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Splinter Cell

  • Video Game
  • 2002
  • 12
IMDb RATING
8.3/10
3.5K
YOUR RATING
Splinter Cell (2002)
Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell
Play trailer0:32
1 Video
11 Photos
ActionAdventureThriller

Stealth-mission expert Sam Fisher searches for two US agents in Georgia and soon uncovers a plot involving a nuclear device.Stealth-mission expert Sam Fisher searches for two US agents in Georgia and soon uncovers a plot involving a nuclear device.Stealth-mission expert Sam Fisher searches for two US agents in Georgia and soon uncovers a plot involving a nuclear device.

  • Director
    • Florent-Emilio Siri
  • Writers
    • J.T. Petty
    • Clint Hocking
    • Tom Clancy
  • Stars
    • Michael Ironside
    • Adrian Knight
    • Alain Goulem
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.3/10
    3.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Florent-Emilio Siri
    • Writers
      • J.T. Petty
      • Clint Hocking
      • Tom Clancy
    • Stars
      • Michael Ironside
      • Adrian Knight
      • Alain Goulem
    • 25User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell
    Trailer 0:32
    Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell

    Photos10

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    Top cast33

    Edit
    Michael Ironside
    Michael Ironside
    • Sam Fisher
    • (voice)
    Adrian Knight
    Adrian Knight
    • Additional Voices
    • (voice)
    Alain Goulem
    Alain Goulem
    • Additional Voices
    • (voice)
    Arthur Grosser
    Arthur Grosser
    • Additional Voices
    • (voice)
    Arthur Holden
    Arthur Holden
    • President Bowers
    • (voice)
    Claudia Besso
    Claudia Besso
    • Anna Grímsdóttir
    • (voice)
    Craig Francis
    • Additional Voices
    • (voice)
    Don Jordan
    Don Jordan
    • Irving Lambert
    • (voice)
    Eleanor Noble
    Eleanor Noble
    • Additional Voices
    • (voice)
    Ellen David
    Ellen David
    • Additional Voices
    • (voice)
    George Morris
    • Morris Odell
    • (voice)
    Harry Standjofski
    Harry Standjofski
    • John Baxter
    • (voice)
    Ian Finlay
    • Additional Voices
    • (voice)
    Jennifer Seguin
    Jennifer Seguin
    • Additional Voices
    • (voice)
    John Sanford Moore
    John Sanford Moore
    • Additional Voices
    • (voice)
    • (as John Moore)
    Marcel Jeannin
    Marcel Jeannin
    • Phillip Masse
    • (voice)
    Mark Camacho
    Mark Camacho
    • Thomas Gurgenidze
    • (voice)
    Matt Holland
    Matt Holland
    • Additional Voices
    • (voice)
    • Director
      • Florent-Emilio Siri
    • Writers
      • J.T. Petty
      • Clint Hocking
      • Tom Clancy
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews25

    8.33.5K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    MovieAddict2016

    A great game and a revolution in gaming in general

    Sam Fisher is a CIA Black Ops Agent codenamed "Splinter Cell" who is recruited to infiltrate the Georgian government in an effort to locate two missing US spies. He soon uncovers a political conspiracy involving presidents, hackers and so on and so forth.

    Games are not known for their plots but to be honest "Splinter Cell" has a pretty good one - it's a good starting place for a Tom Clancy novel and one can imagine that Clancy had the idea once, considered it unworthy compared to his other stuff and tossed it aside and later decided to use it as a game. It's never expanded upon fully as most of the time is actually spent on gameplay, not plot...but it does have one of the best video game stories of all time.

    I liked the voicework by everyone's favorite villain from "Total Recall" (Michael Ironside) but the best part of this game was the beautiful rich textures and actual gameplay. In "Splinter Cell" you do stuff I've never seen in other games - stalking villains instead of shooting them. I do like shoot-'em-ups but it's come to a point now where new stuff is welcomed - and this is great! You can climb through windows, pick locks, open doors, stalk people, grab them, interrogate them, hold them at gunpoint (and use this as a neat defensive trick when surrounded by numerous villains), etc - and instead of just using a lockpick, for example, you really do pick the lock by pressing keys on the computer keyboard! And to open doors you don't just walk up to one, you have to manually push it open.

