Brothers In Arms: Earned in Blood
Brothers In Arms: Earned In Blood is one of the most incredible World War II shooters around. Meet the men of the 101st Airborne and Sgt. Joe "Red" Hartsock. You'll lead him and his squad of paratroopers through some of the most intense missions of WWII as you fight for the liberation of Normandy. Arm yourself with new weapons like the M3 grease gun, and command new vehicles like the M10 Wolverine Tank Destroyer More challenging and dynamic combat, featuring close-quarter urban environments and a new, next-generation artificial intelligence system
Brothers In Arms: Earned in Blood Accessories
Brothers in Arms: Road to Hill 30
Medal of Honor Airborne
Medal of Honor: Pacific Assault
Call of Duty 2
Medal of Honor Allied Assault War Chest
Far Cry
Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare
Men of Valor
Battlefield 1942: The Complete Collection
Call of Duty: United Offensive Expansion Pack
Brothers In Arms: Earned in Blood Reviews
Overall, I recommend this game only if you have played the original; if you havent played the original you will have no idea what is going on storyline wise. It is a great extension of the original Road to Hill 30, which I enjoyed very much. Good game. I bought it because it was only about 10 bucks, and I had never played it.
I am all for a good World War II shooter. No one shakes like that. I got so sick of it I tried going through it disregarding the squad stuff and it is impossible. I gave up on this game after the second board. All gave it pretty good props.
I get even more excited when it is a "tactical" game. I would tell my guys to fire and they would run off to the right and disappear. I was emptying clips at guys who were standing still with no cover and I couldn't hit them, point blank sometimes. Even if I did manage to get a few rounds in the guy he would turn around and blast me and I would be a goner. Since when does the army train someone to shake his gun like he is a drug addict who is going through withdrawal.
I used to shoot rifles competitively in a league that had age groups, one being 8-10 yrs old, and those kids were putting this aiming to shame. Or I would want them to fire and my guy would tell them to flank them.which would be fine if there weren't walls in the way or no way around. I read the PC Gamer reviews and talked to a couple of people who had played it. I played this game and I seriously had to stop and regather myself after five minutes in the first board. The whole tactical thing is a complete joke.
One guy warned me it was a bit tricky to get used to, but that isn't a reason to not buy it. I would recommend for a decent FPS game set in WWII that you get COD or MOH.
When i recieved this I was excited. Except there is a protection program that comes with it. I play 1sr shooter games. Forget the name but I have heard it linger s on you computer. I had to go to this program's web site d/l a another program to delete it. Brothers in Arms should just use the usual keycode or Steam. This company should make clear it uses this type of protection program and Amazon.com should require them to.
There are no health pack, nor quick saves, so you on your own to make it to the next stage. The battlefield is condensed, so the enemy troops appear a lot closer than they are, so you may have to hit them a number of times. I thought all things combined BIA made a more interesting game than the usual comparable PC games, where you are normally just on your own, and there are so many health packs. So you would use this type of weapon up close. You get to have a squad of one or two groups, which is really fun because you get to play the role of the Squad Leader. It is true you cannot go to prone, but only crouch. The will after several tries offer to reheal your team.
The one thing I always tried to remember was that it was only a PC game, far from reality, so enjoy it. The M1 was better at this than the Thompson sub-mchine gun for example. Keep your enemies suppressed and move in to kill, and stay on the move. I really liked this game, once I learned to play it. The next is on the way. I learned to overcome that.
Another thing that was incorporated was suppressing fire. Options unlock when difficulties are accomplished. Earned in Blood is the sequel to the first. You will run down on ammo which if is your own teams weapons, can be resupplied from fellow troops.
- Surpisingly cinematic & immersive single player experience, with a likable protagonist and strong storyline. If realism frightens or irritates you as a gamer, then you may want to leave this one behind. I'm probably only about a third into the single-player campaign portion of the game, but can already tell it's a solid, enjoyable piece of work. I can run the game fine on my old clunker of a laptop with lowered settings, and it still looks and runs splendidly.
There is also a very useful 'tactical view' type of thing, which allows you to pause combat, pull back and examine the battlefield and plan your attack. It's fun. It's gorgeous. There is a strong tactical feel to this game. The AI is really good, too. Just like in real life, right. You'll have to actually think things through and use the abilities of your allies, which makes for a much more enjoyable and interesting FPS game, as far as I'm concerned.
You can't just charge blindly into combat and blow everything up. This is my first experience with the Brothers In Arms series, and I'm pleasantly suprised. - Fun & exciting gameplay. Overall, it's a solid piece of warfare game-r-y. Duh. You usually have limited control over a group of your fellow soldiers, which help you out on missions.
It's action packed. Despite the sometimes repetitive nature of the game, and a few minor annoyances, it's totally worth Picking up. The combat seems very realistic, with occasionally challenging weapons. - Good music, SFX, voice acting.
Nifty. - Beautiful graphics & seemingly bug free. Unlike every single action movie and the majority of FPS games, you're not gaurunteed to hit the target every time you shoot at it. A lot of people are complaining about the combat and stupid nerd stuff like that, but I don't see the problem.
Here's why:. Your character also reacts realistically to getting injured.so, shock of all shocks, if you let a german shoot you three or four times at close range you'll die.
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