Thursday, December 10, 2009

High Altitude Warfare Experimental Squadron(H.A.W.X)






So, I've played this game for sometime and to tell you the truth, the game is good but not too good.It amazes you for the first few seconds and then it gets all so,should I say common?It is almost the same as Ace Combat,except in Ace Combat,they have more futuristic aircraft.


It occupies 7GB memory in your hard drive..As for me,I put it in my gaming portable hard drive so that I can play it not just at the desktop..
This game was released in march 2009 and is made by Ubisoft.
Here is the requirements for the game.


Minimum Recommended
Microsoft Windows
Operating System Windows XP Service Pack 3 or Windows Vista Service Pack 1
CPU Intel Pentium 4 2 GHz or AMD Athlon 2000+ processor Intel Core Duo 6320 or AMD Athlon X2 4000+
Memory 1 GB (2 GB for Vista) 2 GB
Hard Drive Space 7 GB of free space
Graphics Hardware DirectX 9.0c compliant card with 128 MB RAM DirectX 9.0c compliant card with 512 MB RAM
Sound Hardware DirectX 9.0 compatible card DirectX 9.0 or 10
Network Internet connection required for activation




Game play of Tom Clancy's H.A.W.X. which is being in a slightly different future have some benefits to the player as the player can try flying some moderately futuristic aircraft and some handy dandy navigational system.It is good to put in mind that this game is not a flight simulation.You don't have fuel gauge to worry about,the planes carry more than 200 missiles and so on.What I'm saying is the planes in HAWX move with very little realism.
And another problem with the game is when you fly at the speed off sound,you would like to see some fast moving buildings and in this game,there is not much different.I don't feel like I was going fast at all.The worst thing is they don't have landing modes like Ace Combat does.It is just all fly and mission accomplished. There are runways but those are the crappy runway that is just for the landscape,you can't land on them.

You play as Captain Crenshaw, a former United States flyboy whose squadron has been dissolved for whatever reason. Looking for work and money, Crenshaw turns to private military groups and stumbles upon a company called Artemis. Long story short, Crenshaw works for Artemis, Artemis gets contracted to protect Brazil; Crenshaw follows. Then Artemis decides to attack the USA; Crenshaw revolts. Before you know it Crenshaw is fighting for the red white and blue again, trying to repel the attacks by Artemis over some of their landmarks.

There are 19 missions to fly throughout the campaign, all of which are available for four-player cooperative play online. For the sake of fun, I'd recommend hitting up a friend to be your wingman because your control over the AI's actions is very limited. You can tell them to attack or cover you, but that's about it. Assigning them to attack a ground target works out pretty well, but telling them attack an incoming squad of fighters typically yields poor results.

This game get a decent 7.

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