

Unsurprisingly, that technique is not carried over into the game’s multi-player. The slide-lean mechanism works well and is easy to learn, although seems slightly strange in a FPS situation. Dropped into a Taliban-controlled town, MoH dives straight into the action, dropping you into enemy (they’re not called the ‘T’ in the game due to political pressure) territory.ĪI controlled team-mates are helpful and provide adequate assistance but it’s difficult to really there’s any bond between team-mates.

This double approach provides differing experiences on the title’s two central elements.įirstly, the single player. Interestingly, development of the game has been split between Danger Close, who have created the single player experience, and DICE, the team behind the absorbing Battlefield: Bad Company 2. The latest installment in the series sees the action jump from World War 2 to modern day conflict as the MoH series gets a major reboot.

Can it live up to the hype? Visit our blog at IGNORE the controversy and the outrage, Medal Of Honor is a cut-above-the-rest video game that rightly sits with the top titles of 2010.ĮA’s long-awaited answer to Call Of Duty finally arrived this week with more questions than an early round of the The Weakest Link. Games blogger Martin Smith reviews Medal Of Honor – the controversial game billed as Call Of Duty: Black Ops’ big rival this Christmas.
