- CoolROM.com's game information and ROM (ISO) download page for Army Men - World War (Sony Playstation).
- 8/10 (111 votes) - Download Men of War Free. Form part of the armed forces that fought during World War II in Men of War. Choose one of the three armies available and relive historical battles. Best Way and 505 Games have collaborated once again to create a real-time strategy war game set in the.
- What you get with Army Men World War is a decent sequel to the original Army Men 3D, but one that's only barely superior. There's decent variety in levels, the two player flag mode is fun, and the reward value for completing the game is high, but the game's overall replay value is simply drawn through the mire by inadequate control, murky.
- Strategically build and manage an army of green plastic men in their critical war against the Tan army in Army Men RTS! Download a free trial, read about the game, and view user reviews. About Download Free Games. Recommended by PC World Magazine (August 2004).
Have fun playing the amazing Army Men - World War - Final Front SLUS-01327 game for Sony PSX/PlayStation 1. This is the USA version of the game and can be played using any of the PSX emulators available on our website. Download the Army Men - World War - Final Front SLUS-01327 ROM now and enjoy playing this game on your computer or phone.
As a red-blooded American male, I played with little green army men as a youngster. It was a rare day back in the early 1980s when there were no tiny soldiers stationed at strategic places on my bookshelves, dresser, or headboard. So, when 3DO began pumping out the Army Men series, I was excited. However, after several gaming sessions of Army Men: World War, I found myself unimpressed. While the game has a new spin on war simulation, it's fairly unoriginal and not nearly as action-packed as I had hoped.
The idea of bringing toys to life to fight wars is a novel one. However, the problem with Army Men: World War is that it doesn't really expand this gimmick. The action is similar to other war and fantasy action games like Commandos: Behind Enemy Lines, Silver, and Akuma in that you can control single or multiple fighters during the course of the game. Unlike those games, Army Men: World War features a difficult control scheme and missions that are nearly impossible to complete because action is extremely difficult to navigate. Even after taking the slow-paced tutorial, I found that controlling soldiers in the heat of battle was nearly impossible. In fact, I lost most of my team during the first few battles in any campaign I started.
The problem stems from the fact that the controls are all mouse-based and it's easy to click on the wrong areas of the screen during battle sequences. So, if I decide to switch control from one of my units to another, I might accidentally change all of that unit's weapons to grenades, send them in the wrong direction or commit any number of snafus. If I click on an area of the screen to make a unit advance and then accidentally click on a single soldier, the units scatter and I'm forced to scramble to reacquire control. While Army Men: World War isn't the only game where errant mouse clicks ruin a game, it seems particularly bad. The manual lists some shortcut keys that could have resolved the situation, but I couldn't get most of those hot keys to work.
How to crack your nose back into place setting. Accessed April 14, 2014. Mayersak R. Accessed April 14, 2014. Facial trauma in adults. Mendez DR, et al.
Still, I suffered through a few campaigns of Army Men: World War before total frustration set in. As much as I fondly recalled the green plastic dudes from yesteryear, I couldn't get past the weak action and control problems that plague the game. I even hoped that online gameplay would be somewhat more exciting than the single-player campaigns I waged, but could never find anyone logged on to play Army Men: World War on 3DO's game server. I don't know if this is because of the game's relative newness or if the multiplayer aspect of the game simply hadn't caught on among gamers. Perhaps, the frustrations of gameplay kept the player list down. Even when playing the single-soldier 'Capture the Flag' missions, I had limited success taking on dozens of enemies with a lone green renegade. Again, control issues were at the heart of the problem.
Graphically, Army Men: World War is not nearly as cool as I thought it would be. Apparently, the footage I saw in the commercials touted the product based on the animated interludes between missions. The action itself is not represented terribly well, the characters are small, and the terrain is blotchy. It's often difficult to tell where hills rise into impassible plateaus and that can waste a lot of time. Sure, the animated scenes are very nice, but they don't constitute the meat of the game. I expected to see some really great graphics the whole time I played Army Men: World War, but all I saw were average graphics painted green, tan and blue. Army Men: World War's sound is decent, but too many sounds blast at the same time. With tanks rumbling, guns blasting and shells exploding, it was hard to hear orders or other important sounds. That may indeed be a realistic interpretation of war, but I need a little bit of peace when I play video games.
