asexual and most function as hermaphrodites. There’s a story you can tell the kids in science class.

1. Cyanobacteria

TOP 10 OLDEST ANIMAL SPECIES ON EARTH 1. Cyanobacteria

3.5 Billion Years Old: Yep, we’re counting bacteria. Referred to as the “most successful group of microorganisms on earth,” you can find cyanobacteria in just about any spot with water. Foodies, take note. It’s often used as biofertilizer for rice.

WORLD OF WARCRAFT WARLORDS OF DRAENOR

WORLD OF WARCRAFT WARLORDS OF DRAENOR
The MMO juggernaut rolls on, without changing direction.

World of Warcraft is nine years old. If you want to take a moment to let that sink in, that’s perfectly understandable. It has remained the biggest subscription-based MMO in the world throughout that period: it’s still huge, even if the prevailing narrative surrounding it is of an empire in gradual decline. 7.6 million players doesn’t really feel like decline: more like erosion, in the sense that a mountain erodes. Warlords of Draenor is the first of a new kind of expansion for World of Warcraft. It’s leaner, in some senses, than the expansions that have come before. It adds a new continent – the orc homeworld of Draenor, predestruction – and new features, plus tweaks to raids, the UI, and the game engine, but no new classes or races.

On the surface, it appears more considered and modest than Cataclysm or Wrath of the Lich King – and, in returning the focus to the orcs, it’s less of a tonal departure than Mists of Pandaria. Blizzard are gearing up production on World of Warcraft with a view to putting out boxed expansions every year – rather than every 18 months-ish as it was before. They talk about having plans for the WoW expansion after this one, and the one after that, and the one after that: a salvo of erosion-slaying magic bullets loaded in a revolver, with Warlords of Draenor sitting ready in the first chamber.

At least, that’s how Warcraft boss Chris Metzen put it, announcing the expansion at Blizzcon. I asked WoW producer John Lagrave about it later – how possible is it, in reality, to plan for the needs of a gaming community that far in advance?

“Let me continue the analogy,” he says. “First we have to build the bullet – and we’re building a bullet for a gun we don’t know the calibre of yet, so there’s a lot of give and take. We have a plan for Warlords of Draenor – that’s in the chamber and is being fired. For the next expansion, we’re in talks about it. We focus, initially, on the story we’re going to tell. Once we’ve got that, we try to figure out a sentence or two about what the ‘vibe’ is. What’s going to be engaging? What’s going to be fun? What is interesting about it?”

Warlords of Draenor is intended to recapture the feel of orcs-and-humans-era Warcraft, and to reintroduce the characters and conflicts that fans have followed for decades but that recent WoW acolytes might have missed among the panda warriors and world-consuming dragons. It’s a time-travel story, and the Draenor it features is one that has been referenced but never actually presented in a Warcraft game. It’s the same place as The Burning Crusade’s Outland, but this isn’t a Cataclysm-style overhaul: it’s a full alternative take on the planet with entirely new zones to explore.

As players, our dimension-skipping adventure will be prompted by the escape of rogue horde warchief Garrosh Hellscream following his arrest at the conclusion of the ‘Siege of Orgrimmar’ update. Chasing his dream of an all-orc horde to a new extreme, he binds himself to a mysterious time-travelling ally and journeys to Draenor before the orcs became corrupted and invaded Azeroth. There, he stops the orcs from drinking demonic blood and, in its place, gives them loads of technology from the future and sets about building his own portal to Azeroth. So give a little, take a little, then.

Both factions have an interest in stopping Garrosh’s ‘Iron Horde’, and that leads them to Draenor. An initial ‘suicide mission’ tutorial experience will take the Alliance and the Horde to Tanaan Jungle – formerly Hellfire Peninsula. After that, the Alliance will help defend a Draenei temple in Shadowmoon Valley, a temperate zone of rolling hills trapped in perpetual night. The Horde head to Frostfire Ridge – roughly where the Blade’s Edge Mountains will eventually be – to help the Frostwolf Clan defeat some local ogres.

