Shadow Company Review

I love the smell of Napalm.

As a member of an elite mercenary group called Granite, you’re sent out to

the Angola coast to take care of some (ahem) business. However, after a particularly

painful assault, you’re left with almost nothing. Granite denies you reinforcements,

then leaves you for dead. The surviving members decide to band together and form

the Shadow Company, who’s prime goal is to take revenge on Granite.

This is the premise of Shadow Company, a decent but buggy strategy game

from Ubisoft. While it shines in the graphic, music, and gameplay arenas, it’s

brought down by its annoying camera and unpredictable game errors.

This

game is similar in execution to Commandos:

Behind Enemy Lines
. You command a small band of mercenaries, who must sneak,

hide, and shoot in order to complete each level. Of course, like most of these

games, you can’t just go into an enemy camp with guns blazing, and expect to survive.

You must carefully strategize to achieve your goals. You can try to get to high

ground and ambush your enemy; you can try to pick off border guards, throw a grenade

to take them by surprise, set a C4 surprise when no one is looking, and so on.

For any problem, there are lots of ways to solve it, making it more entertaining.

And you will be spending lots of time trying to figure out what is the best

plan of action. Most of the levels will take over an hour and a half to complete,

with at least half of the time spent trying to find the best position for your

guys. It’s really cool to form a plan, and then watch it work out the way you

wanted it to.

Of course, with all of these cool things you can do, you need good controls

to do them quickly and efficiently. Unfortunately, this game doesn’t have the

best. Although it’s pretty easy to get your men to stand, kneel, or lie down on

command, moving your party can be confusing and annoying. If you’re moving four

people, it’s hard to tell exactly where they’ll end up. They may go behind a hill

where you want them, or in front of it, straight in the line of fire. Also, drawing

a bead on your enemy or picking up items can be inaccurate due to fairly poor

click detection on the screen. It’s still possible to use your team effectively,

but it takes a lot more work than it really should.

The same

goes for the camera. Anyone who’s played Myth

will recognize the basic camera movement keys: you can move it in the four basic

directions, circle it left and right, turn it left and right, raise it, lower

it, or tilt it. But, even with all these options, the camera doesn’t turn well.

When you circle the camera around a point, the point is much farther away than

you’d expect, which makes you loose sight of your commandos quite often. This

can be particularly annoying in the heat of battle, where it’ll take you five

seconds to adjust the camera so you can see your men. Meanwhile, the enemy is

shooting you like fish in a barrel.

The graphics are decent, but not without flaws. The ground is well textured

with grass, dirt, dead river beds, and so on, while the various bits of scenery

(trees, tents, buildings, water) are detailed and very well rendered. Your commandos

look pretty good, though their running animation looks sort of silly when they’re

running up hill. There are the occasional graphics glitches, and you can find

guns and other objects passing straight through stone walls (Maybe it’s some sort

of special advanced military phasing device?), but overall these don’t get in

the way of gameplay. The sound is adequate with the standard bang-bangs, rat-a-tat-tats,

and kablooies you’re used to in this sort of game. The voices are a little annoying

though, and occasionally unclear; for the first half hour, I though Lewis Underwood

was saying “Nurse Underwood here”.

Despite all of the good points, there is one thing which can make or break

a game: whether or not it’s stable. The first time I tried to play the game, the

game refused to load. It just gave me a black screen, and didn’t let me do anything.

I was forced to Ctrl-Alt-Del my way out of it. Also, game glitches that kill off

your men are frequent. Within half an hour of starting play, one of my guys got

stuck in a wall, while a second was crushed/drowned while trying to get into a

boat.

Although the game is pretty fun to play when it works, the loose controls and

annoying crashes really bring it down. You’ll have great fun for an hour before

the game glitches and you throw your mouse at the wall. Shadow Company

is a good attempt, but sloppily done.



 
  • Lots of fun stuff to do
  • Many ways to complete goals
  • Loose control
  • Difficult camera
  • Buggy gameplay

5

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