Warhawk ( Includes Blue Tooth headset)

Buy Warhawk ( Includes Blue Tooth headset) for only £29.99 at ShopTo.Net
Average Rating:
average of 2 ratings
starstarstarstarstar  4.5
[view comments page]
Format:PlayStation 3
Manufacturer:SONY
Category:Video Games
SMS Code:PS3WA00
SHOPTO.NET PRICE RRP SAVING

£29.99

£39.99

£10.00 (25%)


 
Add To Order:
 
Availability:
Pre-order

Delivery:
Will be dispatched as soon as we receive the product.

Delivery Promise:
We're aware that sometimes your items may go missing via Royal Mail, which we have no control over. Royal Mail wait 14 working days to declare a package lost, but we will send you a replacement if you haven't received it after only 3 WORKING DAYS for the UK or 21 WORKING DAYS for the rest of the world to make sure you go through minimum inconvenience and you always get your game the fastest from us. (Subject to completion of our online lost parcel form!)

Region:
UK version

SellTo: sell with sellto
no items currently available
no items currently available

Product Video

Product Description

In Warhawk, you'll fly around in a plane that can convert into hover mode at any time. But a stationary target is a dead one. The enemies consist of swarms of smaller drone planes that you could take out in a few hits and larger capital ships that could take several rockets. Your weapons consist of a primary machine gun and a set of secondary weapons. weapon selector allowed for eight or nine different weapons. One let you launch a swarm of rockets using a Panzer Dragoon-like paint-and-fire technique. One was a lock-on missile that required you to keep your target in your sights until it achieved a lock. The last was a lightning bolt that can be used in quick bursts to take out smaller targets, or it can be charged up to launch a ball of electricity.

Eurogamer Review

5/10

After Super Stardust HD and the astonishing Uncharted: Drake's Fortune, Incognito Inc's Warhawk was probably my favourite PS3 title of 2007. Sure, it's little more than a arcade-style console reworking of the classic Battlefield with a fantasy sci-fi skin, but its combination of excellent visuals, refined gameplay and support for up to 32 players made it feel fresh and new on console; not necessarily better, but certainly a step removed from the best that Xbox Live has to offer, and as such, a pretty compelling purchase at the value-rific GBP 19.99 price point.

However, despite its many game modes and map variations, the bottom line is that Warhawk is fairly content-lite, with just a small smattering of vehicles and five different levels. Things have certainly improved since the game's original release though, thanks mostly to the recent 1.2 patch which added DualShock 3 support, cleaned up a few exploits, improved clan support and boosted server filtering options. That the game is still being played religiously by a large userbase is testament to the quality of the gameplay on offer, but the recent debut of the Operation Omega Dawn expansion pack is certainly timely - if only to get you back to the console and remind you just how good Warhawk is.

However, anyone downloading Operation Omega Dawn expecting a radical improvement to the core game is in line for a disappointment, as the bottom line is that all you're getting is a new vehicle that is of limited use, and an additional gameplay arena that's nowhere near as good as any of the five levels in the original release.

The new transport on offer is the KT-424 Combat Dropship, a large, armour-plated airborne monstrosity capable of accommodating multiple troops while carrying a ground-based vehicle within its clutches. As a tool for moving your team around quickly, while dropping off some heavy artillery deep into enemy territory, it's a decent new addition. However, anyone hoping for a 'boss vehicle' capable of inflicting rampant destruction is going to be disappointed. For starters, in flight mode the pilot only has access to the chaff release, relying on onboard soldiers to take out enemy attacks via cute little pop-up cannons. In hover mode, broadside cannons can be accessed by the pilot, but their effectiveness is extremely limited - good for low-level blasting of close-up targets and little else. Heavily armoured it may be, but the Dropship is also remarkably vulnerable when not fully manned. Indeed, due to its lack of agility, any decent Warhawk pilot can easily take it down in just a moment of sustained attack.

It's clear to see that Incognito has worked hard to keep the game balanced with the new inclusion of the new craft. Indeed, perhaps they've worked too hard, resulting in the Dropship being nerfed as a useful new tool on the battlefield unless you're really good at rallying your troops - not so easy when gamers are more inclined to try their luck with the wealth of single-seater craft dotted around the maps.

Onto the much-vaunted new map then: the sinister Omega Factory - a combination of heavy industrial cityscapes combined with rocky, mountainous terrain, garnished with a foreboding night-time atmosphere. Trumpeted in Sony PR materials as the biggest Warhawk map yet, ironically that aspect of the new level also happens to be its biggest downfall. Its size and scope is so colossal that gameplay is slowed down to a crawl; even when airborne getting from A to B feels like travelling between international timezones, and as a consequence, firefights with the enemy are few and far between. This has its impact online too, with players jostling to get into the larger servers and seemingly ignoring the less populated sessions running with the new map.

The problem with Operation: Omega Dawn is that aside from the novelty of having some new content to try out, there's really nothing here that tangibly boosts the appeal of the original release. Certainly for a title like Warhawk that's crying out for additional maps, game modes and vehicles, this expansion is deeply unsatisfying in that the fresh material is nowhere near as classy as the basic content. The release of Omega Dawn is also somewhat divisive. Premium expansion packs for online games always serve to divide the userbase into the 'haves' and 'have-nots', moreso here where the inclusion of the Dropship in older levels on servers running the expansion effectively freezes out those who don't want to pay the GBP 3.99 for the 'upgrade'.

As a relatively cheap mechanism for bringing you back to what is still fundamentally an excellent game, Operation: Omega Dawn is as good an excuse as any to get back into Warhawk's superb online multiplayer. For die-hard fans, the ability to gain access to every server on offer also makes this a must while well-organised team players and clans are going to get a lot of value from the new vehicle. But as an expansion designed to satisfy the existing userbase and attract new gamers to what is still one of the best games on PS3, Incognito needs to try much harder.

Comments

2009-05-04 19:57:00 - onlineatron wrote:

starstarstarstarstar   "Eurogamer Review"


The review shopto have up is for the Omega Dawn expansion pack and therefore not a review of the original title. I assure you that the full game is one of the best online shooters i#ve had the pleasure of playing.


2007-10-15 10:33:56 - b1uesteel wrote:

starstarstarstarstar   "Great Online Experience"


Once you get past the lack of offline tutorial this game really shines best multiplayer PS3 game


2007-08-14 15:51:39 - deaf_raiders wrote:

  "Beta tested"


This game is smiliar to Battlefield 2012. If you liked Battlefield MC and 2012 or SOCOM series then this is the game to get.


Showing comments 1 to 3 of 3
You must log in to add comments.

 view all comments

Login

Not Registered Yet?
Click here to sign up


union jack european flag
STAR BUY
GAME HIGHLIGHTS

verisign logo

HACKER SAFE certified sites prevent over 99.9% of hacker crime.

SecurityMetrics for PCI Compliance, QSA, IDS, Penetration Testing, Forensics, and Vulnerability Assessment