|
Post by Treat me Fancy-Pants Pavis on Dec 12, 2006 13:50:57 GMT -5
Me and Chris vs. every single other person who wants to play. I think I have a 16 channel hub at my house, but I am short on CAT5 or a wireless Hub.
Plus I don't have a place to play. Until I kill some one.
Reason for BF1942: I can kill every one on that game It is old, so you slow people can play it And I can easily get the entire thing downloaded on my hard drive with all the cracks so every one can play it for free. Or you can probably buy it for ten bucks.
|
|
|
Post by Chad Manning on Dec 13, 2006 9:29:35 GMT -5
What type of game is this?
|
|
|
Post by Treat me Fancy-Pants Pavis on Dec 13, 2006 11:15:15 GMT -5
Battlefield 1942 is an expansive first-person shooter (FPS), set in World War II, developed by Digital Illusions CE and published by Electronic Arts for Microsoft Windows (2002) and Apple Macintosh (2004). The game can be played single-player against bots, but most playtime has been in its multiplayer Internet games.
Battlefield 1942 combines high polygonal and high texture resolution 3D computer graphics with extensive gameplay. Players are able to fly World War Two era fighter aircraft and bombers, navigate capital ships and aircraft carriers, man coastal defenses, drive tanks and jeeps, control stationary weapons on the battlefield or aboard vehicles or just fight as one of five classes of infantry. Some argued that Battlefield 1942 had one of the most realistic physics and game engines available in FPSs on the market when it came out in 2002[citation needed]; others however, find this debatable because of certain details. For example, tanks tended to lob their projectiles (which should have had a very flat trajectory) and target leading was arguably due to game and network lag rather than programmed physics.
Each battle takes place on one of several maps located in a variety of places and famous battlefields in all of the major theaters of World War II: the Pacific, European, North African and Eastern Fronts. While the combat is always Axis Powers versus Allies, the location determines which specific armies are used (for example, on the Iwo Jima map, it is Japan versus the United States, while on the Battle of Britain map, it is Germany versus the United Kingdom). The maps in Battlefield 1942 are based on real battles, but are not necessarily realistically portrayed; an example of this is the presence of American forces on the Operation Market Garden map, even though, in reality, the Americans had no participation in the battle at Arnhem where this particular map takes place.
|
|
|
Post by Chad Manning on Dec 13, 2006 15:35:12 GMT -5
Sounds pretty cool. I may have to keep an eye out for a copy of the game.
|
|
|
Post by Vable on Dec 13, 2006 20:51:33 GMT -5
aye, does sound fun. I'll dig around for it later.
AND d**nit..I still want to play some Homeworld2 multiplayer.
|
|