Medal of honor pacific assault pc game review
Nothing extra. Disadvantages: 1 The almost complete lack of plot. I understand that for some games, like Battlefield, the plot is not needed, but if the game does not have a serious binding to the multiplayer, then it should have at least some decent plot. Typical heroes of Hollywood action movies, which the four of them can endure an entire army, simply because they are very tough in the bad sense of the word. Stupid cannon fodder, which instead of firing, rushes at you with a gun at the ready.
The rest of the time you run from point to point and try to stay on this point the only one alive. I can recall only 5 types of weapons not including pistols and artillery , which could be used constantly. For a shooting-oriented game, this is not enough. The load times are totally obscene. I've got a gig of ram and a 2 gig machine. This is rediculous. The game is well designed and totally fun, but when I only have a few hours after the child goes to bed and before I do, mindless yahoo.
I've been a MOH fan since the first installment. Try again, guys. Play Video. Essential Links. By Metascore By user score. All Current Games ». Psychonauts 2. The Forgotten City. Pacific Assault delivers some intense and challenging firefights in its single-player campaign, while also offering a solid multiplayer component for the long haul. By combining intense run-and-gun shooting action with an incredibly authentic atmosphere and some spectacular set-piece battles, Allied Assault helped establish the genre's current high standards.
Seemingly countless other historic war-themed shooters have been released since then, so it's become very difficult for such a game to distinguish itself Nevertheless, developer EALA was apparently up to the challenge with Medal of Honor Pacific Assault, which takes the series into the Pacific theater of WWII and once again delivers some intense and challenging firefights in its single-player campaign, while also offering a solid multiplayer component for the long haul.
Pacific Assault has a few rough edges long loading times, chiefly among them and is demanding of even today's fastest PCs, but it ultimately succeeds at delivering a Hollywood-style World War II experience, and it also features a few unique twists. Pacific Assault features a good-sized single-player campaign consisting of roughly two dozen missions, which will take you 10 or so hours to fight through at the game's default difficulty setting.
Whereas Allied Assault clearly drew inspiration from Saving Private Ryan , Pacific Assault kicks off with an ostentatious bang straight out of Pearl Harbor and proceeds to deliver some tense, cutthroat action sequences juxtaposed with a few thoughtful story bits designed to make the game's characters seem more human reminiscent of The Thin Red Line.
Throughout the game, you'll play as a Marine named Tommy Conlin, and you'll fight together with the rest of his squad. As Conlin, you'll get to wield a variety of authentic Allied and Axis WWII-era weapons, ranging from pistols to light machine guns, and you'll be able to issue some basic orders to your squad.
At one point, you'll get to fly a plane. But, for the most part, you'll be stalking through dense jungle underbrush while hoping to get a drop on your enemies before they do likewise. Your foes will often literally come out of the woodwork, attacking you in waves and sometimes charging you savagely with their bayonets. They're consistently daunting foes--and not just because they'll constantly have greater numbers. They'll take advantage of cover, flush you out with grenades, and seem to work in tandem to defeat you.
The campaign occurs during the course of several years, which gave the designers license to change some of the weapons, outfits, and settings from mission to mission.
Pacific Assault starts off slowly, with a drawn-out training sequence and sort of a guided tour of Pearl Harbor leading up to Japan's surprise attack , but afterwards, the game's action mostly stays hot. You'll operate in such places as Guadalcanal, Makin Atoll, Tarawa, and more. These tropical settings and the fearless Japanese soldiers you'll be facing in each of them stand in sharp contrast to the ravaged European countryside of Allied Assault and most WWII shooters.
Ironically, though, the setting doesn't feel all that different from that of the recent glut of Vietnam-based shooters, so when you're rustling through the underbrush with a Thompson in hand, looking for any signs of your hidden foes, it's actually easy to forget that this is World War II. Nevertheless, Pacific Assault does a great job of rendering lush, tropical environments and the dangers they may conceal. The game's levels are laid out in a pretty linear fashion, but they do effectively create the illusion that they're densely wooded, sprawling battlefields instead of the easy-to-navigate first-person-shooter levels that they are.
Probably the most interesting twist to Pacific Assault is how it forces you to recover your health from the inevitable injuries you'll sustain, as well as the unique way in which it, like any action game, inevitably kills you off. In previous Medal of Honor games, you scavenged canteens and health packs in each of the levels, but now, most levels offer no such recourse.
Instead, you'll be completely dependent on your squad's corpsman to keep you alive. Basically, you can summon him several times per level to completely restore your health. He'll apply some gauze or give you a little shot of something, and before you know it, you'll be back on your feet, good as new. Recovering from gunshot wounds in this fashion really isn't much more realistic than doing so by walking over a canteen, but it adds an element of tension to the game's battles.
Strangely enough, none of your squadmates can actually be killed, but your corpsman may already be preoccupied with tending to one of them when you desperately need his help, so the game encourages you to try to keep your squad safe. However, it doesn't force you to babysit your squad, either. First up is the ability to give rudimentary orders to your squad mates, such as to press ahead, fall back, give suppressing fire, or to form on you.
Whenever the situation permits, your HUD will automatically show the possible orders you can issue in the top right corner of your screen, and all you do is quickly tap the corresponding arrow key, and Tom Conlin will shout the command for the rest of the squad to follow.
While this is rather limited in scope, it does bring a little extra to the table, and correct usage of tactics will often make completing objectives easier in the long run.
Another feature that MoH:PA mixes up a bit is the method used to recover health. By calling over your corpsman, he brings your health back up to full and uses part of his limited medical supplies. If you lose all of your health, you fall to the ground, and the screen takes a blurred black and white look, giving you a limited time to call out for your corpsman.
One of three things can happen here; you can either simply die because your corpsman can't reach you in time, the corpsman actually gets to you and brings you back to your feet with full health and less medical supplies as stated earlier , or the alternative to both of those, in which a Japanese soldier gets there first and slams his boot into your face. Uniforms and languages on both sides of the battle are represented well, as are the guns and islands themselves.
Actual footage shot in the Pacific during WW2 is frequently used in game, such as the sobering view of ships burning in Pearl Harbor. Additional footage can be viewed from the main menu if the player so desires, such as that of the silent Marine drill team. Now, ragdoll effects by themselves in a videogame are nothing to write home about. Every FPS fan should play it. Rating: 8. Pacific Assault is full of action and cinematic moments, but the game is relentlessly difficult. Rating: 1.
The worst Medal of Honor title ever put out. Rating: 5. Average design and average gameplay, a far inferior game to the original. Highly recommended historical FPS.
Pacific Assault offers many welcome changes to the series, and gets the job done well. One of the hardest and most engaging sequences in the Medal of Honor series.
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