Sulrn
Deuces
- 2,159
- 360
Ditto for Natural Selection.Hmm commander mode. That was a pretty cool thing about Battlefield 2 (assuming he was good).
Ditto for Natural Selection.Hmm commander mode. That was a pretty cool thing about Battlefield 2 (assuming he was good).
We're all suckers though, and still gonna buy regardless. But still, yah, fuck them.They can officially go fuck themselves if they think they can release a carbon copy of BF3 and make money.
Actually I wont buy it.We're all suckers though, and still gonna buy regardless. But still, yah, fuck them.
It's awesome that they used a picture in the article which is full of SUN GLARE!
I played the shit out of the game but I kind of agree. None of the maps really grabbed me like the ones in bad company 2.I was actually rather disappointed with BF3. there was just something off with the maps and I cannot place my fingers on it. BF2 bad company, now that was a sweet game and good maps. IMO these games are all about the maps and map design.
God EA needs to go fucking the way of Enron or Worldcom.Pre-orders are set to include a digital expansion pack called Battlefield 4: China Rising in which "players fight for dominance across the vast and majestic Chinese mainland in four massive multiplayer maps, using all-new vehicles and high-tech military equipment."
I agree that the 1942 version was great. And sniping was pretty tough until you learned a little secret. Even standing and moving you could aim at their belt from just about any distance and get a headshot. I don't really understand why standing affected the bullet trajectory in that way, but when i accidently discovered that I want from a 3:1 kd to a 10:1.Why aren't they going back to WW2? BF1942 was one of the greatest tactical FPS to date. It also took way more skill to drive vehicles, shoot guns, snipe ect. It was so far ahead of its time and is what got BF on the map. I can't believe they abandoned their roots so fast.
lol that I won't be doing.Come on guys preorder
God EA needs to go fucking the way of Enron or Worldcom.