Attack on Pearl Harbor (video game)
Legendo's Attack on Pearl Harbor | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | 3DIVISION[1][2] |
Publisher(s) |
Legendo Entertainment (EU & Asia) CDV (North America & Mexico) |
Distributor(s) |
Ascaron (UK & Ireland) Atari (Germany) SimBin (Scandinavia & Finland) Akella (Russia) Ecofilmes (Portugal) Planeta DeAgostini (Spain) |
Designer(s) |
Chris Bateman Peter Adamcik Björn Larsson |
Platform(s) | Microsoft Windows, WiiWare |
Release date(s) | 30 July 2007 |
Genre(s) | Flight Arcade-Combat |
Mode(s) |
Single player Multiplayer |
Attack on Pearl Harbor is a semi-realistic flight simulator in which players can have random dogfights or play in single player campaigns. The game was developed by 3DIVISION and published by Legendo Entertainment for the EU & Asia, and by CDV for the Americas.The game was first demonstrated at the San Diego Comic-con 2007 and was released the same year for PC.[3] The game can be controlled via the mouse, a joystick, or an Xbox 360 controller. The WiiWare version was released on July 5, 2010 as Pearl Harbor Trilogy - 1941: Red Sun Rising.
The game is set on the morning of December 7, 1941, centred around the Attack on Pearl Harbor. The player, who plays as either USAAF pilot Douglas Knox or Japanese pilot Zenji Yamada,[4] takes part in historically themed aircraft combat missions.
The game received average reviews upon release.
Gameplay
There are four single player campaigns, two for US and two for the Japanese, with cut scenes presented in a comic book-like fashion. Both start at Pearl Harbor and proceed through various battles, such as Wake, Midway, and Coral Sea in chronological order, including pre-Santa Cruz and pre-Okinawa operations for both the US and the Japanese. Unlike most games, it is possible to continue a campaign after failing a mission - however, planes are deducted from the player's reserve, and the campaign ends in defeat once the player runs out of planes. Coming into the end of the first half of the campaign, no new aircraft reinforcements will be added. This reoccurs for battles coming into the end of the second and final campaign, signifying the end of the war.
Dogfight mode is similar to 'Skirmish' or 'Instant Action' modes of play in other games. After selecting a venue, weather conditions (which do not affect controls, only visibility), aircraft type, and difficulty, the computer will endlessly spawn AI craft, always of the opposing nation, at the player. There are three possible victory conditions which the player can choose from:
- Time Attack - the player must survive for a certain time limit (minimum 5 minutes, maximum 20, in increments of 5 minutes) to win.
- King of the Sky - the player must destroy a certain number of enemy craft (minimum 5 enemies, maximum 20, in increments of 5 enemies) to win.
- Fly and Die - the game ends when the player is shot down.
There are two modes of LAN or Internet play - either a deathmatch in which last plane flying wins, or a team deathmatch in which the last team surviving wins.
Like Ace Combat, it is highly streamlined and skips realism in exchange for gameplay. Aircraft carry unlimited ammunition, limited only by overheating (machine guns) and reloading times (rockets, bombs, and torpedoes).
Reception
The game received a 64 out of 100 on Metacritic[5] and 7 out of 10 on Gamespot[6] indicating mixed or average reviews.
IGN gave 46/100 stating "Legendo has managed to take something as interesting as World War II's air battle over the Pacific and turn it into something as repetitive as bouncing a tennis ball against a wall."[7]
References
- ↑ "About Us". 3DIVISION. Archived from the original on 2013-03-06. Retrieved 2013-02-18.
- ↑ "Attack on Pearl Harbor (manual)" (PDF). Legendo. p. 11. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-06-17.
- ↑ Attack on Pearl Harbor - PC, retrieved 2016-08-31
- ↑ "Attack on Pearl Harbor". Softonic. Retrieved 2016-08-31.
- ↑ "Attack on Pearl Harbor". Metacritic. Retrieved 2016-08-31.
- ↑ "Attack on Pearl Harbor". GameSpot. Retrieved 2016-08-31.
- ↑ Onyett, Charles (2007-08-13). "Attack on Pearl Harbor Review". IGN. Retrieved 2016-08-31.