Medal Of Honor: Airborne New Hampshire

In terms of presentation, Airborne is right up there with the best FPS games. The Unreal 3 engine delivers detailed characters and settings, and a range of fantastic lighting, post-processing blur and depth-of-field effects.

Local Companies

Sublime Solution
877-273-1200
PO Box 1332
Londonderry, NH
Fuzzycow Com Ltd
(603) 880-4004
20 Trafalgar Sq
Nashua, NH
Bitznbytes Computer Centers
(603) 888-7770
233 Loudon Rd
Concord, NH
Buffalo Computer Sales
(603) 437-6138
Windham, NH
A & D Computer
(603) 672-4700
25 Union Sq
Milford, NH
T W G Solutions
(603) 775-7365
5 Watson Brook Rd
Exeter, NH
Glh Systems
(603) 774-6374
181 Stark Hwy S
Dunbarton, NH
Northeast Electronics Inc
(603) 224-2700
73 Rockingham Rd
Londonderry, NH
Lyme Computer Systems
(603) 795-4000
1 Lyme Cmn
Lyme, NH
It Guardian
(603) 225-2752
553 Route 3A
Bow, NH

Provided By:

Poor old Medal of Honor. The game that kicked off the historical World War II FPS has been languishing in the doldrums for years, watching sadly while other series steal its thunder. The old Saving Private Ryan set-pieces have become tired clichés, and the old bomb-this, attack-that routines have grown stale. How do you make gaming's favourite war seem new and exciting once again?

Luckily, Medal of Honor: Airborne has a good idea - if throwing yourself into battle isn't scary enough, how about throwing yourself out of an aeroplane first? Based loosely on the exploits of the US Airborne regiments during the assault on Europe in 1944, each mission begins with you and your squad in a crowded plane, preparing to hurl yourself out behind enemy lines. As your parachute floats down onto the game's maps, you can steer your descent and land pretty much where you like. Choose carefully, and you'll land with allies to protect you or with surprise on your side. Choose badly, and you'll be riddled with bullets.

This alone wouldn't make much difference had EA not decided to make Airborne a more open, free-flowing game than we're used to. Recent WWII shooters, particularly Call of Duty 2, have hinged on orchestrated levels that funnel you through a series of dramatic set-pieces. Airborne just gives you a large map that takes in a hefty chunk of a city, town or battlefield and a range of objectives to complete. Although the game throws in new missions, how and when you do them is up to you.

A game like this stands or falls on the quality of the AI, but here it's pretty good. Your own troops have a tendency to run into ambushes, and give them support or lead them further through the machine-gun nests and barricades, and they'll lend you a hand in return. The Nazis, meanwhile, aren't content to sit and do the old "duck and fire" routine. They'll outflank you, reposition themselves in cover, or rush and attack when they think you're vulnerable.

Airborne makes little pretence to realism, but it's probably the better for it. A system of arcade-style rewards for feats of marksmanship or accurate parachuting makes you feel like you're achieving something, as well as giving you weapon bonuses that help make your job easier. Airborne also rejects Call of Duty 2's recharging health system in favour of a more traditional four-bar gauge that splutters out quickly under heavy fire. This keeps the tension high, but also leads to the game's biggest black spot. Bar a handful of exceptions, the game only checkpoints your progress when you complete an objective. Die just before you reach it, and you may find yourself parachuting in once more and battling the same sequence of Nazis over and over again. This can make certain sections of the game slow-going, but on the plus side the unpredictable AI stops the game getting too repetitive.

In terms of presentation, Airborne is right up there with the best FPS games. The Unreal 3 engine delivers detailed characters and settings, and a range of fantastic lighting, post-processing blur and depth-of-field effects.

Meanwhile, both the frenetic sound effects and surging score do a brilliant job of building atmosphere. It's a shame the in-game physics are restricted to rag-doll corpses and that so little of the scenery is destructible. Overall, however, this is a fine return to form for Medal of Honor. Even if we're still blowing up the same old gun-batteries and repelling the same German counter attacks as before, Airborne has found a thrilling and compulsive new take.

System Specifications

Requires 2.8GHz Pentium 4 1GB RAM 9.1GB hard disk space 128MB Shader Model 3 graphics card Windows XP/Vista

Verdict

The original World War II shooter is reborn as a free-flowing action game to die for.

Author: Stuart Andrews

PC Pro Online

Featured Local Company

Sublime Solution

877-273-1200
PO Box 1332
Londonderry, NH
www.sublimesolution.net

Sublime Solution is an industry leading sales and consulting practice specializing in helping its customers implement and support their IT initiatives, in both software and hardware solutions. Our goal is to help you realize the maximum return on investment from your technology projects, while making best of breed tools available to implement IT best practices, meet compliance regulations, and achieve the highest level of performance for end users.

Related Articles
- Advanced Blending in Photoshop New Hampshire
If you're into animation, you can use these techniques to excellent effect by applying the blending modes to your Photoshop layers before importing the whole project into After Effects. The ability to move a layer around behind soft objects such as clouds can enable you to create animated montages of startling realism.
- Review: Monster Truck Nitro New Hampshire
- Call of Duty 4 Game Review New Hampshire
- Learn to play an instrument New Hampshire
- Copyright And Patent Your Software New Hampshire
- Bugs & Fixes: Delete files to prevent crashes in OS X 10.5.6 New Hampshire
- Data Recovery Report New Hampshire
- Review: iPhone flashcard apps New Hampshire
Related Articles
- Advanced Blending in Photoshop New Hampshire
If you're into animation, you can use these techniques to excellent effect by applying the blending modes to your Photoshop layers before importing the whole project into After Effects. The ability to move a layer around behind soft objects such as clouds can enable you to create animated montages of startling realism.
- Review: Monster Truck Nitro New Hampshire
- Call of Duty 4 Game Review New Hampshire
- Learn to play an instrument New Hampshire
- Copyright And Patent Your Software New Hampshire
- Bugs & Fixes: Delete files to prevent crashes in OS X 10.5.6 New Hampshire
- Data Recovery Report New Hampshire
- Review: iPhone flashcard apps New Hampshire

Rss   Delicious   Digg   Add To My Yahoo   Add To My Google   Bookmark   Search Plugin

Topics:
Advertising Family Home Services Real Estate Resources
Business Services Fashion Industrial Goods & Services Retail & Consumer Services
Career Financial Services Insurance Software
Cars Food & Beverage Internet Technology
Computer Hardware Franchise Legal Telecommunications
Construction Health Miscellaneous Trade Shows
Education Holidays Nightlife Travel
Entertainment Home Appliances Online Database Weddings
Environmental Home Electronics Pets World History