    The graphics are great, fluid movements on characters...one of the best games of all-time!
    8emasterslake

    Coolest Stealth Game I've played yet.

    This is the first Tom Clancy Video Game I've ever played.

    I'm familiar with his video games, but this one interested me the most.

    Splinter Cell is taken place in an alternate late 2004. The story is similar to the real world. Including Terrisum, World in Crisis, and a war between the middle east and the USA.

    You play Sam Fisher, a highly trained Agent for the NSA(National Security Agency). Your mission is to enter enemy territories and find out info and secrets on the terrorists. It's a challenging task including sneaking around in the dark, hacking into computers, disable security cameras, threaten terrorists to spill the beans, & killing off terrorists. Mission Failure is not an option in the NSA.

    There are 9 missions in total with a very long game play. You can play this game for hours till you succeed in stopping the terrorism from rising.

    The graphics in it are very well done. Photo realistic backgrounds, people, and objects. The light/shadow is top notch. A few cool gadgets to use, a few weapons and special Night/Thermal Vision goggles. The voice acting is great to. Plenty of catch phrases from Sam Fisher.

    Those who like Tom Clancy, Stealth, or Shooting related games will like this title.
    mr_sambone

    Awesome game!

    What can i say this game is awesome the graphics are great the music is suspenseful the action not the greatest but are still cool violence well there is no blood but why should there be it's kinda gross Michial Ironside did an amazing job for Sam Fisher's voice the game may be kinda old but if your a Spy/Espinage fan then you should pick it up at your local game store it's worth it and most of all the storyline is excellent the game's weapon inventory is cool the the sticky cam the sticky shocker and the pistol and Frag Grenade are all my favorite and the loading screen is looks good it shows what date and time of your current mission
    8PhoenixGod00

    Decent kickoff to a Great Triology

    8 out of 10 - The Game That Lit the Shadows

    The original Splinter Cell wasn't just a stealth game. It was a statement. Released in 2002 during a time when action-heavy titles dominated, Ubisoft's Splinter Cell did something bolder: it made you slow down. It made you think. And it brought shadows to the forefront in a way gaming hadn't truly seen before.

    The Birth of Sam Fisher

    This was the world's introduction to Sam Fisher, voiced with grizzled perfection by Michael Ironside - a no-nonsense operative for the NSA's ultra-covert Third Echelon. Fisher wasn't a superhero. He was a ghost. No regenerating health, no bullet-sponge bravado. Just a man, some gadgets, and a grim mission to stop a geopolitical catastrophe.

    Set during a fictional uprising in Georgia (the country, not the state), the story spirals into international espionage with cyberterrorism, military coups, and the threat of global destabilization. It was a political thriller delivered with grit and realism - and it set the tone for the series.

    Gameplay: Light and Shadow Redefined

    Splinter Cell's greatest innovation was how it weaponized light. You weren't sneaking in darkness just for style - you needed it to survive. The light meter became your gospel, and every flickering fluorescent bulb or exposed hallway became a puzzle.

    You could shoot out lights, crawl through vents, use fiber-optic cameras under doors, and deploy non-lethal gadgets like sticky shockers and ring airfoil rounds. You weren't encouraged to kill - you were encouraged to evade, extract, and disappear without a trace.

    It was challenging. Brutally so, at times. But when it worked, it felt incredible. You weren't just controlling a character - you became an operative.

    Level Design: Industrial, Tight, Tactical

    From CIA headquarters to oil refineries and foreign embassies, the environments were tight, cleanly designed, and built to support stealth. They weren't open-ended playgrounds like later entries - they were missions, with very little room for error.

    It was linear, yes, but deliberately so. Every corridor had a purpose. Every guard had a patrol path. And it was your job to crack the code without ever being seen.

