Medal of Honor : Warfighter

Medal of Honor : Warfighter

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We have collected 5 reviews of the Medal of Honor : Warfighter. Experts rate Medal of Honor : Warfighter 5/10. Reviewsor.com helps you find reviews, best prices, user reviews of the Medal of Honor : Warfighter and PC games.

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Medal of Honor : Warfighter Reviews

IGN

10/2012

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4.0/10

Medal of Honor Warfighter review

Unlike the macho military shooters that inspired it, Medal of Honor Warfighter wants you to consider the effects of violence on those responsible for it. Such appeals to a player’s humanity are bold but risky moves in a military shooter, where countless corpses of faceless terrorists pile up at your feet. Warfighter strives for this by giving you a genuine impression of what it’s like to live as a Tier 1 operator, the elite operatives at the center of the modernized Medal of Honor series. It’s clear from the first cutscene all the way to the end credits that developer Danger Close has the utmost respect for the extraordinary skills and bravery of these soldiers. If Medal of Honor extended the same level of respect to its players, Warfighter might have accomplished more than its numerous significant failures and lack of player agency has allowed. The landscape of the first-person shooter is not the same as it once was. The 2010 series reboot was a competent mimicry of what had worked previously, and its sequel continues to ignore innovation. For the entirety of its brief five-hour campaign, Warfighter spotlights one tired design idea after the other.

GameSpot

10/2012

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6.0/10

Medal of Honor: Warfighter Review

Upon completing Medal of Honor: Warfighter's campaign, you are met with a heartfelt dedication impressing upon you the heroism of the men in uniform the game depicts. The attempt at sincere emotion is commendable--but it rings hollow, coming as it does at the end of a bog-standard military shooter that celebrates the killing of hundreds. The battlefield fantasy itself offers a few surprises, but they're crowded out of your psyche by the indifferent hours of shooting and military chatter that surround them. "Linear." The word is commonly used to identify any number of shooters that usher you along a narrow path, interrupting your progress with a bit of sniping, the shooting of a turret, or an explosion-heavy cutscene. Warfighter's issue isn't that it fits this common modern-day shooter template, but that developer Danger Close doesn't use the linearity to the game's benefit. By directing the experience so tightly, a developer can build momentum, giving the action an arc that develops tension and ultimately reaches a zenith. When a game intends to be a playable action film, as so many do, managing that arc is key to delivering a memorable experience.

Game Revolution

10/2012

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Medal of Honor: Warfighter

Many first-person shooters try to entertain players with a blockbuster roller coaster, where bullets fly fast and explosions happen every ten seconds. Some others this year have taken slightly different routes, but it still remains that shooter campaigns are all about big moments. Keep the player running, ducking, shooting, grenading, knifing, and so on. What might have been a dull car drive becomes an exciting race that keeps you guessing. If your game can't do that, you have to rely on your story instead. That may have been true a console generation ago, but these days many games make no bones about how much of a focus multiplayer is, Medal of Honor chief among them. But with all the competition, including Spec Ops: The Line and the upcoming Call of Duty: Black Ops II, Warfighter has a lot stacked up against it. Does it simply check off everything on the back of the box or is there something special in the latest from Danger Close and Electronic Arts? Warfighter's campaign puts players in the boots of soldiers on the ground in Somalia, Yemen, and Bosnia. The player inhabits Preacher, Mother, and other code-named "Frogmen" on the hunt for a terrorist network with ties to a chemical called PETN, a powerful explosive.

GameSpy

10/2012

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Medal of Honor Warfighter Review

To play Medal of Honor Warfighter's single-player campaign is to become Bill Murray in Groundhog Day, only instead of knowing exactly where Ned Ryerson will be and what he'll say every single day for eternity ("I did the whistling belly button trick at the high school talent show. Bing!") I knew every exploding twist and slow-motion turn the levels were going to make before they actually made it. Warfighter isn't a bad modern military shooter, it's just that there's very little of its seven hours of terrorist-shooting that doesn't make me feel like I've played it before. While just about every map I played through as Tier One operators Stump and Preacher provided plenty of options on where to take cover and return fire, the overall level design in Warfighter is as linear as they come. There's one path to take throughout -- even if some levels provide wider paths than others -- and too often it's so clear where enemies will spawn that I could open fire before they set foot outside. It's a big part of how developer Danger Close plays dangerously close to the scripted-thrillride formula concocted by Infinity Ward in the five-year-old Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare -- a formula that's been regurgitated countless times since 2007.

VideoGamer

03/2012

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Medal of Honor: Warfighter (Preview)

Is it possible to take Medal of Honor: Warfighter as seriously as it takes itself?Danger Close's wonky but likeable enough 2010 reboot of Medal of Hono(u)r struggled to find a place in the hearts of many, including me; I secretly only bought a copy for access to the Battlefield 3 beta, which I didn't even use in the end. It was a two-tier game, made complicated by some fancy marketing guff about scalpels and sledgehammers, when it just felt like a weak lemon drink version of Call of Duty. Worse still was a confusing and off-putting mix of multiple engines and developers, as EA drafted in the DICE backbenchers to make a drab multiplayer component people played for all of about four days.It's particularly delightful, then, to see that Danger Close has already managed to address a lot of those conceptual errors with Medal of Honor: Warfighter (Warfighter? what's next? Gunshooter? Enemykiller?). So you can say so long DICE, au revoir to the confusing marketing guff and farval to Afghanistan.Instead you can say guten tag to the Frostbite 2 engine, which powers the whole game.

Prices

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Amazon Marketplace Medal of Honor: Warfighter $12
Amazon Medal of Honor: Warfighter $14.96
Amazon Medal of Honor Warfighter $14.96
Amazon Marketplace Medal of Honor Warfighter $18.1
Target Medal of Honor: Warfighter (PC Games) $26.99
UnbeatableSale, Inc. Electronic Arts 19718 Medal of Honor Warfighter PC $37.56

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