|
Most people in their gaming history have at some point
played one of the original Flying games which try and recreate notorious battles
during some of the worlds most horrific times. And Blazing angels achieves this
by giving us a New Idea of the World Renowned War, WWII. The Second World war
was not just about the fights on the ground between the infantry and tanks, as
we all know so much about, as the aircraft Battles over land and sea were all so
Important in the way the war went, with the Battle of Britain, and of course the
dreadful assault on Pearl Harbor, and Blazing Angels revisits most of these most
memorable events of the war in Ubisoft’s most recent WWII game.
The Game
Flying games rarely come by often any more, and so this is a very welcome
addition in that sense, The last flyer I enjoyed was Crimson Skies, it was on
the original Xbox which was not a world war game but merely a happy-go-lucky
arcade shooter, Crimson Skies had a more arcade-like feel to it therefore would
give the idea that it would be more fun for most gamers out for a good time on
their Xbox playing a flying game, but even though Blazing Angels is not that
much of an Arcade flyer, it still brings momentous joy and even a flying
feeling, a feeling of you actually being in the seat and just appreciating the
beauty of the surrounding environment as you brutally and mercilessly gun down
Japanese and German bombers and fighters.

In Blazing Angels you will start of with an old bi-plane and will soon be thrown
into gunning down unmanned zeppelins and blimps which are either floating
casually in the air or waiting to be blasted into thin air whilst you strafe
over them. The first thing you will see is the sweet graphics, from high up
they look pretty stunning and you’ll just stop briefly to appreciate them, Then
you’ll be introduced to your flight instructor, Southern American repair pilot,
Joe, he will have some mildly humorous comments to make which possibly won’t
have you laughing out loud but may have you grinning or giggling slightly as he
insults the English accent at the first chance that the game makers give him. He
quickly gets a little tedious and luckily you won’t hear much more of him when
you are out of the training assignments. Happily for most it doesn't take that
long until you are into some actual dogfights in real missions. The missions
themselves range over a number of locations from Rabaul to Berlin and include
famous crusades like Pearl Harbor, the Battle of Britain, and Mid-Point, you’ll
always be swift and without many allies with you, you’ve got all the enemies to
yourself, in missions Blazing Angels will definitely keep you entertained, just
as long as you're not looking for profundity.
There are also multiple types of missions for whatever mood you’re in at the
time, which are called the following: Mini-Campaigns (bombing or dog fighting
challenges) Aces (fight one on one to the death with a computer ace with that
plane, which unlocks a new skin for the plane if you beat him)or Arcade (where
you are put up against 3 waves of 12 fighters and you have to take them down
with that one plane, winning this unlocks an upgrade for that plane which is
shown on the planes menu with a blue star next to it) so they each give you a
different style of playing against the computer, which is always a necessity for
all Games.
Flying your plane in Blazing Angels is undemanding and easy to grasp. The tough
part is actually keeping track of the action in the skies. It's easy to feel
overexcited and lost when in the heat of battle, but that’s what it’s all about,
tempo, precision and Luck! The dogfights are the best part of BA and this even
translates over Xbox Live. The AI is no slouch as well; the enemies are like
tricky snakes and provide a fair challenge to gun down most of the time. You’ll
soon be mastering the bullet accuracy and power for each plane and Fighting in
the sky can be summed up into one word, and that word is Fun-And-Intense (no
that’s not cheating :D). I never had a single battle where I wasn’t ferociously
smashing down the triggers and swerving around 180 degree turns just trying to
get behind my enemies for a clear shot to win the missions.
Besides the Dogfights in Xbox Live you can try a few other modes including Squad
Based Capture the Base, Onslaught, Bombing Run, Kamikaze, and co-op Historical
Missions. But no one ever seems to be online, there is usually 3 lobbies with
about 10 people in and in 2 of the 3 I joined the host was AFC (away from
controller) and even though it’s hard to get into a game, playing it is worth
it, with a few friends and having a great time is what it’s all about, and of
course everyone shouting things like oh my god, you rocketed me, you son of a ….

