Updated:07:28 PM CEST Jun,06
(new)
66 lottery login
91 club
okwin
bdg game
55 club
(c) 1998-2026 Gameguru Mania
Privacy Policy statement
|
Call of Duty 2 Q&A - interview|
| (hx) 03:13 AM CEST - May,03 2005 |
GameSpot
has posted
a Q&A with Vince Zampella, CEO of Infinity Ward, and Zied Rieke, the game's
lead designer, as they talk about
Call of Duty 2, their
upcoming sequel to their military shooter. Here's a taster:
GS: We've already seen famous battles such as Stalingrad, the Battle
of the Bulge, and the Fall of Berlin in the first Call of Duty game and
expansion. What battles can we look forward to in Call of Duty 2, other than
Toujane (which we've already seen), and is there a danger of covering ground
that's been covered before?
ZR: Last thing first... The only Call of Duty battle we are returning to
in Call of Duty 2 is Stalingrad, and that's just because it was so epic, so
mind-bogglingly huge, and so important to the entire war that you could easily
make five to six games about it and just get started on fully depicting it all
by itself. Other than Stalingrad, we are also featuring the winter war where, in
1941, the German army rolled to within 20 miles of the gates of Moscow before
the terrific cold and the tenacity of the Russians brought it to a halt. A new
setting for us is North Africa, where we are featuring battles in Tunisia,
Libya, and Egypt between Montgomery's 8th Army and Field Marshal Erwin Rommel
and his famous Afrika Korps. The best known of these battles is the huge and
critical battle of El Alamein, where the British went so far as to make fake
tank units, using wood and paint, in order to trick the Germans into defending
in the wrong place. As you can see, there is so much of the war left to cover.
There are also a couple more very exciting battles that we'll be showing and
talking about at E3 this year.
|
|
last 10 comments: | v1m | (11:05 AM CEST - May,04 2005 ) | | Shots look nice. Plus, the unexplored idea of using a WWII setting is blowing my mind. | |
All comments
|
|