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Operation Flashpoint 2: Dragon Rising [review]

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If there's one game that needs a sequel, it's Operation Flashpoint.

"It was a game with a lot of potential," observes the game's senior designer and lead AI designer, Clive Lindop. "People fell in love with it even though it had lots of quirks and lots of things weren't quite right with it, but its promise, and the fact that it was unique kind of drew people in."

And draw people in it did. Released in the summer of 2001, the PC-only military shooter sold well over a million units and spawned two successful expansion packs, Red Hammer and Resistance. Such success proved that despite (or possibly because of) its brutally uncompromising approach to the genre, gamers were hungry for a title with scope, ambition and freedom. Admittedly, the visuals were rubbish even then, but what lingers in the memory are the moments of palm-sweating tension as you snuck through a wood or crawled through a field with enemies just feet away from you.

Seven years on, Codemasters is finally ready to take the wraps off the long-awaited follow-up. "There's a reason for that," Lindop says about the delay - but declines to clarify further. The well-documented souring of relations between original developer Bohemia Interactive and Codies certainly didn't help, and meant that the UK publisher was faced with either binning one of its most successful original IPs of the decade, or going it alone. So, in 2005 the company took the latter option and essentially built the game from the ground up.
'Operation Flashpoint 2: Dragon Rising' Screenshot 1

Zoom in as close as you like.

"We've built all the technology from scratch because it's the only way of [taking] that original promise forward," Lindop says. "It's taken a lot of time and effort to get the technology to the point where we can do these huge landscapes, these massive battles and all these effects and all this impact with a visual delivery and an experience which is 'next-gen', for want of a better word."

But hardcore fans fearing their beloved game will be watered down for the masses needn't fret. "It's still very much from a simulation heritage," he confirms. "But rather than that kind of slight detachment you get from sims where it's all about the numbers and the kit, we wanted to amp up the kind of experience so that you [feel like you] are really there, having bullets flying at you."

We're told to expect a game that's "stylistically a lot more documentary-style" and can look forward to crazy amounts of attention to detail including "kit [that] doesn't just roll out of a factory fresh - it gets muddy, it gets scratched. We want you to feel these are real, in your hand, getting battered as you dive around running past things."
'Operation Flashpoint 2: Dragon Rising' Screenshot 2

I hope that chopper's on our side.

While the original game was set in 1985, Operation Flashpoint 2 opts for a real-world, contemporary setting where you're squabbling for oil. "The game itself is set on an island called Skira, which is off a chain of islands called Scarlett - north of Japan, east of China. It used to be Chinese, then the Japanese nicked it during World War II, then the Soviets liberated it and never gave it back," Lindop explains.

"It's a backwater of history, not a geopolitical hotspot, except... The world's largest oilfield is underneath it. It was found about ten years ago, and everyone's been trying to develop ever since. That's where the tension and back-story come from."

As you might expect, Flashpoint 2 favours vast, sprawling environments which can accommodate battles of impressive scale. We're told that the island itself spans 220 square kilometers or 134 square miles, and that the viewing distance is about 35km ("It's a damned long distance to see!").

To add to the realism, real soldiers have been motion-captured doing all manner of incidental actions, whether entering/exiting different vehicle types, climbing convincingly over obstacles, kicking down doors, bursting into buildings or hitting the deck. But as well getting the look and feel spot-on, Codies has taken a very different approach to the weapons system. "You have to assemble the weapon systems as the manual says. So if you're carrying a javelin, you have to put on the main aiming system, mount it, shoulder it and fire. We didn't want weapons to be a magic wand with bullets," he reasons. "They actually have a sense of functionality, and they have a weight."

In total, we're told to expect 70 infantry weapons in the game, with different sights, scopes, and attachments, including "very James Bond-looking Japanese submachine guns and a fully tricked-out Mk16 with a CVLA aim laser". There will be 50 land, air and sea vehicles, each with different strengths and weaknesses. Apparently "you'll need to learn how to use them".

Moving onto the real-time portion of the demo, Lindop takes the opportunity to stop the game in motion and show us a staggeringly detailed AH1Z Cobra helicopter in mid-air, and how well that detail scales. It's every military fan's wet dream, with every dial and instrument in the cockpit lovingly recreated, and the pilots sitting in massively detailed uniforms wrestling with the controls. "We've got hardcore fans that love their kit, and love the detail and the accuracy and we're delivering on that. You can see that we're not afraid to take you up close to the action."
'Operation Flashpoint 2: Dragon Rising' Screenshot 5

Hands-up who's about to die.

But there's more to it than just a pretty face, Lindop argues. "Of course, the vehicles look nice but the functionality's got to be there: the weapons systems, deployable weapons systems, crew spaces, passenger spaces, the simulation of the engine and the torque, the vehicle's ability over different terrain types. That buys you a lot in terms of gameplay balancing. If you simulate the real thing, it makes balancing much more realistic."

Achieving this level of realism is, understandably, a vast undertaking, and Lindop is keen to stress how important it is for it to gel correctly on a technical level. "To have all these dynamic effects and terrain, weapon systems all running simultaneously... A lot of the technology and effort has gone into that," he nods. "It means we have to have very clever audio managers and effects managers to have this kind of scale of combat on a cross-platform [title]. As part of the cross-platform delivery there's actually a lot of cross-pollination between platforms so that everybody benefits."

Indeed, PC owners with Quad Core processors and 4GB of memory will particularly benefit from the extra detail. Console owners need not fear getting a watered-down version, but PC owners can expect more expansive multiplayer options and bigger matches. It has previously been reported that the PC will feature 32-player (16 vs 16) multiplayer compared to the console's eight-player multiplayer. In both versions, however, each player will have a total of eight AI squad members fighting alongside them. In co-op terms, the PC will feature eight-player co-op, while console will be restricted to two-player co-op - so there are evidently going to be huge benefits to opting for the PC version if multiplayer is your thing.
'Operation Flashpoint 2: Dragon Rising' Screenshot 6

Quite how much of this detail will make it to the PS3 and 360 is open to debate. Hint.

For a matter of a few minutes we were shown some pre-alpha code running in real-time, albeit in an un-optimised state. Still, the high levels of detail, advanced damage modeling and awesome sense of scale were already easy to see as we watched as a marine troop land on a beach.

As a squad of soldiers advanced up a hill towards a village (continually chattering about the precise position of nearby landmarks), the old Operation Flashpoint gameplay was very much in evidence: the use of cover, the sense of imminent danger, the total freedom to decide for yourself which route to take. Rightly or wrongly, it's a very different approach to the typical run-and-gun, and all the game is looking all more interesting as a result. Whether all this rich promise will come to fruition is still open to question. But as the spring 2009 release date draws nearer, it hopefully won't be long before we can decide for ourselves whether Codemasters will deliver on its many bold claims.
Preview by : Kristan Reed

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