The Frostwolf Clan in this case is led by Thrall’s dad, Durotan, and the sequence I played through involved helping both of them lay siege to an ogre fortress – at which point, through Pandaria-style phasing, it transitioned into being the Horde base of operations on Draenor.

Blizzard have had a lot of experience bending and twisting the WoW engine into new shapes, and their work here displays the same inventiveness and attention to detail that marked out the best bits of Wrath of the Lich King. Post-conquest, the player is asked to free some orc scouts from a nearby ogre village. The path takes you back out of the ogre fortress, pushing through a crowd of Warcraft-style peons carrying stones and lumber back up the hill. It’s a nice little nod to the past, and it made me smile.

You’ll have to take the long way around, by the way: flying mounts are disabled in Draenor until some point post-launch. The journey to the new level cap of 100 will be made on foot.

In addition to seven new PvE zones, Warlords of Draenor will add seven dungeons – three at max level – as well as two raids with sixteen bosses between them. Blizzard are also taking a pass at Upper Blackrock Spire as part of their programme of classic dungeon reboots, and there’ll be a new set of world bosses too. There will also be a full PvP zone on Draenor, called Ashran. It’s intended to recapture the old days of World of Warcraft battlegrounds – the skirmishes over Alterac Valley that took days to resolve. Combatants will be drawn in from multiple servers using the cross-realm technology also used to fill out parties in the dungeon finder.

The current structure of WoW PvP is being revised. Blizzard regard the current system as too deterministic, leading players towards fixed rewards through a long grind – they want to shake it up, and they’re approaching the problem from multiple angles. PvP matches will now grant random rewards on completion, from bind-on-equip items to rare PvP equipment and bonus Honor. The idea is to surprise players with rewards they weren’t expecting, to lead people towards upgrade paths they might not have considered by adding a degree of chance. The other approach to freshening Player vs Player is the exact opposite. Warlords of Draenor will introduce Trials of the Gladiator, new arena combat events where players use standard, balanced gear – creating a competition that is entirely about skill.

On the PvE side, raid sizes are being reworked – again – to create a more accessible experience. Raids will be available in Raid Finder, Normal and Heroic difficulties for any number of players between 10 and 25, their encounters scaling on the fly to match the number of friends you bring. If someone drops out, you won’t need to wait for a replacement. The best rewards, however, will be available to guilds who crack raid encounters on ‘Mythic’ difficulty, which will be balanced for – and require – 20 players. It seems like a smart compromise between the needs of the hardcore set and weekend warriors who just want a chance to see dungeons they’d previously been locked out of.

Blizzard walk a thin line between giving their community what they want and telling them what they need – but they seem to walk it confidently, at least in Warlords of Draenor’s case.

“We want you to stay engaged in the game and not become dispassionate about it,” says John Lagrave. “We have our own internal testing sessions, and I’ll tell you – the session for our Blizzcon build was brutal. We’re very critical, and there’s lots of things that we will be doing and changing from our own criticism – plus what we get from the community. It’s a constant process.”

Some of the biggest cheers I heard at Blizzcon were for Warlords of Draenor features that seem innocuous from the outside. WoW’s inventory is being updated, so that you’ll be able to easily set filters for your bags and sort them quickly.

Collectible items such as heirlooms, toys and tabards are becoming part of the collections system – as opposed to taking up bank space – and quest items will no longer go into your inventory at all. You’ll be able to craft using materials that are in your bank, Guild Wars 2-style. These quality-of-life improvements will likely shave off millions of hours busywork across the breadth of WoW’s audience.

No one feature received an outpouring of approval quite like the update to character models, however. Vanilla WoW’s original races are all getting upgraded with more detailed models, high-res textures, and new animations that include facial expressions for emotes. Blizzard are recording new voice work, too, so expect to hear a bunch of new variations on “ungh!” and “I can’t cast that now!” The Burning Crusade races are set to be updated shortly after the expansion launches.

