Battlefield 1942 user manual


















The complete game, which includes both expansion packs. Download 2 MEGA. Download 3 DropBox. Download 4 MediaFire. Enjoy six new maps, dozens of new weapons and vehicles or fight as the French or Italian. Grab this and receive nine new levels in addition some of the most exciting gameplay offered. Download 1 MEGA. Double click and it will throw you into the game.

Download 1 MediaFire. If you would like to experience more, grab this file which contains 16 new maps with bot support. Download 1 MediaFire Download 2 Dropbox. Download 2 MediaFire. If the team earns control points, it reinforces itself enabling the players and vehicles to assault in an assigned area. If the player earns capturing and controlling points, it weakens the enemy reinforcements. If the team captures the control, it is their place to spawn from it again. Battlefield full version game has rounds.

The more detail you provide for your issue and question, the easier it will be for other EA Battlefield PC owners to properly answer your question. This manual comes under the category Games and has been rated by 1 people with an average of a 6. This manual is available in the following languages: English. Is your question not listed?

Maps focused around urban combat Stalingrad, Berlin also seem popular, while desert maps co-starring British and Germans are lower down in the pecking order. Despite their almost universal high quality BF would certainly benefit from some smaller, more focused locales for eight-player games or less. If you are unfortunate enough to be lumbered with a 56K modem, you should find that you can still play games with up to 16 players, without too much lag but it's rarely the case that you will get a decent game.

Thankfully there are plenty of servers available to join. Even if you do have to settle for one sparsely populated with players, it usually isn't long before all the spaces are filled and you can get on with the task at hand with a full complement of men on both sides. The genius of lies in its superb combination of simplicity of design and ambition of execution. You enter the battleground as a basic foot soldier, armed with anything from a sniper rifle to a rocket launcher, and from there you can jump into any of 35 air, sea and land vehicles.

Grab a jeep, a tank or lumbering bomber plane, man a fixed-gun emplacement, defend a battleship against waves of oncoming fighters, or simply run sabotage missions with a bulging sack of explosives. Rather than the hardcore war simulation it could have been, opts for a pick-up-and-play arcade sensibility that puts the focus firmly back on fun and frantic competition.

On current form appears to be a classic in the making, and with three months of fine-tuning still in front of it there seems little doubt that it will wind up being a multiplayer favourite for many years to come. It is not even the beginning of the end.

But it is, perhaps, the end of the beginning. Aptly we are at a similar juncture in PC gaming - perhaps the beginning of the end or the end of the beginning of a phase that has seen a blitzkrieg of WWII-themed games over the last two years across every major genre, from strategy and simulation with Sudden Strike and IL-2 Sturmovik , to the recent first-person shooters Return to Castle Wolfenstein and Medal of Honor: Allied Assault.

And with production lines still running on a war footing, there seems to be no let up in the number of WWII games coming our way. Whether or not fatigue could be setting in, one thing's for certain, it won't be over by Christmas. Fortunately Battlefield: looks like it could be a lot of fun, for while it may look slightly inferior to both Wolfenstein and Medal of Honor , in the gameplay stakes it could well end up offering a great deal more.

As you may already have worked out, the game will allow players to fight missions as diverse as the Normandy landings, the Arnhem parachute drop, Midway, the Tobruk siege and the massive Kursk tank battle. Even more important than the settings, however, is what you can do across them - an incredible 35 vehicles will be available to control, including tanks, jeeps and APCs on land, fighters and bombers in the air.

It's quite an impressive show of force, backed up by an arsenal of 19 different weapons, ranging from pistols, sniper rifles and machine guns, to bazookas, mines, flame-throwers and hardmounted weapons. While you may be thinking this all sounds a bit over ambitious, let me just remind you that while Battlefield will offer a single-player game with bots, it will be online that developer Digital Illusions plans to take over from the likes of Medal Of Honor.

Similar in scope to its predecessor Codename Eagle which was a rubbish single-player game anyway , Battlefield has a lot more in common with games such as Tribes 2 and the up-and-coming PlanetSide, except of course that rather than mincing about in Power Rangers costumes shooting popguns and flying around on butcher's blocks, you could be escorting a bomber manned by your mates, while your comrades bombard the enemy defences from a battleship as 30 chums storm the beach.

As with Tribes 2, up to 64 players can fight across a single map, some of which will be a wide as 4km, which on foot could take a good half-hour to run across. Just to add a Team Fortress flavour to the mix Battlefield players will be able to pick a player class for their character, including Assault, Medic, Scout, Antitank or Engineer, and game modes will feature Team Deathmatch, Capture The Flag, Co-operative and Conquest modes - in which each team must capture and hold key areas, and the more they hold, the more it will eat into the 'lives' or respawns the other team has remaining.

It's with some thanks that despite its FPS mechanics. Battlefield: has ambitions away from the realism of today's more contemporary tactical shooters, the emphasis is squarely on team-based arcade action.

And as the WWII war machine grinds relentlessly on without apparent end, Battlefield: seems destined to provide a good few of gaming's finest hours. Although it has a solid multiplayer teambased focus, this single-player demo should still give you an inkling of what's to come when it hits the shelves next month. This demo is set in Tobruk, the scene of one of Rommel's greatest successes in the North African campaign before Montgomery thwarted his efforts at El Alamein.

A barren desert landscape means you'll have to make use of potholes, trenches and scattered bunkers to survive. Your objective is to secure all the outposts, which to begin with are almost all occupied by the allies.

However, playing as the allies isn't any easier. The German outpost is a large factory with several machine gun batteries and tanks at the ready. The allies have a few resources spread between a small base and five outposts. The first thing to do is rush to the front and either commandeer a vehicle or get behind a bunker machine gun post.

The enemy will probably flank you instead of going straight for your outpost, so make sure you know what's coming for you and which defenses you have on your radar. As long as you keep your side's flag flying you should be OK, but you'll also need to check the map regularly to ensure all the outposts are still safe. If not, hop into the nearest vehicle, call over a gunner and go like hell. As well as tanks, you can control heavy artillery units and howitzers.

In the final game, air and sea units will also be at your disposal. It's one o'clock in the morning, I've been in Sweden for all of four hours and I'm sitting in an underground Internet cafe, taking sniper shots at American marketing people from the back of a giant Zeppelin. It's fair to say I've had saner nights. The oddest thing about the whole experience is that the game in which myself, several representatives from Electronic Arts US, and the Battlefield development team along with the company president's brother who owns the cafe and graciously agreed to let us in after closing time due to my late arrival in the country are enjoying ourselves with Codename Eagle.

We gave it 44 per cent when we reviewed it. Other magazines weren't so kind. There is a legitimate reason behind this odd scenario, though. As Lars Gustavsson, lead designer on Battlefield , explains the next morning over a strong coffee.



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