Dom Robinson reviews
Electronic Arts
- Price: £49.99
- Players: 1; Online: 2-24
- Widescreen: Yes
- 60Hz: Yes (optional)
- HDTV: 720p/1080i/1080p
- Dolby Digital 5.1 sound: Yes
- Xbox Live-enabled: Yes
Yes, Battlefield: Bad Companyis another army-based shooter but a lot more whammy to the average game and which has anice balance of the arcadey-feel of blasting away, while giving you the ‘get stuck in’ feel of the old Medal of Honour games,so you can put paid to the bad guys with satisfaction.
The idea is that, set in the near future, you and three other guys, Haggard, Redford and Sweetwater, are plunged deep into adramatic Eurasian conflict. However, you just don’t think you’ll get the respect you deserve on your return to the fold, soit’s tempting to go out on your own personal mission and blast seven shades of shit out of everything for the gain of somesweet gold. In fact, perhaps you’re really controlling Gordon Brown since he sold all of Britain’s gold reserves when it wasat its lowest price and now they’ve nothing to fall back on in these harsh economic times…
We have explosive!
Then again, if you could really reduce every last brick to a pile a rubble it’d be a bit too ridiculousso this has the fairly realistic touch of, say, leaving the more sturdy elements of a house standing that, under suchtreatment, would eventually collapse, as that allows you a chance to hide behind things while the baddies blast you.This can be seen towards the end of my ‘rocket launcher fun’ video as everything is seen to blow up around Redford outside.
Quite honestly, it’s one long exercise in crash/bang/wallop as everything booms about around you, as you can see from theclips uploaded, and you’ll be hard-pushed to find a bigger bang for your buck in the run-up to Xmas.
Blast the enemy tank!
The fact you don’t have to repeat sections means there isn’t anything to be lost by being killed, which can end up beingdisatisfying as a result and this can be seen by the clip where I sort out the enemy tank with a rocket launcher. In any othergame, where I get killed just as I kill him, I’d be back to the start of that segment as a result, but here? It’s business asusual – I’m alive again and I’ve got to get to the meeting point. Madness.
On balance, there are better shooters out there, such asJohn Woo’s Stranglehold.It’s a good blaster for a bit of fun, but it does become far too repetitive and overall it comes across like a knockaboutCall of Dutyrather than a serious game.
Rocker launcher fun!
Anyway, as I said, there’s a brilliant bang for your buck in this title, but it also has to be said that it’s a greatinbetweener but at this point it’s not a classic because there’s too many explosive things and other elements mentioned thatmake it too easy (and so, the high scores are more in-keeping with the short term and not the long term). That said, we cansee that it has a fantastic new game engine (Frostbite, by DICE) and also that it’s clearly got amazing potential for thefuture, and for those who are into multiplayer gaming (which I don’t have), I can see how this title will be outstandingin that capacity. It’s just that the single player offering needs a bit more substance to it.
I’ll also add that it has one major plus in that, after you die, the loading times to get you back to where you were arevery quick indeed, so there’s no hanging around waiting for it to restart.
Glitch as Redford won’t fire at the enemy
- Battlefield: Bad Company Clip 1: We have explosive!
Battlefield: Bad Company Clip 2: Using the enemy artillery guns
Battlefield: Bad Company Clip 3: Blast the enemy tank!
Battlefield: Bad Company Clip 4: Rocker launcher fun!
Battlefield: Bad Company Clip 5: Walking through Kablammoland!
Battlefield: Bad Company Clip 6: Glitch as Redford won’t fire at the enemy
Battlefield: Bad Company Clip 7: Grenade finally hits the boat!
Visit my DVDfeverGames Youtube channel.
SOUND EFFECTS AND MUSIC
PLAYABILITY
ENJOYMENT
OVERALL
Reviewer of movies, videogames and music since 1994. Aortic valve operation survivor from the same year. Running DVDfever.co.uk since 2000. Nobel Peace Prize winner 2021.