World of Warcraft is also, at long last, getting a form of player housing. You’ll be able to create and manage a garrison on Draenor that works a little bit like a base in the original strategy games. You’ll pick from plots of land, and build and upgrade structures that provide game-widebenefits. You might build crafting buildings that give you limited access to professions that you don’t otherwise have, or buffs that you take with you into the wider world.

Garrisons will also act as the basis for a new kind of daily quest. Through your town’s inn  you’ll build up a party of NPC adventurers who can be sent on adventures that take hours of real time to complete.

They’ll have their own traits and levelling paths, and sending the right people on the right jobs will yield rewards such as exclusive items, mounts and randomised chests. It’s a substantial extension of the Tillers’ farm system from Mists of Pandaria, with much further-reaching implications for your daily life within the game – and for your free time. It’s also equivalent to Pet Battling, in that it’s an addition to an expansion that looks a bit like a nonsequitur on the surface, but which will probably end up being the most strikingly new-feeling addition for players who have had almost a decade to get used to the game it’s attached to.

Your garrison will be a part of the open world, separated from those of other players using – again – seamless phasing. If you want to invite a friend over, that’ll be possible – but it’s unclear at this stage whether or not it’ll be possible to discover other people’s towns or followers in a more informal manner.

Every purchase of Warlords of Draenor will, additionally, give you an accountbound token that lets you boost any character you like to level 90. It’s a measure that Blizzard are taking to give new or returning players a chance to skip straight to the new stuff, but it’s likely to be possible with veterans too. Haven’t finished a full set of max-level alts yet? You just got one for free. These insta-90s will start with a set of equipment and some consumables appropriate to their level.

I imagine that some dedicated players will feel their investment has been cheapened by letting total newbies skip nine years’ worth of content, but it’s a pragmatic move by Blizzard and there’s a good chance it’ll be the last little push required by those of us who are at any point only a few clicks from resubscribing. Blizzard make changes like this from a position of authority: even after all this time, World of Warcraft is the game to beat – and even when a new contender improves on this or that system, its like can be replicated within WoW – and improved upon – in no time at all. This expansion modernises the game across the board.

Warlords of Draenor strikes me as an attempt to level the playing field in anticipation of the future. It’s varied, certainly, but safe in the sense that it in no way reaches deep into the crust of the game to find something new. Even its narrative moves backwards rather than forwards to find something fresh to present to fans. At its most radical, the expansion rethinks systems like raiding without ultimately changing the purpose they’ve always served. Lapsed players and dedicated fans alike might have expected something a little more dramatic, this long into the game’s life – but then again, perhaps it’s not a surprise. Blizzard are still sitting at the top of the mountain, and they’ve got no reason to shake the foundations.
Chris Thursten

TOP TEN F2P GAMES

TOP TEN F2P GAMES
1. SKYFORGE
IF YOU’RE LOOKING for an action-heavy MMO, this content-rich fantasy offering is right up there with the likes of DC Universe Online. It can be a little daunting to newcomers due to how much there is going on (and how advanced a lot of players seem to be) but a smart guild system lets you join factions as an apprentice, giving you people to learn from as you contribute to their progress in turn.

2. WARFRAME
THIS ONE HAS come a hell of a long way since launch, and that journey has been a long one Warframe was available at the launch of the PS4 back in 2013. Constant updates have seen it not only grow in terms of content but quality and variety, too. If you’re looking for something to tide you over to Destiny 2, this is certainly worth a look.

3. TOUKIDEN 2: FREE ALLIANCES
IT WAS A shame to see this great sequel fail to pick up a great deal of traction when it launched earlier in the year, but Koei Tecmo’s response to that was admirable. Within a few months, this free-to-play version was available, a stamina system time-gating content but allowing players to join the demon hunt alongside owners of the full game. With Monster Hunter World still a way off, this is the
next best thing for the time being.

