Condemned Heroes pulls no punches and offers no surprises.
This stand-alone expansion to the brutally challenging Men of War real-time
strategy series offers more of the same as seen in the prior Vietnam and
Assault Squad games. Difficulty has been scaled back a bit from that of last
year's incredibly tough release set in the jungles of Vietnam, but that has in
turn been offset by dreary missions put together without a lot in the way of
imagination. This one struggles to live up to the Men of War standard.
Your guys are the cannon fodder who undertake fun jobs like
clearing trenches and buildings for the regular troops following behind with
tanks, mortars, and the like. The campaign consists of about 20 missions in
total that take your Russian Dirty Dozen from the desperate moments in the
homeland in early 1944 through Poland and into Germany in the waning days of
the war in the spring of 1945. There isn't much of a story here, though. Troops
are readily replaceable, and there is no way to increase experience or level
up. The atmosphere is also thin due to odd choices like the voiced mission
directives being given without even the slightest pretense at a cheesy Russian
accent.
Missions aren't very inventive, and maps all look the same.
There isn't anything ugly, but there are a lot of browns, blacks, and whites,
and much of the art seems to have been held over from previous Men of War
releases. Even worse, your single-minded soldiering often involves the same
repeated tasks. You'll probably lose count of the number of German-held
trenches you clear over the course of the campaign. While the monotony of the
look and feel is broken up courtesy of some different tactical approaches along
with the ability to scrounge weapons and ammo and even repair vehicles like
tanks for impromptu armor assaults, you're forever figuring out smart ways to
attack dug-in Germans. This typically means finding good cover and then sending
in some lucky bugger with a grenade to drive your enemies out of cover for a
good hosing down with automatic weapon fire.
It's all a bit tedious. Only the insanely brutal nature of
these assaults livens things up. In true Men of War fashion, you are wildly
outnumbered and outgunned. Constantly. Mission goals are always capped by
accomplishing some spectacular feat or three, which then typically opens the
way for larger squads and tanks to roll in and mop up the rest of the bad guys.
At times, this can be used as a bit of a cheat. Sending a few of your troops in
on suicide runs can trigger quick successes that cue waves of
computer-controlled backups to charge into the fray. So sacrificing your men
can be the best way to move forward. Stalin would have approved.
At the same time, a tremendous amount of trial and error is
required. Suicide runs often turn into plain old suicide unless you have
figured out the exact attack line that will get a care package of grenades
delivered to their targets before withering enemy fire kills the runners. And
even when you do have things sussed out, there are some odd pathfinding issues
that see troops stand up at the wrong time, get bunched up and run out of cover
to make room for buddies (how courteous!), ignore enemy troops just a few feet
away, and so forth. Being able to take charge of individual troops through the
game's direct control feature helps, but the game is too quick for so much
micromanagement. By the time you realize that you need to jump into a grunt's
army boots, chances are awfully good that he'll be dead.
Multiplayer has been scaled back, so you can't skip out on
the campaigns to go up against other human players. The co-op mode from Vietnam
has been dropped in favor of Capture the Flag and a minor variant called
Victory Flag. Modders have already patched co-op back in, but it's
disappointing that the developers didn't bother with what would have been a
pretty satisfying way to handle the extreme difficulty of the missions. At any
rate, there isn't much of a crowd playing the game online right now, so the
whole multiplayer question is kind of moot unless you have some buddies you can
hook up with on the Net or who can come over for some LAN play.
Condemned Heroes isn't a bad addition to the series, but it
is limited and predictable, which might be a tough sell to those who have seen
all of this before. Additionally, the intensely frustrating difficulty makes
the game an even dicier proposition for casual gamers or series newbies looking
to get into some WWII squad combat. So venture into this one only if you're
looking for a lot of repetitive reasons to pull out your hair.
You Can Download Game Here
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