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ArmA: Armed Assault

 
Wikipedia: ArmA: Armed Assault
ArmA: Armed Assault
Arma cover.jpg
Developer(s) Bohemia Interactive Studio
Publisher(s) 505 Games
Atari
Distributor(s) Bohemia Interactive Studio and several local publishers.
Engine Real Virtuality 5089 - 5256
Version 1.14 (May 21, 2008)[1]
Platform(s) Windows
Release date(s) CZ November 10, 2006
UK February 16, 2007
EU February 23, 2007
AU March 8, 2007
NA May 4, 2007
Genre(s) Tactical Shooter
Mode(s) Single player, multiplayer
Rating(s) ESRB: M
PEGI: 16+
Media PC DVD-ROM, Download
System requirements Minimum Specification:*CPU: 2.0 GHz Intel Pentium 4 or equivalent processor*RAM: 512 MB*Graphics card: Nvidia Geforce FX series or ATI Radeon 9500 series or higher (Pixel Shader 2.0)*HD space: 3 GB (or more as needed for downloadable addons)*Operating system: Windows XP or Windows 2000
Recommended Specification:*CPU: 3.0 GHz Intel Pentium 4 or equivalent processor*RAM: 1 GB*Graphics card: Nvidia Geforce 6800 series or ATI Radeon X800 series or higher*HD space: 4 GB (or more as needed for downloadable addons)*Operating system: Windows XP
Input methods Keyboard, Mouse, TrackIR if desired

ArmA: Armed Assault (known as ArmA: Combat Operations in North America) is a tactical military first- and third-person shooter which was developed by a 40 member team at Bohemia Interactive (BI), an independent game developer based in the Czech Republic.

ArmA is the spiritual successor to Operation Flashpoint: Cold War Crisis and features an overhauled game engine, with improved graphics, physics, multiplayer functionality, scripting capabilities, and new units and vehicles. An expansion pack titled ArmA: Queen's Gambit was released in 2007.

Because of legal issues between BI and Codemasters (the original publishers of Operation Flashpoint), Codemasters owns the intellectual property to the name Operation Flashpoint. Since BI severed its connection with Codemasters and no longer has the legal right to use the Operation Flashpoint name, Armed Assault is considered to be the direct descendant of Operation Flashpoint. ARMA 2 (previously referred to as "Game 2") was released in June 2009. Codemasters has released a rival title to BI using the name Operation Flashpoint: Dragon Rising with which BI has no participation.[2][3]

Contents

Storyline

Map of 400km² Sahrani Island

The campaign in Armed Assault takes place on the fictional Atlantic island of Sahrani, a nation which is divided into a northern communist regime (called the Democratic Republic of Sahrani - DRS) and an oil rich southern democracy called the Kingdom of South Sahrani. The narrative begins with United States forces, after a few months of training in the south, leaving the island. The northern leader uses this moment of weakness to attack the rest of the south. The player takes on the role of one soldier in one of the platoons not rotated off the island before the conflict began. The platoons aid the Royal Army Corps of Sahrani (RACS) in fending off the more powerful neighbour's offensive being spearheaded by the Sahrani Liberation Army (SLA).

The campaign follows a linear storyline. However, each level in the campaign has options for the player on how to progress through the mission. The player's in-game performance and choices determine how the storyline progresses and ultimately will have a bearing on the war itself. For example, a mission to seize a crucial town can have a substantial effect on the story depending on the player's level of success or failure. Failure to successfully complete an objective does not result in the game ending but will affect the storyline. Hostile squads act independently of the player's actions so that they may be engaging in an activity dictated by the game AI that does not necessarily involve the player. This implies that the game has high replay value as no two games will be identical.

ArmA's expansion pack, ArmA: Queen's Gambit, was released on September 28, 2007 and contained a followup to the original storyline and added a second event afterward.[4]

The content of Operation Flashpoint: Elite is currently being converted to ArmA's format, and released a free addon, titled Cold War Rearmed.[5] This addon contain the original islands, models, and campaign.

Multiplayer

An ingame screenshot demonstrating the high draw distance, making long range engagements up to 10 kilometres possible.

The multiplayer aspect of the game features a "Join in Progress" option, so that players can play without waiting. The number of people allowed in a multiplayer game is limited only by the server's capability. NPCs are also available in multiplayer missions, both as allies and foes, while the mission editor allows users to script battle scenarios. A cooperative mode of gameplay is also included, allowing players online to complete the single player missions as a human player squad. The Armed Assault community also creates custom content such as new missions, campaigns, factions and weapons.

A new multiplayer mode that blends FPS and RTS elements was released as ArmA Warfare in the official update 1.14.[6]. ArmA Warfare contains team-based multiplayer missions with realtime strategy. Two sides fight for control of the entire map or destruction of the enemy base. Players must capture whole cities to gain resources that can be channeled into manufacturing even more weapons and units.

Reception

 Reception
Aggregate scores
Aggregator Score
GameRankings 73.41% [7]
Game Ratio 72% [8]
GameStats 7.4/10 [9]
GameTab 65.75% [10]
Metacritic 74 [11]
MobyGames 76 [12]
TopTenReviews 1.98/4 [13]
Review scores
Publication Score
1UP.com C+ [14]
Allgame 3/5 stars [15]
Computer and Video Games 8.4/10 [16]
Edge 5/10 [11]
Eurogamer 8/10 [17]
GameSpot 7.0/10 [18]
GameSpy 3/5 stars [19]
GameZone 7.4/10 [20]
IGN 7.3/10 [21]
PC Gamer UK 7/10 [22]
PC Gamer US 78% [7]

ArmA received average reception on its release, praised for the unique believability of its action but criticized for its difficulty, complexity, and bugs. IGN said "ArmA's adherence to realism and accuracy in terms of weapons and world design is highly commendable and hopefully will inspire other developers in similar directions." GameDaily praised its "spectacular graphics" and its multiplayer, but criticized its bugs and "complicated menu system".[23] Computer Games Online said "It’s hard...to believe that they actually thought that such an unpolished game would enjoy any kind of success."[24] WorthPlaying concluded its review with "There are so many things going for Armed Assault: Combat Operations in terms of presentation, concept and effort. Unfortunately, it slips up in so many ways that affect the gameplay to a serious degree that it turns what could have been a great military combat simulator into a test of patience. ...That said, ArmA is one of the more authentic first-person shooter war games out now, so...ArmA is worth considering."

See also

References

External links


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