Brothers in Arms: Hell's Highway is the third entry in the Brothers in Arms series of video games which follows the men of the 101st Airborne Division (502nd Parachute Infantry Regiment). This game once again puts players in the role of Staff Sergeant Matt Baker during Operation Market Garden in the later stages of World War II.
The game was released for the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 on September 23, 2008[1] in North America, and were in stores on September 20, 2008. The Microsoft Windows version was released two weeks later, on October 7, 2008. It was made available on Steam on October 8, 2008.[4]
The game follows the story of Staff Sergeant Matt Baker leading his new recon squad into the middle of
the Netherlands during Operation Market Garden.
[edit] Gameplay
The game has many new features, including a selection of new specialized units (
bazooka and
machine gun
teams). When a command is issued, the player model uses authentic WWII
infantry hand signals to issue the command to his squad, similar to its
predecessors. The player also has the ability to take cover behind
objects and fire from a third person perspective which is an integral
part of the game's strategy.
A new “health” system has replaced the more punishing set health per
mission system of previous titles in the franchise. With this system,
the player's screen begins to turn red as he exposes himself from cover
and will return to normal when he return to cover; failure to do so will
result in Baker getting shot and killed. The original 'Situational
Awareness' system of the first two
BiA games has been replaced
with a simple tactical map that includes historically accurate recon
reports based on period reconnaissance of the exact missions the player
is currently playing.
One of the newer features of
Hell's Highway, is the "action
cam". Whenever the player gets a head shot, good grenade kill or orders a
particularly explosive bazooka blast, the camera will sometimes zoom in
on the action and go into slow-motion showing the gory death.
[edit] Development
[show]Official system requirements |
|
Minimum |
Recommended |
Windows |
Operating system |
Windows XP with Service Pack 3 or Windows Vista with Service Pack 1 |
CPU |
Pentium D 925 3 GHz |
2.6 GHz dual-core |
Memory |
1 GB |
2 GB |
Hard drive space |
8 GB of free space |
Graphics hardware |
DirectX 9.0c compliant card with 128 MB RAM must support
Pixel Shader 3.0. ATI RADEON X1600/1650/1950/HD 2000/3000 series and
NVIDIA GeForce 6800/7/8/9 series or even higher |
Sound hardware |
DirectX 9.0 or 10.0 compliant |
Network |
Broadband internet connection with 384 kbit/s upstream |
|
On September 15, 2008,
Ubisoft and
Gearbox Software announced that the
Xbox 360 and
PlayStation 3 versions of the game had gone gold. The Windows version went gold two days later. Playable demos on the
PlayStation Network and
Xbox Live Marketplace are available now.
Gearbox has officially announced a special, limited edition version
of the game which includes a 6 inch Sergeant Matt Baker figure with 13
accessories, a blister pack holding the figurine and accessories, a
32-page
Brothers in Arms First Edition comic book, a full color map of Operation Market Garden, special packaging and 2 more playable multiplayer characters.
[5][6]
[edit] Reception
The game was met with generally positive reviews. It was received
with praise for its portrayal of soldiers in combat and the bonds that
form amongst them. Not all of Hell's Highway's reviews were ideal, with
many citing the lack of any real support for its multiplayer and the
uneven gameplay and modes as steps backwards from the previous entries
in the series. Positive things cited by many critics included the voice
work, which many reviewers noted as a step up from previous entries, as
well as the story, which worked on a much grander level to show the
horrors of war. Other issues cited were a collection of bugs, primarily
in multiplayer.
[edit] Novelization
Brothers In Arms: Hell's Highway has also been published into a popular companion novel for the video game by the video game's historical director,
Colonel John Antal, who served in the
United States Army and retired after 30 years.
[19]
[edit] References