Mercenaries 2: World in Flames explained

Mercenaries 2: World in Flames
Developer:Pandemic Studios
Artificial Mind and Movement (PS2)
LTI Gray Matter (PC)[1]
Publisher:Electronic Arts
Director:Cameron Brown
Producer:David Baker
Designer:Scott Warner
Programmer:John Northan
Jason L. Maynard, Daniel Zahn & Chris Farrar (PC)[2]
Artist:Amie Haemi Hong
Composer:Chris Tilton
Series:Mercenaries
Engine:Zero
Platforms:Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 2, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360
Genre:Action-adventure
Modes:Single-player, multiplayer

Mercenaries 2: World in Flames is an action-adventure video game developed by Pandemic Studios and published by Electronic Arts for PlayStation 2, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 and Microsoft Windows. It is the sequel to 2005's . The game is a third-person shooter with an open world, set in a fictionalized war-torn Venezuela. The game's primary objective is to kill the President of Venezuela whose betrayal of the protagonist mercenary acted as a stepping stone to their current position.

Following the closure of Pandemic Studios, EA announced in November 2009 that EA Los Angeles were working on a title known as Mercs Inc.[3] The game was eventually canceled following the closure of Danger Close Games in 2013.

Plot

Following the events of the Second Korean War, the Mercenary and their technical support advisor Fiona Taylor leave Executive Operations to work independently. Three years later, the Mercenary is referred to a contract in Venezuela by Blanco: a Liberian who the Mercenary had worked with in Dakar. Blanco introduces them to Ramon Solano - a billionaire software entrepreneur with family ties to drug trafficking. Using his connections, Solano had convinced General Carlos Carmona and large portions of the Venezuelan Army to overthrow the government. However, General Carmona had since been captured by loyalist army units, leading Solano to hire the Mercenary to rescue him.

Upon rescuing Carmona and returning him to Solano, the Mercenary is betrayed and Solano attempts to execute them, shooting them in the buttock as they flee his mansion. Humiliated and penniless, the Mercenary watches as Solano overthrows the Venezuelan government in a coup d'état, then decides to take revenge and set up a PMC of their own.

Marketing and release

In preparation for the release of Mercenaries 2, Electronic Arts opened a commercial campaign in August 2008, with scenes of the plot of the game in a stylized world, featuring background music reminiscent of a "hip-hop musical" singing about how the protagonists are going to get revenge for being double crossed and getting no pay to boot. The song, called "Oh No You Didn't" was written and performed by the Wojahn Brothers and was released as a single on September 23.

EA took over the Last Stop petrol station in Finsbury Park, North London, on the release day of the game in order to give away £20,000 worth of petrol for free, with each driver receiving a maximum of £40. The petrol station was transformed into a military bunker, with sandbags, oil barrels and jeeps. The area's member of parliament, Lynne Featherstone, described the campaign as an "ill thought-out media stunt" after it created unnecessary traffic congestion.[4]

The demo of the game became available on September 18 on the PlayStation Network and Xbox Live.

Downloadable content

Pandemic Studios developed a free patch, called "Total Payback", which adds six new playable characters, cross-region co-op, and cheats. The patch was released on October 23 for PS3 and October 31 for 360 users.

A downloadable content (DLC) content pack "Blow It Up Again" was released for download on the PlayStation Store in December 12. An Xbox 360 version of DLC was expected to come soon after Sony's release, but DLC had relatively little advertising and failed to even have an official announcement from Pandemic aside from a simple trailer which was available for download on the Xbox Live Marketplace. It has also been raised from free to $1.99.

The "Total Payback" patch and "Blow It Up Again" content pack have not been released for the Windows version.

Reception

Mercenaries 2: World in Flames received "mixed or average" reviews on all platforms except the PlayStation 2 version, which received "generally unfavorable reviews", according to the review aggregation website Metacritic.

Though praised for its colorful and destructive environments, many reviews have complained of "nagging annoyances" throughout the game that occasionally feel rushed and unfinished.[5] One of the major problems was the unintelligent AI of both friendly and enemy NPCs, and the issue was aggravated by voice acting and repetitive lines. Some reviewers found several gameplay mechanisms questionable, such as the air supports and airstrikes being of limited value, over-powerful melee attacks and simplistic faction dynamics. The reactions from the new co-op mode were divided; while another player added to the fun, there were limitations, such as the tether between players and limited role of the passenger when in a vehicle.

Edge gave the PlayStation 3 version a score of 6/10 and said that, while it's inferior to the original game and suffers from poor NPC programming, it nonetheless "remains an absolute blast".[6] In Japan, Famitsu gave it a score of one eight, one nine, and two sevens for the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 versions; and one six, one seven, and two fives for the PS2 version.

The version released on PlayStation 2 received overwhelmingly negative reviews, with IGN calling it "insulting" and "clearly a half-assed rebadging of the first game that wasn't finished", giving it a 3.9/10.[7] GameSpot gave the PS2 version a 3.5/10 and said it "feels like a really bad GTA:SA mod made by a fan who was still in the learning phases of how to mod" and blamed "clipping, hideously blurry cutscenes, repetitive buildings, an endless of slough of glitches, enemies that all look alike...and a miserable color palette" as reasons this version could be considered "one of the worst games ever released on the PlayStation 2." GameSpot also shunned EA for tricking buyers into thinking the PS2 version of the game would be the same as the PS3 and Xbox 360 versions by using gameplay footage and still images from the newer console version to promote the PS2 version.[8]

Mercenaries 2 was nominated for "Dubious Honors: Worst Game Everyone Played" by GameSpot in their 2008 video game awards, which was a category for games with large sales that had been panned by the critics.[9] In addition, it won "Dubious Honors: Most Disappointing Game" by GameSpot.

The game was criticized by the Venezuelan government, accusing the U.S. federal government of trying to drum up support from the American public for a real-life invasion of Venezuela with the purpose of overthrowing Hugo Chávez.[10] Pandemic Studios had previously developed Full Spectrum Warrior (2004) for the U.S. Army. In response to the criticism, the official website of the game included the following disclaimer:

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mercenaries 2: World in Flames (2008) Windows credits.
  2. Web site: Mercenaries 2: World in Flames (2008) Windows credits.
  3. Web site: Pandemic Studios Announces 'Mercs Inc' . . November 24, 2009.
  4. Web site: Chaos at £20,000 petrol giveaway . . September 5, 2008 . December 16, 2017.
  5. Web site: Mercenaries 2: World in Flames Review (PS3, XBOX 360) . Suttner . Nick . . August 31, 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121013141719/http://www.1up.com/reviews/mercenaries-2-world-flames . October 13, 2012 . dead . December 16, 2017.
  6. Mercenaries 2: World in Flames (PS3) . Edge staff . . 194 . November 2008 . 92.
  7. Web site: Reparaz . Mikel . Mercenaries 2 on PS2: How bad is it? . IGN.
  8. Web site: Thomas . Aaron . Broken, buggy, and shallow gameplay leaves Mercenaries 2's world in flames. . GameSpot.
  9. Web site: Best of 2008 Dubious Honors: Worst Game Everyone Played . Mihoerck . Dan . December 23, 2008 . GameSpot . https://web.archive.org/web/20081223092907/http://www.gamespot.com/best-of/dubious-honors/index.html?page=5 . December 23, 2008 . dead . December 27, 2008.
  10. Web site: Venezuelan anger at computer game . BBC . May 25, 2006 . September 4, 2008.