Going Solo in Bad CompanyPublished June 24, 2008 At A Glance
While EA and DICE's Battlefield franchise has long been associated with its award-winning online multiplayer, the single-player mode of Battlefield: Bad Company™ is not about to play second fiddle to its Xbox LIVE® counterpart.
Sweet-fancy-gold, I'm rich! Complete with tongue-in-cheek story, well-rounded and often hilarious characters, a touch of greed, hyper-realistic combat scenarios and all the multi-faceted gameplay and destruction you've come to expect from the franchise, Bad Company is a solo experience set to shock and awe veterans of the series. There are few things more satisfying in Bad Company than taking in the utter annihilation of a once pristine village square at the battle's end.Misfits Unite You play as Preston Marlowe, Bad Company's latest recruit and resident punching bag for your new squadmates, Sweetwater, Haggard, and Sergeant Redford. Sgt. Redford and his two slightly addled comrades aren't faceless soldiers, though. They'll fight alongside you for the duration of the game, but more importantly, their constant chatter, personality quirks, and sometimes indefensibly rash decisions turn what you might otherwise consider meat shields into living, breathing soldiers you care about, laugh at, laugh with, and want to protect.
You're fine. Just rub some dirt on it. The war effort takes a turn for the profitable when your squad stumbles into a platoon of hired-gun mercenaries paid entirely in gold and their gold-laden payroll truck. Alas, the truck crosses over into neutral territory, but when Haggard charges off in pursuit of everlasting riches, our less than scrupulous squad is only too happy to follow suit. Shenanigans ensue. Every Class in One Whether it's unloading the full complement of a mortar strike on an enemy stronghold, repairing your smoldering tank, decimating enemy weapons and vehicles with C4, or plying a grenade launcher to bust open walls, you'll get to play with toys from each of the Assault, Recon, Demolition, Specialist, and Support classes. Likewise, you'll settle behind the wheel of tanks, jeeps, armored personnel carriers, helicopters, suicide trucks filled with exploding barrels, and in one memorable case, a golf cart. Vast and Varied
It all falls down. Knock it Down Up to You Auto Injector
He's a little off maybe, but Sweetwater's good people. Rather than automate healing whenever you're not being hit, Bad Company requires you to switch out your weapon for the Auto Injector, and then trigger its use manually. This slightly more tactical approach requires forethought and a shade of twitch-reflexes to pull off in the heat of battle. Because it instantly replenishes your health, you can even use it mid-run while charging an enemy encampment. Good Things Come to Those Who Search In the end, Battlefield: Bad Company proves that this shining example of FPS multiplayer gaming can hold its own offline. Now go get that gold! Article by Ryan Treit |