Overall, I was very disappointed in Army Men: World War. While it is a decent war simulation, it doesn't break any new ground. In fact, it re-wraps several old packages in a green plastic shell and that's not enough to insure good quality gameplay. On a final note, while I am not a big fan of ratings systems on video games, the ESRB's decision to give Army Men: World War an 'E' for 'Everyone' (meaning that the game is suitable for all ages) is atrocious. Even though, the little green men are only toys, the violence is very graphic intensive. This is especially true when you lose all your men in a campaign. The animated end sequence shows a soldier gasping for breath, moaning in pain and then dying. This is a much more realistic presentation of death than in many fighting games which have received harsher ratings from the ESRB. I strongly advise parents to check this game out before allowing younger players to have access.
Graphics: Graphic presentation breaks no new ground, with the exception of painting soldiers solid colors.
Sound: The sound scheme is average, but occasionally, too many sounds hitting at once make it hard to follow.
Enjoyment: The bad control scheme sucked the fun right out of the fighting and campaigns.
Replay Value: With several facets to explore in Army Men: World War, an online following might make playing the sub-par action worthwhile.
People who downloaded Army Men: World War have also downloaded:
Army Men 2, Army Men, Army Men: Air Tactics, Army Men: Sarge's War, Army Men: Air Attack, Army Men: Sarge's Heroes, Army Men: RTS, Army Men: Toys in Space
This can, however, be a well-concealed trap. Previous 3DO Army Men Games have tried to capture that feeling by giving us a bucket of army guys to fight wars with. Sadly, while these games may have struck a twangy chord of nostalgia, they seemed to fail at actually being fun. Appeal to nostalgia all you want, but if the game itself isn't fun, then you might as well have not wasted our time and yours.
But undaunted by past games, 3DO plowed on and created Army Men RTS, and luckily for both of us, they got it right this time. They made a fun game throwing together the engrossing nature of an RTS and the backyard, kitchen table army men games one would play as a child. With engrossing art (and a movable camera that allows you to get close up to some more bizarre obstacles -- like a rotting apple outside or a rubber ducky in the bathroom) and a solid RTS, Army Men is sure to amuse and engross you.
If you compare this Army Men game with previous Army Men attempts, it's very clear which one comes out on top. However, if you compareArmy Men RTS with other RTS games, hardcore strategy gamers might find it a bit lacking. The game goes back to a simpler time in the world of real-time strategy, as your green platoon has only two resources to gather: plastic and electricity. Your units also have a limited movement command, with move and attack being the only actions most of your units can handle. When my base would be attacked with my guys standing just out of view, I sorely missed the 'patrol' command, and when they would charge into battle where they were horribly outnumbered, I could have used a good old 'stand ground' command that would keep them safe. But even though it's simpler than current RTS Games, there is little fun lost because of it.
The game is based on a simple premise: your green army men fight the tan army men. Your overall goal is to eliminate a former green solider that has gone mad and procured a bucket of paint and gone tan. Methinks the designers were a little into Heart of Darkness and the picture of the tan soldier sitting on a throne with a lollipop as a scepter is priceless. There's not much more plot than that but not much more is needed, honestly. When we staged elaborate battles on our lawns, in our childhood bedrooms, and even on our bathroom counters, we needed no more reason than that. The Greens were good. The Tans were bad -- even Tans that were formerly Greens.
The art design guys had a blast with this game, that's for sure. The detail in the messy house is a refreshing change from RTS games that give us trees, rocks and hills to maneuver around. Heavily detailed flying disks, watches, toothpaste tubes, potato chips, furniture and a massive scary spider all add to the feeling that you are crouched on the ground, trying to lead your army men into battle in unfamiliar territory. The thrill of running across a water gun or a dog's chew toy or measuring cups in the kitchen, and realizing you can gather resources from it, is testament that the art is doing what it's supposed to. The dichotomy of acknowledging the seriousness of war while running your squads underneath a skateboard, hiding them behind rotting apple and gathering resources from a dog's bowl makes for amusing play. The details in creating the world, from your headquarters being a buried soda can to the resource depot strongly resembling a blender are very well thought out. I especially liked the barbed wire posts made of little pencils.
Like other RTS Games, the generic units and the heroes have a variety of things to say as you're commanding them. The heroes' personalities come out with their comments (the minesweeper, Hoover, is a nervous wimp while the guy named 'Thick' is about as smart as you'd expect). Unit and vehicle sound is realistic enough for plastic war buffs, and the music, while not standing out, makes for good background as you plan your attack.