4. NEVERWINTER
MOST MODERN RPGS riff on the systems of Dungeons & Dragons, so why not cut out the middleman and enjoy some classic D&D action? PS4 owners are spoiled for choice when it comes to F2P MMOs – you can even play the first chunk of frontrunner Final Fantasy XIV for free these days but there’s not strictly speaking a bad choice among them.

5. LET IT DIE
IT’S NOT EASY to put this surreal dungeon-crawler into words, but we’ll try because that’s sort of our job. Simply put, it’s a slightly clunky Souls-esque combat action game with a love of all things bizarre, including skateboarding skeletons, edible frogs and all manner of other silliness. Die as you try to ascend the tower and your character will be sent into someone else’s game as an AI ‘Hater’, bringing you back rewards for any scalps they might claim. There’s nothing quite like it so give it
a try – what have you got to lose?

6. ZEN PINBALL 2
YOU’LL OFTEN HEAR us champion this great series, and with good reason – chasing high scores on cool tables that wouldn’t be practical or even possible in real life is just really good fun. The core game comes with just a single table, but you can add more from the vast catalogue for a few quid a pop as you like. Quality is high across the board and all tables have trial versions, so you can give something you like the look of a go before splashing out.

7. PLANETSIDE 2
ONE OF THE greatest ‘if only…’ stories on PS4, Planetside 2 could have built a massive amount of momentum had it not slipped repeatedly to miss its original launch window by almost two years. Great as this huge-scale shooter may be, it already had multiple Call Of Duty titles and a handful of other great shooters to contend with by the time it was ready, so it never really got to fulfil the full potential of its epic battles. Just like Sony’s own MAG, it’s all well and good boasting hundreds
of players per skirmish, but you need at least that many people actually playing to take full advantage of that feature…

8. DEAD OR ALIVE 5: LAST ROUND
WE’RE EXPECTING TO see this model applied to more fighting games in the future – it’s done well for games like this and Killer Instinct, and it makes sense. What you get is a barebones fighting package with just a handful of characters and modes, but with the ability to add what other fighters and features you actually want piecemeal. Those who want everything will naturally be better off just grabbing the full game to save (a lot) of money, but casual players who just fancy a quick ruck every now and again can have their fill for free, or at least for very little.

9. SMITE
THE MOBA SCENE is very much still a PC-centric one, but that’s not to say that there aren’t a few decent options available for the likes of us. Epic’s Paragon continues to improve by the month and Overwatch wannabe Paladins seems decent, but in Smite we have an actual MOBA that sees regular competitive play. Pick your god and play out epic fantasy battles, but be aware that the skill ceiling is rather high so you might need to put in a fair amount of time.

10. WORLD OF TANKS
and not feature one of the most successful free games of recent years, so here it is. With relatively simple controls and navigation, newcomers can hop into the war machine of their choice and have at it. You need but check out some footage of competitive play, though, to see just how much deeper the game goes for those that want more from it, which explains why some have thousands of hours clocked up.

10 VIDEO GAME EASTER EGGS THAT TOOK YEARS TO FIND

TOP 10 VIDEO GAMES OF ALL TIME

TOP 15 SCARY HIDDEN THINGS IN VIDEO GAMES
TOP 15 MOST SCARY THINGS CAUGHT ON VIDEO
10 MOST MEMORABLE PRESIDENT TRUMP JOKES AND CAMEOS

Why Crysis 3 is the ultimate sequel

Why Crysis 3 is the ultimate sequel
CRYTEK GIVES NEW YORK A TOTALLY TROPICAL TASTE, TRANSFORMING THE WORLD’S GREATEST CITY INTO A WAR RIDDEN FUTURISTIC DOME, FUSING  TOGETHER THE IDEAS BEHIND THE ORIGINAL CRYSIS AND CRYSIS 2. PRODUCER MIKE READ EXPLAINS WHY THIS TRILOGY CLOSER IS THE BEST OF BOTH WORLDS

It seems a little unfair that the Crysis series is probably better known for its developer’s insistence on pushing technology to its very limits, rather than being acclaimed for its merits as a first-person shooter franchise par excellence. The PC original was regarded as the video game that only a select few with top-of-the-range hardware could play, rather than being a tremendous and uncommonly open shooter in its own right. Crysis’ graphics might have been its most marketable asset, but some wrongly dismissed it as a case of style over substance.

