Digital Extremes’Warframeis one of the longest-lasting live-service games on the market, having started its free-to-play romp back in 2013. Some of the game’s oldest fans may well remember that DE’s sci-fi adventure ambitions started earlier still, with the original concept behindDark Sector: a game that embodied many ofWarframe‘s core design principles at first, only to eventually be retrofitted into a bog standard (albeit charming) cover-based third-person shooter. Well,Dark Sectorhas always had more than a few parallelswithWarframeproper, and those parallels may be explored in a new context withWarframe: 1999.

Notably, Digital Extremes recently revealed one ofWarframe‘s two upcoming expansions, those beingWhispers in the WallsandWarframe: 1999.1999is due to launch sometime in 2024, and what’s really notable about it is that it appears to take players far, far away from the central conflict of the Sol system. Instead, it is seemingly set in an alternative version of the year 1999.

Image via Digital Extremes

Is Warframe: 1999 a Dark Sector revival?

Digital Extremes has, historically, never been too concerned about whether the team will stray too far away fromWarframe‘s core lore and gameplay principles. This has resulted in a remarkably layered but also fragmented experience, where not all of the game’s features necessarily interact with one another. It’s always been a bit strange, then, that the studio chose not to do anything withDark Sector, short of releasing some of its cosmetics as microtransactions inWarframe.

It’s worth pointing out that DE itself hasn’t come out and said that1999is a re-envisioning ofDark Sector. The similarities, however, are certainly striking. The protagonist ofWarframe: 1999is a mystery man known as Arthur, who is – for whatever reason – fielding the Excalibur bodysuit with an old-school combat harness and other various tidbits of regular, modern-day kit. His enemies? The techno-organic plague, which may or may not have something to do with the mad scientist type (Entrati) who appears at the end of the trailer. The similarities withDark Sector‘s Hayden Tennoare impossible to ignore.

Promotional art for Warframe`s Duviri Paradox, which shows Dominus Thrax and the cast of the expansion.

Now, it’s anyone’s guess whether Digital Extremes is actually gunning to reenvisionDark Sectorin the context ofWarframe‘s own lore, but that certainly looks like what’s going on.Warframeveterans may wish to keep an eye out for1999, then, as it has the potential of being remarkably interesting to those who enjoy the game’s wacky lore.

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Oraxia, a spider-inspired Warframe with multiple legs. Webs appear on the background.