Product Details
Act Of War: Direct Action (PC DVD ROM)

Act Of War: Direct Action (PC DVD ROM)
From Atari

List Price: £6.99
Price: £1.94

Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Dispatched from and sold by inetvideo-uk

48 new or used available from £0.01

Average customer review:

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #9551 in Computer & Video Games
  • Brand: Atari
  • Released on: 2005-03-18
  • Rating: Parental Guidance
  • Platforms: Windows 98, Windows 2000, Windows Me, Windows XP

Editorial Reviews

From the Manufacturer
Be a part of a technothriller story and rescue the world from terror. Find yourself in a modern military real-time strategy game presented through the true convergence of film, literature, and videogames.

Direct Action has incredible gameplay:

  • Classic, proven RTS game play. RTS players will immediately feel at home with the game's familiar interface and design. Innovations such as capturing POWs, rescuing civilians, and a line of sight system add anextra touch.
  • Urban combat in real settings. Fight in the streets of cities such as D.C., London, and San Francisco, as you occupy, attack from, and destroy buildings.
  • Top-notch presentation. Experience a level of detail previously only found in “shooter” games.
  • Single player and multiplayer. Up to 8 player skirmishes with many options.

  • See it. A Hollywood production-quality presentation using full motion video, live actors, special effects, and a next-generation game engine that bring you right into the story.
  • Read it. A frightening and believable tale of suspense, international intrigue, and geopolitical military conflict, created in collaboration with best-selling author Dale Brown
  • Play it. A real-time strategy experience that puts you in control of highly realistic counterterrorist forces to defend the streets of San Francisco, London, & Washington D.C.


Customer Reviews

Highly recommended4
Don't expect anything particularly groundbreaking in this game. Anyone who has played Command and Conquer : Generals will be familiar with this type of gameplay. However, what it does do it tends to do very well. The three playable armies each have a very distinct flavour : Task Force Talon are your "expensive elite" type force, with several units that can change at the push of a button to being anti tank/anti aircraft/anti infantry etc. The US army has a lot of very specialised, very strong units that are good at one specific task, but pretty useless at others. The Conglomerate are the terrorist-style force. They start the game as "unrevealed", and feature lots of low-tech,cheap and weak units. Later up the tech tree the status becomes "revealed", and then they have access to some extremely high tech units, mostly with stealth/invisibility. You can only play as the latter in multiplayer or skirmish modes however.
The single player campaign is reasonably long, focusing mainly on Task Force Talon (TFT). There are also some missions where you control US army forces, or both. The difficulty level is fairly low, I found, even playing on the higher settings. However, it does serve as a good intro to the use of your units. The real meat of the game can be found in the multiplayer and skirmish modes, where the AI plays a tough game at the hard difficulty level.
There are some nice touches which put this game firmly above CnC in my opinion. The resource model starts on familiar territory, with oil wells providing your main source of income at the start. You can also place infantry units in a bank building to gain a constant (finite) trickle of cash, but the real innovation is that each of your units can be put out of action but not killed. They remain on the battlefield until either rescued or capture by the enemy. Each army has their own "POW camp" building, where captured prisoners grant you a small income on a regular basis (think hackers from CnC Generals). Infantry are particulary useful all through the game too, being able to occupy buildings, and "ambush" (hiding in corners, trees etc.) to cause double damage and gain limited stealth temporarily. Finally, the super weapons are nicely done, not being unbalancingly overpowered. You can also build counters to them, which protect large areas of your base around them from attack, a welcome break from being nuked to death :D
Graphically this game looks great, but can be demanding. There are a lot of scalable options though, with shadows making the biggest difference, I found. Some people have had a lot of problems with the latest patch (1b), and their DVD drives not reading past the security. SecurROM is the copy protection used, so if you've had probelms with it in the past, be warned.
Like I said, there is nothing particularly new here, but it is a very polished, enjoyable addition to the RTS genre.

Not a bad effort4
My main problem was that of the two families of graphics cards that this game doesn't support, I had one - I upgraded and spent the next two days playing this game.

The game in itself is vast improvements on Generals - Generals allows for infantry surviving direct hits from artillery. That doesn't happen here - mortars, MLRS, field guns - it all sends infantry flying. Similarly, the ability for troops to actually have a firefight inside buildings is rather impressive in my opinion. It needs a bit of a tweak to allow direct helicopter assaults onto the rooftops though.

To be honest, I'm not entirely sure where the main focus of this game is - is it on street fighting or the old fashioned c&c school of slaughter and manouvre? Certainly, if you wanted to try and attack using only tanks, you could try it, right until they hit a roadblock with rpg launchers either side.

If you ever wanted C&C to have units like mortars, mobile repair vehicles, and even better - nuclear weapon counters - this is probably the game you're after.

It takes a bit of time to get used to some of the more unusual features (you can order your troops to hide in trees and ambush, lie down, your snipers to pick off enemy in buildings and infantry to capture enemy left behind), but if you can get beyond that, you'll find this game is far more realistic and enjoyable (I'm waiting for them to release a patch with a London map, not just the Washington DC map!)

Act Of War5
This game is similar to the command and conquer series. The graphics are good and the gameplay is better. For all C&C players out there, this is even better! Act of War has the usual base and unit building aspects as well as offering much more tactical concepts rather than the normal build and throw in tactics. This game is really enjoyable to play and has a long gamelife, doubt you'll finish this in a day!!