Description Penetrate the island strongholds of Japanese Imperial forces with your squad of commandos. Stealth, a cool head and your M1 may buy you one more day. It’s real missions with real consequences. Survive the hard-edged intensity of the Pacific theater.
Summary: A very good budget title. Not as polished as some of the bigger budget games, but better than most.
This sequel to the orginal Deadly Dozen improves on that game's few flaws. Enemy snipers are no longer super human killing machines like the nazis in the first game. Your squad mates are much smarter this time around and will be racking up kills while you're still spinning around, trying to determine where the enemy is.
Fog is still a problem in this game, but the distances have been pushed back and besides, it actually seems appropriate in a jungle setting.
If you like tactical war shooters along the lines of Hidden & Dangerous, Ghost Recon and Operation Flashpoint, this game is well worth a look.
Summary: I must admit, that when I first saw this game on the shelf, I thought, "oh crap, another game in which you command a squad of morons." Luckily, when I finally decided to give it a go, I was proven wrong (at least for the most part; still some errors in pathing). Though I am far from completion, I found both the single and multiplayer to be engaging and fun.
Summary: Great game. After playing the first DD, I had very high hopes for this one, and it went above and beyond anything I could hope for. All of the technical issues from the first game have been eradicated. The enviroment is fantastic, it pulls you in to the point where you can feel the mud that you're laying in, you will find yourself swatting at mosquitos buzzing around your ears.
Rating Reviewed by: David White(Unregistered User)
Review Date November 21, 2002
Overall Rating 5 of 5
Review NaN of 7
, from Warwick, Rhode Island, USA
Price Paid:
$2999.00
from Best Buy
Summary: Simply great. Not only the best value for the money in many years, but one of the best games period if you are a fan of MOH, Return to Castle Wolfenstein, Soldier of Fortune, oh, so many others. You've got to hand it to Infogrames. In standing by great old titles like European Air War and backing so called "budget" titles (Wizard Works and ValueSoft make budge titles, not Infogrames) gamers have what they have been asking for: a quality company puting out quality games.