Lone Wolf Mode
The centerpiece of the Future Force Warrior equipment is the super-light, super-powerful M29 system. This sleek, high-tech assault rifle features a built-in camera that allows you to peer around corners without exposing yourself to enemy fire. Hitting the black button engages the camera so you can manipulate the view with your controller. From this view you can scan, zoom, and line up the perfect head shot without leaving cover. You can even fire the gun from this position so that the enemy is dead before he knows you're out there.
If you think all this superior weapons tech is for show, you obviously don't know Tom Clancy or the Ghost Recon series. As the name implies, Lone Wolf missions are for a single soldier—you won't have any of your fellow Ghosts along to provide covering fire or execute flanking maneuvers. No squad mates means you're the only one shooting at the enemy, and, worse, the only target for them to shoot at. The advantages of the M29 mean nothing if you can't change your strategy to compensate for the lack of troop support. The Ghost Recon games are famous for demanding patience and sound strategy over speed and aggression—trying to shoot everything that moves just won't work here—, but this has never been more important than in Lone Wolf mode. Since it takes only a few shots to do fatal damage (one if it's a head shot), you have no chance against superior numbers in close quarters even with the Future Force Warrior gear. You must rely on the long-range capabilities of the camera gun, timed grenades, and air strikes to soften up the opposition before you get close. Cover is also more important than ever—anything that stops enemy bullets is your friend, and you want to shut down as many sources of hostile fire from as many different directions as you can, all while avoiding large-scale shootouts.
Lone Wolf mode is an excellent addition to Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon 2. Giving players access to the next generation of military hardware fits perfectly with the near-future setting of the game. More importantly, it changes the fundamental approach players must take in order to succeed. By concentrating all of a mission's offensive and defensive requirements into a single soldier, each battle becomes more exciting, more challenging, and much more intense. By Pete Hutter |