    Presentation & Audio

    For its time, Splinter Cell was visually stunning. The use of dynamic lighting and shadows on the original Xbox and PC was a generational leap. Ubisoft built an atmosphere of tension through minimalist music, ambient sounds, and Ironside's iconic voice work.

    Every interaction had weight. The sound of a guard's footsteps, the hum of a nearby security camera - it all mattered. This was immersive stealth done right.

    Why 8, Not 10?

    Brutal Trial and Error: The game demanded perfection, sometimes to a frustrating degree.

    Limited Save System: Some missions could be punishing due to sparse checkpoints.

    Linear Paths: Unlike later games in the series, there was little freedom in how you approached objectives.

    No Multiplayer: This was a solo affair - and while gripping, it lacked the innovation Pandora Tomorrow would later bring with Spies vs. Mercs.

    Final Verdict

    8 out of 10. A foundational stealth classic.

    Splinter Cell (2002) wasn't perfect, but it didn't need to be. It invented the modern stealth blueprint for Ubisoft and introduced one of the most iconic operatives in gaming. Its atmosphere, challenge, and use of shadow-based stealth were years ahead of their time.

    It's not the easiest game to revisit now, but it commands respect. Without it, we wouldn't have Chaos Theory, Conviction, or any of the greatness that followed.

    It's not just where Sam Fisher began - it's where an entire genre evolved.
    abarsby

    Poor man's Metal Gear Solid

    Whilst Splinter Cell might have made a pretty good game for the Xbox, it simply is not up to the standard expected by more discerning PS2 owners.

    Whilst it absolutely is not in the same league as MGS (1 or 2), the game itself is actually more akin to Syphon Filter on the PS1 - which it has "borrowed" greatly from in many areas.

    Most annoying of all, it keeps the S-Filter approach to stealth - in that once you are spotted then it is game over on many levels (!!) Wheras in MGS, Solid Snake had to deal with the consequences of being discovered.

    So in S-Cell you find yourself repetitively going over and over the same sections of the levels.

    On the levels that dont have this drawback, the AI is so stupid that you can simply charge through as if you were playing a shoot 'em up.

    And as for all those fancy moves you see on the box, forget it, I completed the game and not once did I find anywhere to perform the promised moves - they simply arent required.

    And also, the box says "creat your own darkness path" - ie all lights are supposed to be shootable - rubbish, very few lights are shootable.

    The game is very very linear, you simply can only take the route laid out for you, you cant climb on stuff that the programmers dont want you to - even though they are low enough.

    This game could have been so good ! But quite frankly it is just plain ordinary. If you have never played MGS then you might think this was pretty good, but otherwise just rent it from Blockbusters (PS2 owners) before you consider buying it.

    And poor PC owners need a 1gb, 256mb, 64mb GFX PC to run this !! Talk about sloppy coding !! It runs with all the same FX on a 300MhZ PS2 - the only difference being in a lower screen rez ! When will PC programmers learn to code as efficiently as Console coders ? Probably never.

    More like this

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    Hitman 2: Silent Assassin
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    Hitman 2: Silent Assassin
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    8.4
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    Condemned: Criminal Origins
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    Medal of Honor
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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Originally, 'Tom Clancy' rejected the idea of Sam Fisher having trifocal goggles, stating that goggles with both heat vision and night vision are impossible to make. The creators argued that having two separate sets of goggles would make for awkward gameplay and convinced Clancy to allow it.
    • Goofs
      When Sam knocks grabs or knocks out a guard while he holds his weapon in his hands, the guard will never drop the weapon, not even after picking him up or dropping him.
    • Quotes

      Lambert: Its my job to know everything.

    • Crazy credits
      After the end credits, we see Sam Fisher's interview in a room with the crowd walking by.
    • Connections
      Featured in Icons: Splinter Cell (2002)
    • Soundtracks
      Name of the Game
      Written by Ken Jordan, Scott Kirkland & Tom Morello

      Performed by The Crystal Method

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    FAQ1

    • What year does this game take place in?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 17, 2002 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Canada
      • China
    • Languages
      • Mandarin
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell
    • Production companies
      • Ubisoft Montreal
      • Ubisoft
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

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