Английская Википедия:Enlisted (video game)

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Enlisted is a free squad-based multiplayer tactical first-person shooter developed by Darkflow Software and published by Gaijin Entertainment. The game is set during World War II and revolves around major battles fought across all fronts of the war. It was an Xbox Series X/S launch title and timed console exclusive.[1] On March 2, 2021, the closed Beta went live on PlayStation 5.[2] On April 8, 2021, the game was released on PC as an open beta test.[3]

Gameplay

Enlisted is squad-based, with each player controlling an infantry squad or a vehicle's crew. Players control a squad of 3–9 soldiers (represented by a real life division of their respective military, such as the 1st Infantry Division and the 2nd New Zealand Division[4]) of varying classes, equipped with class-restricted weapons such as rifles, submachine guns, machine guns, sniper rifles, mortars, anti-tank weapons, or flamethrowers; alternatively, players may control the crew of a tank or a fighter aircraft, at least one of which must always be equipped for use in the menu. Players control one of the soldiers in their squad, and can give orders to or switch between the other AI soldiers in their squad. The player's squads, soldiers, and weaponry can be managed in the main menu, where squads can be equipped and upgraded, soldiers and weapons can be purchased, game modes and campaigns can be switched, and several other aspects of the game can be customized or controlled.[5]

Players battle in large maps based on major World War II battles on the Eastern Front, Western Front, North African Campaign and the Pacific Theater in battles such as the Battle of Moscow, the Battle of the Bulge, the Battle of Stalingrad, the Battle of Tunisia, the Battle of Guadalcanal and the Battle of Berlin. Players are divided into two teams representing the Allies (Red Army, NKVD, United States Army, United States Marine Corps, British Army, Free French Forces, Australian Army,[6] the New Zealand Army[7] the Red Airforce, Red Navy, United States Air Force, Royal Air Force.) and the Axis (Wehrmacht, Waffen-SS, Royal Italian Army, Imperial Japanese Army, National Republican Army, Romanian Army, Vichy French Army, Volkssturm, Luftwaffe, Imperial Japanese Army Air Service, Royal Italian Air Force).Шаблон:Efn There are four nations to choose from: The United States, The Soviet Union, Germany, and Japan. Each nation has 5 tiers. (except for Japan which only has 4 tiers) Some nations trees also have a smaller faction under them (UK, Australia and New Zealand are currently under the US. Italy and Romania are currently under Germany). When matchmaking the player will be matchmaking with the tier above and below. For example if the player is matchmaking in tier 2 that person will play with tier 1 and tier 3 players. (the only exception is tier 3 as one matchmakes with all tiers). With each tier the player unlocks better weapons. At tier one, there are basic bolt-action rifle such as the Karabiner 98k, M1903 Springfield and the Mosin–Nagant, early submachine gun's such as the MP 28 and PPD-38, and early tanks and aircraft. such as the Panzer II, early Panzer III variants, T-26, BT-7, A13 Mk 2 and M3 Stuart. At tier 2 one unlocks better bolt-action rifles with modifications such as rifle grenades, better submachine guns, such as the FNAB-43 and sten gun, early machine guns such as the MG 13 and the Bren gun, early to mid war tanks and aircraft such as the Junkers Ju 87, later variants of the Panzer III, the T-28, the T-50, Crusader and M3 Lee. At tier 3 the player unlocks advanced bolt-action rifles, semi-automatic rifles such as the gewehr 41, the SVT-38 and the M1 Garand, mid war machine guns such as the MG 34 and the DP-27. mid war submachine guns such as the MP 40 and the Thompson gun. Mid war tanks and aircraft. At tier 4 one unlocks advanced semi-automatic rifles, advanced submachine guns, later war machine guns and rifles such as the MG 42, gewehr 43, the SVT-40 and mid to late war tanks and aircraft. tier 5 consists of later war assault rifles such as the Maschinenkarabiner 42(H), StG 44, Fedorov Avtomat and M2 Carbine. Machine guns and late war tanks and aircraft such as the Tiger I, Tiger II, IS-2, and more. Other unlockable weapons consist of anti-tank rifles, sniper rifles, mortars, flamethrowers and many more. Some weapons and vehicles such as the Austen submachine gun, Suppressed Sten gun, Charlton automatic rifle, Fairbairn–Sykes fighting knife, the BT-7A, Chi-Ha Kai, Universal Carrier are locked behind events.[8][9]

Matchmaking options

  • Squads – Standard default matchmaking, where players spawn with their full squads.
  • Lone Fighters – Modified matchmaking, where players do not spawn with their squads; instead the player selects individual soldiers from their squads to spawn as. If a soldier is killed, they will be unavailable for the rest of the match, and another soldier must be selected; to compensate, spawn numbers are increased. Most of the HUD is hidden in this mode.
  • Custom - Custom maps created by the Enlisted community which include both unique weapons from past events and standard unlockable weapons.

