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Ah, XP. Thus, all games should do it Even if they're not at all suited to it. This isn't like Dawn of War IFs Diablo -compulsive loot system - it's about unlocking the units themselves. Want a Scorpion tank? Not until you've played as Nod for about five hours. How about a GDI Mammoth?

Yeah, give it a couple of weeks. These are not lovely bonus toys heaped on top of an overflowing box of delights. These are the game's core units, drip-fed to you over days or weeks, and only in response to successfully killing tons of enemies and levelling up.

Jump immediately online the day you buy the game, and you'll have access to about four units. Sure, hitting Tier 2 only takes a few missions or matches, and will double that roster, but it's absurd.

It's insane. It's ludicrous. It's preposterous. It's being made to wait and to work for something you've paid for, not patting you on the head for doing well. It's one thing to unlock a variant weapon in an online shooter, but denying you access to most of the tech tree until you've put the hours in is not how RTS games work.

Unlocked units are supposed to provide choice instead of advantages, but that's utter nonsense. It is possible to win by swarming a Tier 3 enemy with Tier 1 units, but it's harder going and not much fun. To the game's credit, XP is earned from multiplayer, single-player, co-op and skirmishes alike, but it's still a long road to the best stuff.

As a final smack upon your red-raw buttocks, the two factions - GDI and Nod - have to be levelled up separately. You don't have to fight hard and fight well to get everything - you just have to play and wait and wait and play and play and wait, and that's incredibly boring. Dear EA: You are total bastards. Worse still, the persistent unlock system is used to justify an anti-piracy measure that's the equal of Ubisoft's always-online DRM for pure contempt.

No matter what mode you're in, if you lose your internet connection for any I reason, you're kicked out of the game j until it resumes. Progress will be lost, and train-based boredom will not be killed. Is this a worthwhile for having your XP, unlocks and scores constantly monitored and updated? The answer begins with, ends with "o bloody way''.. All that said, when you've played long enough to unlock a decent clutch of units and enter the fray with a bunch of people in a similar position to you, the game does feels right, turning into the bastard child of World in Conflict and Company of Heroes - it has the instant action appeal of the former and the tug-of-war of the latter.

Co-operation is key, and also hard to avoid: as one vs one currently is the only way to fight entirely alone.

You need a Defence player setting up turrets to guard caps, a Support guy deploying his magic powers to bail you out of a fraught fight, and you need an Offence player to get into that fraught fight in the first place. Things clicks together when all multiplayer pieces are in place, but it's unfulfilling in single-player.

While longevity hangs upon the multiplayer mode, and the potential string of patches and DLC - aargh! I've already banged on about how pathetic the story is, but the missions fall short too. The trouble with the new structure, regardless of its multiplayer merits, is that it permits very little variation. It's just a race to biff some other stuff on small, palpably arena-like maps. It tries to insert a little more oomph - a giant spaceship at one point, a tiny Kane pixel-man at another - here and there, but it feels limited and cheap.

Take care of yourself, Mr Kane. It was good while it lasted. See, We Always knew that bald guy known only as Kane was a decent fellow. He was just misunderstood, only wanting a better world for you, me and the entire human race. Granted, he may be responsible for the deaths of thousands and his insane quest for personal deification and radioactive tiberium crystals is the reason the world has turned into a bleak, green, irradiated wasteland.

But forgive and forget? Everyone makes mistakes, after all. His plan is simple - an alliance. The GDI and Kane's Brotherhood of Nod the baddies working together to push back the tiberium menace and help get the planet back on its feet. The GDI guys look a bit nervous, but we know they decide to agree, perhaps after some tough negotiation or maybe just after a curry and a night out on the tiberium cocktails.

While we don't know yet who will actually make an appearance we know for sure Ric Flair won't be in it, sadly the cast are sure to bring life to the story, as they've always done. This meeting takes place 10 years after the events of the previous game. The plan is coming to fruition, the Tiberium Control Network is almost complete and the two factions have been skipping merrily together in tiberium-free fields for a decade and a half.

A new golden age for humanity is said to be dawning. So, of course, as is the way of things in game land, things go terribly, terribly wrong. We don't know how they go wrong, nor would we tell you if we did, because it would spoil the story.

But it does and the GDI and Nod are back at each others' throats once again, the fate of mankind in the balance once more. A common enough refrain, of course, and one that is hardly easy to attain. To be fair to him, it does seem like the game could be significantly different to its predecessors, although not in a "shit, they've ruined it!

There's definitely more of a "hmm, that sounds interesting" vibe to the project at the moment. How much you agree with that statement depends on the following passages, so let's get cracking. You build a base with a mobile MCV called a Crawler in this one - well, ish Each one has its own specific roster with unique roles to play.

For example, using Defence gives you heavy turrets to deploy, but very little in the way of quick, incisive attack troops with which to gain ground; offence does the opposite; and Support gives you the option to properly utilise aircraft, artillery and transports.

You must pick one of these before starting a game, so it'll be important to think about what you plan to do or what your preferred style is. This doesn't mean that your units are invincible - far from it - but if your Crawler or the equivalent depending on which class you've chosen - the Crawler is used for the GDI's Offence class is destroyed, it isn't the end of the world.

You'll then get the chance to respawn as either the same class or a different one. How well this idea will work can only be divined from a proper play test of course, but it has the potential to make irritating buiid-and-rush tactics less of a pain in the backside. While we're still sure that quickfingered and quick-rushing gameplay will be essential to mastering the game, Vessella stresses the effort the development team are putting jn to shift the balance of power towards a middle ground, where people who don't even know what a hotkey is could have a chance of putting up a good fight.

Electronic Arts Supreme Commander is a strategy game developed by Gas Powered Games. It was published by THQ Nordic. Supreme Comma Contact : [email protected] - Crackthisgame -. Crack This Game. Please, disable adblock. Description Behold disciples of Nod, for the end is soon upon us.

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