Meanwhile, for the follow-up, the German publisher dialled back its ambitions a touch, releasing the more linear Crysis 2 on consoles as well as PC, a decision that didn’t sit too well with the desktop hardcore. Even so, it was still a rock-solid FPS with looks that, while not quite as astonishing as its forerunner, could slacken a PS3 owner’s jaw at ten paces. The lush, verdant jungles of the original were traded for the decaying urban grid of a ruined New York City, a better fit for a narrower, more focused shooter.

The story continues next February with a game that may not be the end of the line for the Crysis universe, but seems likely to tie up the final strands of this particular narrative – and Crytek
has come up with the perfect excuse to combine the best of both predecessors. The Big Apple now lies under a giant Nanodome, built by the nefarious CELL Corporation ostensibly to protect citizens from alien invaders, but really to harvest a secret energy source. The result: many streets are now rivers, forests have sprung up around skyscrapers, and elsewhere there are boggy marshlands to negotiate.

In other words, a lot has happened in 24 years since we last saw protagonist Prophet and the rest of the Delta Force marines. Producer Mike Read was only too happy to fill in the gaps for us. “Over that period of 20+ years basically what [the CELL Corporation] have done is to harness the world’s energy resources to get really cheap power, sell it to the public and manage to create a monopoly over this specifically.”

And what of our Nanosuited friends from past games? “We’ve also introduced Psycho into the scenario and of course Prophet’s in there – [he] had been doing a number of operations over the course of the 20 years alongside Psycho. Prophet was eventually captured and that brings us to where we are at the start of Crysis 3, where Psycho has basically broken Prophet out of incarceration after a number of years.” And hell bent on revenge, we shouldn’t wonder.

From what we’ve seen so far, Crytek has expertly combined elements of the earlier titles, the natural
beauty of the tropics juxtaposed with familiar New York landmarks in a way that feels remarkably
unforced. It makes Crysis 3 feel less guided than its immediate predecessor, without overwhelming
those who don’t like getting lost. It’s Crytek having its cake and eating it, in other words, and it’s a
pretty tasty cake at that.

Still, Read doesn’t believe it was a deliberate decision to combine the two – at least, not initially. “Between our designers and the different things they wanted to do I don’t necessarily think this was an intent going into creating Crysis 3, but they started looking into it, looking at different elements and it kind of evolved into [this]. My understanding of where it came from is that we had New York City, we wanted to come back to [it] but we also wanted to do something different and using the dome itself allowed us to create a fiction around how New York has been destroyed, how the buildings have been broken down and how various areas of this jungle environment have grown due to the greenhouse effect because of this dome. So I think that’s where that main piece [of fiction] came from.”

The idea of pooling the strengths of the first two games is an enticing proposition, even given that the two were as different as an FPS and its sequel are likely to get, the more open elements of the first game being scaled back in the second. Yet Read doesn’t believe that the differences between the first two games were quite so pronounced.