Singleplayer tutorial levels for basic gameplay, tanks, planes, and engineers are also available, as is a shooting range containing every weapon in the game.

Game modes

  • Conquest – Both teams fight to control three control points (five in "Battle of Berlin" for some maps) on a map. Each team is represented by a colored bar that depletes as long as the enemy team has two or more points controlled. The match ends when one team's bar fully depletes.
  • Invasion – One team attempts to take a series of five control points on a large map, while the other attempts to defend each point. Each point is played sequentially; if the defenders lose a point, they must retreat to the next point. Attackers are restricted to 1000 respawn tickets (including AI soldiers). Additional tickets can be obtained by capturing control points or by shooting down barrage balloons in certain maps. The match ends when either the attackers run out of tickets or if the match runs out of time. The defenders lose all of their control points.
  • Assault – One team must defend a series of control points from the other team. However, two points must be captured at a time to progress, and the points can be captured by either team, allowing the defending team to delay the enemy or push back. Each 2 points are in a sector. There are 3 sectors. The attackers gain tickets for each sector taken. Some sectors on a few maps have 1 point. The attacking team lose if all their tickets run out or if they run out of time. The defenders lose if all control points are taken by the attackers.
  • Destruction – One team must defend a series of control points from the other team. However, instead of regular control points that must be captured, the attacking team must plant explosives at each point and destroy them to sabotage the enemy. These explosives can be removed by the enemy, so the attackers must defend their explosives once planted. Each 2 objectives are in a sector. There are 3 sectors. The attackers gain tickets for each sector taken. Some sectors on a few maps have 1 objective. The attacking team lose if all their tickets run out or if they run out of time. The defenders lose if all objectives are destroyed by the attackers.
  • Armored Train Escort ("Battle of Berlin" only) – The attacking team must escort an armored train through two stations while the defending team must stop them. The respawn zones and objectives shift as the train progresses. The attackers regain some tickets once the armored train reaches the first station. The defenders lose if the attackers manage to escort the armored train to the 2nd station. The attackers lose if they run out of tickets.
  • Confrontation – Both teams fight to control a series of control points. Each point is played sequentially, and the front line shifts with each point captured; however, both teams are on the offensive and can recapture lost points. The match ends when a team runs out of tickets or loses all of their control points.

Development

Gaijin Entertainment and Darkflow Software first announced the game in 2016 as a crowdfunded title. Two campaigns focusing on the Battle of Moscow and the Invasion of Normandy were announced. The game was advertised as a "first person shooter decided by the fans, for the fans" and that "they will have direct input into what we create, including things like campaigns, game modes, even which platforms after PC we will support"; other campaigns would be unlocked if the game's funding goals were met. Funding tiers at the highest levels would allow contributors to choose which campaign would be added next.[10]

The first public play test occurred in April 2020 on PC. In November 2020, ray-traced global illumination and DLSS was added to the game.[11][12] On May 20, 2021, the Battle of Berlin campaign was partially released in a public beta test, followed by the Tunisia campaign.[13] On December 4, 2023, all campaigns where changed to create 4 nations to play as.

Release

At E3 2018, Microsoft confirmed that the game would be released on the Xbox and would be part of the Xbox Game Preview for that year.[14][15] The first public play test occurred in April 2020 on the PC and in October of the same year, Microsoft announced that Enlisted would be part of the Xbox Series X/S launch lineup and a timed console exclusive.[16][1] On March 2, 2021, the closed beta went live on PlayStation 5.[2] Nvidia confirmed the game's PC release.[12] On April 8, 2021, the game was released on PC as an open beta test.[3] On October 4, 2021, Enlisted was released on PlayStation 4 and Xbox One, albeit with only the Moscow, Normandy, and Tunisia campaigns. All six campaigns have since been released on all platforms. The merge occurred in December 2023 for all players. There is currently a Steam release of "Enlisted: Reinforced" available for Q1 of 2024, from their blog, "symbolizing the recent massive changes to the game, and how far the community and Enlisted has come since its initial release." The base game is playable through their in-house launcher.

Reception

XboxEra gave Enlisted a 5/10 rating, saying the game's best elements were "mediocre", and its worst elements "truly dreadful". XboxEra praised the gun handling, but criticized the game's uncomfortable controls, generic soundtrack, and poor performance. Heavy criticism was given to the game's slow player progression system, in which each item must be purchased individually for each soldier in each squad, calling the system pay-to-win.[17]

A review by Penny Arcade praised Enlisted, calling it "an absolute blast" and "the best WWII shooter", praising the game's "'Matrix' style encounters where the player might die only to come into consciousness in another body".[18]

GLN gave Enlisted a 7.8/10 rating, saying The game’s visuals are "detailed and realistic", and the FPS is impressive because it offers "engaging gameplay experience". GLN praised the level design, but criticized the game's matchmaking system, animations, and bugs and glitches.[19]

See also

Notes

Шаблон:Notelist

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links