Wednesday 2 November 2011

Ace Combat : Assault Horizon - Review

Ace Combat: Assault Horizon, available on both PS3 and XBox 360, marks something of a departure for Namco.

Ace Combat is a franchise that has spanned three generations of consoles over sixteen years, not to mention the several iterations of the game on mobile devices including the iPhone, PSP and GBA. In all that time the console franchise has always been set in a fictional world that, although mirroring real world politics, remained somehow alien to us. The new game, however, attempts to please it's devotees while attracting a new generation of Ace's from the Modern Warfare/Battlefield market, with diversified gameplay and a real world setting.

Unlike the Belkan War, or the territorial disputes of the Usean continent, this instalment of the franchise is initially set in Africa and later visits locations such as Washington DC, Miami, Dubai and Moscow. Each location is rendered in the highest detail of any Ace Combat game, including a great number of three dimensional buildings in city settings, something that has until now been a weakness of the series.

Dubai is represented in brilliant detail

The renditions of Moscow and Dubai in particular are stunning, you instantly recognise where you are, and when looking at the ground below you really feel like you're above a real city, not just a glorified high quality Google map. The music also helps to set the mood, each location accompanied by music that really manages to bring it to life. Anyone who buys the special edition will get a copy of the soundtrack on CD, it's an excellent selection of tunes and well worth hunting down the special edition for. Less worthwhile however is the note book that accompanies the special edition. The box claims that it's a signed notebook, but quickly it becomes apparent that the "signatures" have been printed on. I am disappoint Namco!

Gameplay when flying a jet is largely unchanged from previous Ace Combat games, with the exception of the new DFM (Dog Fight Mode) system. DFM makes taking down your enemy a much more visceral experience than previous games have managed, in essence it puts the plane in auto pilot mode, allowing you to focus on shooting down your rival Ace at close quarters.

When you close in on an enemy fighter to a range of approximately 700 feet, a green ring surrounds your opposite number, indicating that you can engage DFM with just a click of your L1 (LB) and R1 (RB) buttons. After that he'll try to shake you off while you train your reticule on him in an attempt to deliver a well placed homing missile or volley of bullets.

Gameplay now includes Helicopter missions, among others

In a further attempt to diversify the game and attract new gamers, Namco have added several new types of gameplay to what was once an exclusively jet based experience. You'll take the part of a door gunner on an American Helicopter, defending your whirlybird from roof based rocket launcher attacks, You can man the weapons on a gunship, protecting and supporting a group of soldiers as they infiltrate an enemy stronghold in the mountains. You'll fly an Apache through the streets of Moscow and you'll even take charge of the Bomb bay doors on a vital bombing run in enemy territory.

These missions add a lot of diversity to the game and make a nice change of pace from the usual deluge of dogfights and bombing runs, but fail to hide the faults that plague the game.

The game feels very short. Two days playing the campaign was enough to complete it from beginning to end, and with the game woefully short of replay value there's very little left to keep you interested or playing. In fact unless you want to see your plane in a different colour there's no reason to replay the campaign. The online is solid enough but once everyone has moved onto MW3 or Battlefield 3 it will most likely be a graveyard.

Gameplay feels confused when moving from Gunship to door gunner, since the control stick inversion settings are shared between the two. I personally preferred to have inversion on when using the helicopter Gatling gun, while it felt more natural to have it off when I was operating the gunship. Admittedly these are personal preference issues and they were quickly sorted by entering the pause menu, but it would have been nice to have seperate settings for two very different areas of gameplay.

Namco have made a big thing about the fact that New York Times best selling author Jim DeFelice wrote the screenplay for Assault Horizon, and while his attention to detail shines through when dealing with the nuts and bolts of Military life, the Plot is unimaginative, stale and transparent at best. Plot twists are given as much gravitas as the opening of an envelope, while the fact that it's yet another Military Coup at the heart of everything makes me wonder if they should have just written the plot themselves and saved some money.

It very much feels like the length of the game hurt the story development, almost as soon as it got going it was all over again. The main Antagonist of the game, Colonel Markov, could have been a much more complex and sympathetic character if his motivation was explored properly. Instead we got one cut scene that not only served to show us his motivation but also made a big reveal about another character. It completely took away any emotional response that the viewer could have had by making us choose between two different emotional responses at the same time. One thing at a time Namco, please.

Affirmative action in the military, a must for any NYT best selling author...

I found it difficult to care about characters who had little to no back story and who were at best stereotypical Top Gun style Jocks. It feels like DeFelice was under orders to represent every group in his treatment, we have Hispanic, Female and African American Characters while The cover star, Lt. Colonel Bishop, is once again a White Male. We play as all of these characters throughout the game, but it only ever feels like we get Bishops story. There is zero development of any characters outside of the Lt. Colonel, and from a series that made me care as much as i did about the death of Chopper in Ace Combat 5, that's a sad thing indeed...





Conclusion


While the story is not the most original and the characters are less than two dimensional, Assault Horizon is at heart an excellent Fighter Pilot game. Graphically the Ace Combat series has never looked better, while the shift to a real world setting might tempt some of the Modern Warfare crowd to at least give it a go. Dog Fight Mode has made the game much more action orientated without taking away from it's roots. The addition of Helicopters, Gunships and Bombers has given the game more diversity but the length of the game is a real problem. This is a great game to rent, but with little more than a couple of days worth of gameplay and no replay value of note it's not really the sort of game that you'd purchase for the long term.

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