“Crysis had a very open visual style which people perceived as an open world game and people still
talk about it like that when in actual fact it really wasn’t. Sure, there were a lot of ways you could go
and a lot of things you could do, but we still kept people on a path. I think when we brought that into Crysis 2, these tall buildings created a bit of a closed-off fa?ade that the game was a lot more linear, a lot more contained. So in dialling things back a little and bringing in the jungle elements and the urban elements I think we’ve hit a pretty good middle ground with that. And especially those who get their hands on it for the first time, they’ve been coming back to us completely unsolicited and saying ‘Wow you guys really did hit a good middle ground between the two games’. ”

Indeed, it’s evident from our conversation with Read that user feedback is very important to the publisher. He discusses the desire from players to “throw in a lot more suit powers”, as well as the game’s increased difficulty for top-tier players (“Wow, you guys really did make this hard”). It turns out three games in it’s not too difficult for Crytek’s designers to come up with ways to make a hardened soldier in a super-powerful Nanosuit still feel vulnerable. “I don’t think it’s really been an
issue,” he shrugs. “I think at this point it’s become a lot more refined, even though we’ve changed the AI systems over the course of the three games.

Of course, that isn’t to say that there aren’t more ways to deal with enemy threats. It turns out Prophet is something of a futuristic Errol Flynn, as handy with a bow as his contemporaries are with a gun. An archer is only as good as the projectiles they fire, though, so fortunately he has a number of different arrow tips that give him a tactical advantage in combat. “We were actually looking at a few more tips to have in there,” admits Read, “but I think we’ve kind of balanced that out with the four tips. The bow itself was brought in to tie into the whole hunter theme, [as a way of] rolling back a little to elements that we had of the jungle theme in Crysis.”

As a predator in this literal urban jungle, then, it seems you can go as quiet or as loud as you like. “What we’ve seen in some of the playtests is that people are using the bow in quite a number of ways in various combinations, and not just standing back and using it in a cloak scenario,” says Read. “Past that, certain weapons have various ammo types from electric to explosive or thermic ammo, and of course the number of attachments has been increased. We really want to provide people with a whole number of options for the way they’re comfortable tackling [a given situation], so that everybody who goes through it is experiencing it in a much different way.”

Does that mean Crysis 3 offers something for everyone, then? The return of secondary objectives
for each mission should ensure players are more willing to explore their environment thoroughly, but as an entirely optional aside, they can be safely ignored by those wishing to play the best video game of all time as a more straightforward, linear shooter. Translation: whether you prefer Call Of Duty or Far Cry, you’re in luck. And that goes double if you’re a fan of deeper environmental interaction. “There are things that we’ve done through the visor itself,” explains Read, “and that’s mainly in terms of what we’ve introduced with the hacking mechanism, being able to hack mines or turrets or special crates to open them up and stuff like that.” There’s also the small matter of Prophet’s Nanosuit being infected with alien DNA, which allows him to use a variety of otherworldly weapons. It’s another nod to the original, but Read believes the idea has been far better integrated into the game’s lore on this occasion. “Over the course of those 20+ years the suit has essentially evolved [through the infection] and that allows us to bring in these weapons. There was actually alien weapon in Crysis that people could use – it was kind of a freeze ray, but that didn’t really have any story elements specifically tied to it. But in this one, yes, there’s going to be five different alien weapons, and yes, there are some balancing mechanisms that’ll play into that because they’re pretty powerful and a lot of fun to use.”

Those with a penchant for destruction, meanwhile, are catered to far better than in Crysis 2. Trees can be mown down, you’ll regularly see logs and concrete barriers blown apart, while masonry cracks and crumbles under heavy fire. Destruction isn’t quite on Crysis levels, where players could embark upon a sustained campaign of deforestation by arming themselves with a minigun and chewing
through rows of trees, but there’s a very good reason for that. “It’s fun to a point,” admits Read, “but it’s also very taxing on the software side – and the hardware side as well.”

It was bound to come to this. Read talked at E3 about Crytek struggling to squeeze any more juice out of the current consoles, and it’s evident it’s a bit of a sore point for a software house that prefers to push the technical envelope.

“Throughout the course of development of Crysis 2 there was a lot of pain experienced in getting our engine to run on the consoles specifically,” Read sighs, “which not only hindered us from a technical side but also hindered us from our designers’ side as well.

