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Medal Of Honor Allied Assault RIP [PC game]DescriptionEA has finally brought its Medal of Honor series (already wildly popular    on the PlayStation) to the PC. Set during World War II, 
Medal of Honor:  Allied Assault   chronicles the fictional exploits of Lt. Mike Powell as he  battles  his  way from the shores of Africa to the shores of France to the 
heart  of  Nazi Germany. On the PSX, the Medal of Honor games were hailed as   revolutionary, and though 
Allied Assault never quite merits that level of  praise, it's still a great 
game.
At first glance, 
Allied Assault seems to have a lot in common with the  World War II-themed 
Return to Castle Wolfenstein, but the similarities  are strictly superficial. 
Allied Assault   takes a more realistic approach  to the action, both in the enemies   that you face (there are no zombies or  mutants) and in the 
mission  structure. The game  unfolds across six real-life  theaters of war, and  the 30 playable  missions vary a lot in how they play out.  Just like a  character in a  good army movie, you'll be sabotaging tanks,  destroying  submarines,  and sending false 
communications. Nearly all your  missions  are very well designed, especially the mission where you land on Omaha   
Beach.
The D-day mission has received a lot of attention, and  for good reason--once the  door on your Higgins 
boat drops, all hell  breaks loose. The men in front of you  drop in a hail of bullets, a  Higgins boat to your left is blown to bits, and  machine gun fire rakes  the water everywhere. Getting from the boat to the  relative safety of  the 
shingles is a truly harrowing experience, although parts  of it  borrow a little too much from 
Saving Private Ryan.
Since  the game is set during WWII, you'll face a wide range of enemies,    including tanks, machine gun nests, and even planes. The enemy AI is   better than  in 
Wolfenstein--enemies will duck for cover, lay   down suppressing fire,  and throw back grenades--but too often it's   obvious that enemy actions are  scripted. At times you can actually tell   when you've triggered the next wave of  enemy attacks: stay still and   nothing happens; silently creep a foot forward and  they all come   rushing out. This kind of heavy-handed scripting is a throwback to  the   days of 
Doom, and more than a little bit of a disappointment.
Graphically, 
Allied Assault looks quite sharp. It uses the 
Quake  III  graphics engine and the character 
models,  vehicles, and textures are   well done, especially if you have a  high-end video card. Unfortunately,  there  are some glitches, such as  clipping and collision detection  problems. It's not  uncommon to see  enemies walking halfway through a  door or a wall. Also, in a   (successful) effort to get a "T" rating,  there is absolutely no blood  or gore.  When you a shoot a Nazi  infantryman with your captured MG-42  machine gun, he  simply falls down.
The weakest part of 
Allied Assault  is its multiplayer component. There  are four game types, all of which  are exceptionally average, and none of them is  as compelling as 
Wolfenstein's multiplayer. Still, it is undeniably 
fun  to wage war in bombed-out French villages and other World War II battlefields.  
Allied Assault offers a fun single-player game and its D-day mission will  go down as a classic gaming experience.
System RequirementWindows XP/Me/95/98/2000
733 MHz Intel® Pentium® III or 700 MHz AMD® Athlon™ processor
128 MB RAM;
8x CD-ROM/DVD-ROM drive
3 GB free hard disk space plus space for saved games (additional space required for Windows swap-file);
16 MB OpenGL capable video card using an NVIDIA™ TNT2, GeForce™ or greater;
ATI® Rage 128, Radeon® or greater; or PowerVR Kyro II with OpenGL and DirectX 8.0 compatible 
driver;
DirectX 8.0 compatible sound card;
Keyboard; Mouse
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