Login to access exclusive gaming content, win competition prizes
and post on our forums. Don't have an account? Create one now!
Why should you join?
Click here for full benefits!
Follow our Twitter feedBioShock 2 review coming 5pm GMT! http://bit.ly/93OAMH
SIGN IN/JOIN UP
GamesForumsCheatsStore
Diablo III Monk revealed | Google launches Facebook rival | No Dead Space 2 on PC | Ghost Recon: Future Soldier trailer out | Lego Universe beta sign-up open | Assassin's Creed goes to Rome | Mod of the Year Awards announced | FIFA fans break Guinness World Record | All EA titles "will have an online component" | BioShock 2 review round-up | BioShock 2 is "only pure shooter out right now" | Deus Ex: Human Revolution trademarked | Exclusive BioShock 2 multiplayer video | Dragon Age goes triple platinum | Mass Effect 2 DLC coming tomorrow | Dead Space 2 early 2011 | EA announces Q3 loss | Square Enix reports profits up 68% | Aliens vs Predator demo hits 14k downloads on Live | New Vegas 'wittier' than Fallout 3 | Just Cause 2 trailer lands | Bioware details Star Wars: The Old Republic Sith classes | Lego Star Wars: The Clone Wars announced | Metro 2033 trailer number three arrives | UK CHART: Mass Effect 2 keeps top spot
All|PC|PlayStation|Xbox|Nintendo|Download PC Games
Search CVG
Computer And Video Games - The latest gaming news, reviews, previews & movies
CVG Home » PC » Reviews
PreviousAnachronox PCRed Faction PCNext

C&c: The Covert Operations Review

So you've finished Command & Conquer and you think you're really hard, eh? Well, that's what Pete Hawley thought until he tackled the new mission disc from our friends at Westwood.

Over recent months commanding and conquering into the wee small hours became something of an international past time for pc users across the globe. A sales figure of 500,000 copies of the game through-out Europe alone isn't bad for a start, but now there's another assault on our desktops in the form of a brand new mission disc: The Covert Operations. And to continue in the tradition of mission discs, it's absolutely rock hard.

Mission discs are a very strange breed of software indeed... I mean, what are they exactly? Where do they actually come from? And why are they always so incredibly difficult? Taking a quick look back through the pc's chequered history, a few titles spring to mind that leave me with the lasting impression that mission discs are released for one of only three reasons:

1) They act as an appetiser before the actual sequel arrives, keeping game junkies happy in the interim period.

2) They are an attempt to cash in on the success of the original by slapping a few extra levels on a cd, although the same game engine has been used and there are no new features.

3) A sick joke created by programmers for game-testers and people who work at the developers who are now bored with playing the original for 16 hours a day, and need a new challenge.

Does anyone remember The American Revolt, the mission disk for Syndicate? If you are familiar with it, you'll under-stand exactly where I'm coming from.

New bits

All the new missions and network levels are listed (eight gdi, seven nod, ten network), and simply clicking on one launches the mission intro animation; there are no new ones, I'm afraid. This initial menu system annoyed me. There isn't any campaign or plot to follow with the new levels, it's just a case of fighting through them one at a time. This is all very well and does mean you get to the see all the new levels without having to play them, but, one of the reasons I enjoyed the original so much was because of the immense sense of atmosphere and realism that built as you battled towards your final goal.

Another irritation is that glaring errors in the artificial intelligence are still in evidence; network play still suffers in this respect too. And then there are the harvesters that wander aimlessly, despite being next to the largest crop of Tiberium in the known galaxy, and spending pots of cash on satellite strikes which then do about as much damage as an angry spider with a head-ache. It's still best to save your money and build an enormous battalion of tanks and steam in from two sides. Ho-hum!

Niggling criticisms aside, C&C stands as one of the finest games of last year, and the addition of new levels can only be a good thing. The Covert Operations is an excellent addition to any Command & Conquer General's software collection, and if you are an avid fan I'd strongly recommend you dip into your war fund and purchase it immediately. If you're a casual C&C dabbler then be warned - it's harder than eight hard things all fighting it out to find out who's the hardest; and all getting hammered by something even harder with its arm tied behind its back. Nuff said! Z

PC Zone Magazine
// Overview
Verdict
A great addition to the original but bloody hard.
// Interactive
Share this article:  
Digg.comFacebookGoogle BookmarksN4GGamerblips
del.icio.usRedditSlashdot.orgStumbleUpon
 
No comments have been posted yet.Post a Comment
// Screenshots
PreviousNext2 / 2 Screenshots
// Related Content
Reviews:
More Related
// The Best ofCVG
Get FREE games at FileRadar.
News | Reviews | Previews | Features | Interviews | Cheats | Hardware | Forums | Competitions | Blogs
Top Games: Unreal Tournament III | Football Manager 2007 | Medieval 2: Total War | FIFA Online | Alien vs. Predator | Dragon Age: Origins Awakening
Final Fantasy XIV Online | Games of the Decade | Battlefield: Bad Company 2 | Mass Effect 2 | Dawn of War II: Chaos Rising
Top Reviews: BioShock 2 | Mass Effect 2 | Left 4 Dead 2 | Tropico 3 | Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 | Dragon Age: Origins
Football Manager 2010 | Championship Manager 2010 | Borderlands | Risen | Operation Flashpoint: Dragon Rising
Copyright 2006 - 2009 Future Publishing Limited,
Beauford Court, 30 Monmouth Street, Bath, UK BA1 2BW
England and Wales company registration number 2008885