That became a big blocker for a lot of the things we really wanted to do with 2. In this one, we can push it so far, but we’re definitely feeling the constraints. This is the longest generation of console that the world has really ever seen and I think in some ways the SDKs [Software Development Kits] improved and in other ways they didn’t, but we’re trying to squeeze as much as we can to give console users the best graphical experience possible. But we have so much more in terms of seven years of hardware that has advanced over that time to be able to take the PC side and push that even further.”

We can’t say we’re entirely surprised to hear this. As good as Crysis 3 looks on the PlayStation 3, put it next to the PC version and the difference is night and day. Graphics aren’t everything of course – even Crytek happily admits this – but at the same time it’s impossible to deny that the ever-evolving PC market has sped away from the comparatively underpowered current-gen consoles, leaving
them choking on its dust. So is Read hankering after PS4 for what his studio wants to achieve?

“I think everybody pretty much is at this point!” he laughs. “Pushing ahead and creating new tools and innovations and putting these tools in designers’ hands… I think there’s definitely a place for a bigger focus on gameplay sometimes, but I think there’s also a place where we need to keep accelerating this. The PC is light years ahead at this point and it’ll be interesting what happens with the next generation of consoles and whether they’re going to be able to hold out as long as they did with this generation just given how quickly technology is advancing at this point.”

Then again, the progression of hardware isn’t the only important factor to consider in the current market. The rise of free-to-play is the industry’s current hot topic, with more and more developers looking at new financial models as retail figures continue to drop year on year. It’s a discussion that Crytek has already waded into, but it’s clear Read still sees value in the traditional console experience.

“This is a whole argument unto itself,” he says. “Everyone’s watching Dust 514 on PlayStation and where that’s potentially going to go as really one of the first free-to-play [console games] with micro-transactions built into it. I think there’s room on there for that and I think you’re probably going to see some big changes, but I think there’s still room for maintaining the payup- front best video games of all time as well. People talk a lot now about all single-player games [being] obsolete, that they’re going to disappear and it’s all about multiplayer, and I really don’t think that’s true at all. There are quite a large number of people still out there that love single-player games. I think there’s also a whole number of ways, especially over the next five to ten years that we’re going to see single-player games evolve into something different, and what that is we’ll have to wait and see. But it’s definitely an interesting bullet point right now [with regard to] where the next-gen consoles are going to go.”

So if Crytek is watching next-gen consoles with great interest, you can probably take that as a near-as-damnit guarantee that we’ll see Crysis return on said hardware. We may have seen the last of the likes of Prophet, Psycho and company, though that’s not the spoiler you might think it is. Instead, it may just be that this third instalment marks the closing of this particular chapter in the Crysis universe.

“That would probably be the best way to put it,” agrees Read. “Back in 2007, when our CEO Cevat [Yerli, co-founder and president of Crytek] said he had originally cited this to be a trilogy I actually meant to ask him this question. Whether we’re going to do three games and it was going to go on further I guess is another question that would be specifically for him to answer, but I think what we’ve done over the years is to build the IP out and maintain it. Over the past five years we’ve done a pretty good job to take it beyond this [story] and into new places but still contained within the Crysis universe itself. But yes, this is kind of a finale to this piece.”

If Crysis 3 is an end point for this particular narrative strand, it certainly appears to be going out on a high. It’s another boundary-pushing shooter that feels like a Best Of Crysis while offering its own unique bonus tracks. Sure, it might make the PS3 creak and groan at the edges, but it promises an action-packed climax to a trilogy that should finally cement the idea that Crysis deserves to become as famous for how it plays as how it looks.

10 VIDEO GAME EASTER EGGS THAT TOOK YEARS TO FIND

TOP 10 VIDEO GAMES OF ALL TIME

TOP 15 SCARY HIDDEN THINGS IN VIDEO GAMES
TOP 15 MOST SCARY THINGS CAUGHT ON VIDEO
10 MOST MEMORABLE PRESIDENT TRUMP JOKES AND CAMEOS
10 CREEPY VIDEO GAME URBAN LEGENDS