A feature that has not been introduced into any of the other recent flying games
is the Camera-Locking feature. By holding down the Left trigger (L) you will
change the angle of the camera so that it’s centered on the targeted enemy
plane, also if you don’t like the target as it’s to far off to reach efficiently
then you can just simply change to the next closest target or the one
shooting you down by pressing B. I think that for all flying games this feature
should be included as it is so useful it’s unbelievable sometimes, after you
have got used to using it, you cannot follow a target without the lock-on camera
feature without losing it several times.
The only downside when it comes to cameras in blazing angels is the lack of
first person views, which I was quite upset about as it would give you even more
of an in-game experience, but hey, I’m not Ubisoft and there must’ve been a
reason for the lack of it, as you only have one camera angle. This can be
frustrating at times, but its O.K all the same.
The planes play a big role in Blazing Angels. All the well-known planes are
included like the Japanese Zero’s, the infamous German Me109 E’s, British
Spitfires, and the USA’s B-17. The United States and Britain have the biggest
selection each with 18 planes per piece, and then Germany and Japan follow with
less.
In total we are looking at 38 WWII planes that you can set the sky on fire with
in 18 legend missions. And the extra 4 which you don’t get a mission with plus
Blazing Angels has a good selection of online modes, if only people would play
them. The controls are pretty intuitive and Ubi could have had a little more
added to the mix to really bring the player more into the game like alternative
views or a deeper story mode. Playing online keeps you going but overall Blazing
Angels game-play flies in at a little above average.
Graphics & Sound:
To get across the sense of speed Blazing Angels
overindulges with the blur effect. It's a good looking effect and really makes
you seem like you’re going really fast, once again heightening the In-Game
experience. The Graphics are overall above average once again but they could be
a lot better as they are not yet up to the Xbox 360’s limit by any means. Yet
what BA do nicely are the extra effects like smoke and fire, and it does a good
job of recreating landmarks like the Eiffel tower and the sense of elevation and
speed.
The sound of Blazing Angels is a little worse than the
graphics as it is pretty poor apart from the sweet engine and gunshot sounds,
basically you will get slightly un-amusing racist comments and the overall AI
Speech is appalling, at first it seems quite sweet, but then it just gets
down-right annoying as the same one line said by a Japanese pilot will be
repeated up to 10 times on 1 mission, also the foreign pilots didn’t speak their
native tongue which didn’t impress me, and every now and again, the normal one
liner like “you have no honor” said by Japanese pilots will turn into something
that sounds like a strangled dog as some Japanese (and German as a matter of
fact) pilots have random spurts of dodgy speech. Therefore BA is just quite poor
in the sound area.
Overall:
I wanted to love BA, and I did, but it turns out I’m rather alone with this
opinion, I don’t really understand why because when it comes to overall game
play, I think it was brilliant! Yes the sound’s not great, the accents are
cheesy and the graphics could do with Kim and Aggie’s skills, but when you get
into the dogfights and the rest of it, you get a real kick from being in the
cockpit of a WWII plane. This game may not appeal to all, but from fighting the
Aces of each plane and completing the mini-campaigns, collecting the
achievements and attempting to complete all the single player missions on Ace
rank, this game is top notch in delivering long-term entertainment for one of
those rainy days or just when you feel like completing a few more arcade
missions, if you’re not convinced, then just rent it and get your own opinion,
but thanks for reading mine, I hope you enjoyed it.
Summary of Blazing Angels
·
24-page Manual
·
Disc
·
48hr Free gold membership of Xbox Live
·
Rated Teen/13+
·
Xbox-Live compatible
·
HD Compatible
·
Players 1-16 on XBL
·
Players 1-2 on same screen
·
Guests not allowed on Xbox live
·
10+ Hours of entertainment
Gameplay: 8.2
Sound: 5.8
Visuals: 7.5
Intuition: 6.4
Lastability: 7.1
Overall 7.5
Rating
75%
|