The original Ghost Recon was an excellent, if relatively bare-bones, PC tactical shooter, but the console Advanced Warfighter was something else: a hybrid tactical/action game with a goofy HUD and lots of visual effects. Having played numerous Rainbow Six and Ghost Recon games (including Advanced Warfighter 1) and trying to get that last little bit of mileage out of my old Pentium 4, I figured that Advanced Warfighter 2 would be $10 well spent. Powerdirector 12 free download.
Platforms: | PC, PlayStation 2 |
Publisher: | Ubisoft |
Developer: | GRIN |
Genres: | 3D Shooter / Tactical Shooter |
Release Date: | May 3, 2006 |
Game Modes: | Singleplayer / Multiplayer |
That the PC version of Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon: Advanced Warfighter appeared after the well-reviewed Xbox 360 one was cause for alarm. The original Ghost Recon was an excellent, if relatively bare-bones, PC tactical shooter, but the console Advanced Warfighter was something else: a hybrid tactical/action game with a goofy HUD and lots of visual effects.
Where the 360 version is all smack-you-in-the-face action, the PC version slows down the pace while maintaining the kinetics. It also retains the candy-colored HUD—which turns out to be incredibly useful—and developer GRIN has crafted an entirely different single-player game set in the same Mexican city as the 360 version.
As with the original Ghost Recon, individual missions are more like puzzles than dynamic tactical scenarios. Though the urban environments provide multiple ways to get from Point A to Point B to fulfill your objectives, your course is always directed to certain scripted areas where you’re guaranteed some action. You run through these a few times, die at key moments, and then try to figure out how to handle each one using actual tactics. This process leads to a lot of dying, reloading, trying something else, dying, and reloading.
In fact, it’s brutally difficult until you realize you can’t just Rambo your way through levels. You need to creep from corner to corner and issue intelligent orders to your fellow Ghosts. The urban environments in GRAW make it much less run-and-gun–oriented than the original Ghost Recon.
The single-player missions can be played either solo or in multiplayer co-op mode. While co-op is always a welcome addition, its implementation in GRAW is a mix of awesomeness and frustration. Each mission is extremely long, and humans don’t respawn. If one player dies early, they get to watch. And if the leader gets taken down, it’s game over.
On the plus side, it’s a lot more of a challenge for serious players than Ghost Recon ever was; that game basically let you charge a base, and you needed little in the way of coordination to actually succeed. If you split up in GRAW or don’t follow some proper strategies (laying down cover fire, flanking, etc.), you have no chance.
But if Ghost Recon was only interesting as a multiplayer game, GRAW gets the single-player right. The AI isn’t quite SWAT 4 or Full Spectrum Warrior level, but it’s close. Your fellow Ghosts generally follow orders and only occasionally do something stupid. Fujitsu siemens esprimo mobile drivers. The interface is similar to the one in SWAT 4, where you point to a location, pull up a menu, scroll through the options, and send everyone on their way. The world’s most detailed overhead satellite map can also be used to issue orders, which is a nice way to give generic ones. But it’s a lot quicker to just point and shoot.
And that, in a nutshell, is the appeal of games like GRAW. All it does is present some interesting tactical action, a lot of graphically impressive—if somewhat too amber-colored—carnage, and a lot of intense pointing and shooting. And that’s more than enough.
Ghost Recon Advanced Warfighter Key
System Requirements: Pentium IV 2 GHz, 512 MB RAM, WinXP
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