 |
| Find
them first – IG12, an interesting mix of stealth and
action.. |
| |
| How
to win |
The
Gamesmen has a copy of the PC release of IGI2: Covert Strike
to give away.
Entries should be e-mailed to ADFgamesmen@telstra.com
with the name of the game you in the subject line.
Please only one entry per person, subsequent entries will
be discarded.
Please include your full name and mailing address in the
e-mail or your entry won’t be accepted.
Congratulations to our recent winners J. Beesley, Sydney
and H. Stuart, Brisbane Raven Shield; L. Cartwright, Townsville,
CMBB; P. Hoffman, Freemantle, Mech Assault. |
Their
Army will hunt you down
I.G.I-2
Covert Strike
http://www.igi2-game.com/
http://www.codemasters.com
Military authors are rapidly finding themselves a new outlet for
their creative talents. Tom Clancy may have started it with his
techno-thriller gaming company Red Storm Entertainment but, more
recently, large and well-known developers are turning to high-profile
military talent in order to enhance realism.
In much the same way the movie industry snapped up Andy McNab as
a technical expert, Ravensoft created the Soldier of Fortune series
around gun-for-hire John Mullins and Sci Games used Cameron Spence
of Victor Two fame for Conflict: Desert Storm. Now added to the
list of virtual characters is Chris Ryan, author of The One Who
Got Away and several other SAS titles, who has become David Jones
in IGI2: Covert Strike.
As the name suggests, this Codemasters’ title follows from
a previous game, Project IGI: I’m Going In. For some reason
the ‘I’m Going In’ moniker has now been replaced
with the acronym for Institute for Geotactical Intelligence but
most fans are still calling it by its old name.
Like its precursor, IGI2: Covert Strike is an interesting mix of
stealth and action.
David Jones has all of the kit (although his lack of a night aiming
device/NVG’s is very ‘90s – he has to use image
intensifying binoculars or a thermal scope instead). For those keen
on the destructive aspect of the game it is possible to complete
missions with shoot-first rule but it does become difficult to survive
as a whole army hunts you down. In many games that’s not a
real problem as corridors only lend themselves to a certain amount
of people shooting at you
In IGI2: Covert Strike there are enough open areas that you can
quite unwillingly start a full-scale war.
The single-player storyline is well-structured and enough to keep
a gamer fighting through the 19-mission campaign. Unfortunately,
the game has a pretty steep learning curve and the first mission
is in the dark (which does nothing to show the game’s graphical
beauty) making it quite a frustrating experience for those new to
the series.
The AI seems reasonably competent but I still gag at enemy guards
who decide there is nothing wrong and return to their barracks a
couple of minutes after finding the results of some well-placed
silenced pistol shots. They will work together, however, and this
becomes apparent on the open maps as you watch patrol patterns and
the way they split and hunt for your virtual gunman.
My only other real complaint is the lack of a useable lean command
to help you observe and fire from behind cover.
All up another shooter with highs and lows – it will appeal
to the more cerebral first-person fans but Counter Strikers may
find it a bit demanding on their run, jump, gun playing styles.
Codemasters recommend a system with a 1.2Ghz processor, 512MB RAM,
and a 64MB 3D graphics card, with 1.9MB of free hard-drive space
running Windows 98 or higher to fully enjoy IGI2: Covert Strike.
Wolfenstein’s
back
 |
| Beautiful
but deadly, Helga, the elite guard every man wants. |
Console
Corner Preview
Return To Castle Wolfenstein
XBox and PS2
This month Activision are releasing one of their highest selling
PC games onto the console format – no, make that two console
formats.
Revamped for the specialised features of each machine, Return To
Castle Wolfenstein: Tides of War for XBox and Return To Castle Wolfenstein:
Operation Resurrection for PS2 will have gamers taking over the
role of US Army Ranger and all-round bad-arse BJ Blazkowicz in the
fight against Himmler’s henchmen.
It isn’t just a straight port to the consoles either. Id Software
has created an expanded storyline that puts a player in BJ’s
shoes hunting Nazi scientists in Egypt with a new partner.
This new scenario results in BJ running from a downed aircraft to
be eventually incarcerated (the starting point of the PC game).
The XBox version also offers expanded multi-play options with system
link and XBox Live options.
From what we’ve seen the game looks great in console guise
but you’ll have to wait until the next couple of columns to
see how it plays.
It should be interesting because although the PC version was a great
run-and-gun shooter in multi-play, the single-player game required
a bit of stealth and precise control to make it through relatively
unscathed – something I find a lot easier with the standard
mouse/keyboard control of a PC game.
Both versions are due for release this month. |