The resource management is refreshingly unique. The common way to gather resources is siphoning plastic and electricity from discarded toys, flying discs, batteries and watches, even poor Killer's food bowl. But that isn't the cool part. The designers remembered that these weren't people to be reduced to a red smear on the battlefield. They're plastic. When animated plastic dies, it stays plastic, it just doesn't animate anymore. You can recover the little blobs of plastic left by dead soldiers and destroyed building. As a furious micro-manager, I was thrilled with the efficiency of the system. You can also melt down your useless buildings (say a resource depot near depleted resources) for more plastic. I will have to add here that I would have preferred my dump trucks to not wander into the battlefield gathering plastic when the measuring cups are depleted. These strangely suicidal tendencies worry me. Still, their heads are made of plastic..
The different levels have a good amount of variety within them. While the classic 'gather resources, build base, build units, upgrade units, kill enemy' game style is there, they also give you a handful of heroes and require them to do a mission alone, fighting Tans as well as pests like ants and cockroaches. Each level has medal objectives. If you finish the level, then you get a bronze medal. However, there are voluntary goals to accomplish for better medals, things such as finishing within a time limit, killing all Tans or bugs, keeping your heroes alive, or finding all of the power-ups. Power-ups such as Full Heath and Weapons Upgrade are hidden around the map, and almost always worth the finding.
Army Men World War Free Download Torrent
MINIMUM PC REQUIREMENTS
- Pentium 233MHz Processor
- 250MB Hard Disk Space
- 64MB RAM
- 4X CD-ROM Drive
- 16MB DirectX Compatible Video Card
- DirectX Compatible Sound Card
- Keyboard
- Mouse
- DirectX 8.0
- MULTIPLAYER SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS
- 56Kbps Modem (internet play)
- TCP/IP Network (LAN play)
Download Games PC Army Men RTS Full VersionLink Download Games PC Army Men RTS Full VersionIndowebster
This Game uses the Russian language
Download
Download Games PC Army Men RTS Full Version Indowebster (Size:185 MB)
Password: blogguerrero / bolgueerror
Download
If The Download link is Broken you can Write it in the Comment Box
Army Men World War Pc
Army Men World War Free Download Utorrent
The idea of bringing toys to life to fight wars is a novel one. However, the problem with Army Men: World War is that it doesn't really expand this gimmick. The action is similar to other war and fantasy action games like Commandos: Behind Enemy Lines, Silver, and Akuma in that you can control single or multiple fighters during the course of the game. Unlike those games, Army Men: World War features a difficult control scheme and missions that are nearly impossible to complete because action is extremely difficult to navigate. Even after taking the slow-paced tutorial, I found that controlling soldiers in the heat of battle was nearly impossible. In fact, I lost most of my team during the first few battles in any campaign I started.
The problem stems from the fact that the controls are all mouse-based and it's easy to click on the wrong areas of the screen during battle sequences. So, if I decide to switch control from one of my units to another, I might accidentally change all of that unit's weapons to grenades, send them in the wrong direction or commit any number of snafus. If I click on an area of the screen to make a unit advance and then accidentally click on a single soldier, the units scatter and I'm forced to scramble to reacquire control. While Army Men: World War isn't the only game where errant mouse clicks ruin a game, it seems particularly bad. The manual lists some shortcut keys that could have resolved the situation, but I couldn't get most of those hot keys to work.
How to crack your nose back into place setting. Accessed April 14, 2014. Mayersak R. Accessed April 14, 2014. Facial trauma in adults. Mendez DR, et al.
Still, I suffered through a few campaigns of Army Men: World War before total frustration set in. As much as I fondly recalled the green plastic dudes from yesteryear, I couldn't get past the weak action and control problems that plague the game. I even hoped that online gameplay would be somewhat more exciting than the single-player campaigns I waged, but could never find anyone logged on to play Army Men: World War on 3DO's game server. I don't know if this is because of the game's relative newness or if the multiplayer aspect of the game simply hadn't caught on among gamers. Perhaps, the frustrations of gameplay kept the player list down. Even when playing the single-soldier 'Capture the Flag' missions, I had limited success taking on dozens of enemies with a lone green renegade. Again, control issues were at the heart of the problem.
Graphically, Army Men: World War is not nearly as cool as I thought it would be. Apparently, the footage I saw in the commercials touted the product based on the animated interludes between missions. The action itself is not represented terribly well, the characters are small, and the terrain is blotchy. It's often difficult to tell where hills rise into impassible plateaus and that can waste a lot of time. Sure, the animated scenes are very nice, but they don't constitute the meat of the game. I expected to see some really great graphics the whole time I played Army Men: World War, but all I saw were average graphics painted green, tan and blue. Army Men: World War's sound is decent, but too many sounds blast at the same time. With tanks rumbling, guns blasting and shells exploding, it was hard to hear orders or other important sounds. That may indeed be a realistic interpretation of war, but I need a little bit of peace when I play video games.
Overall, I was very disappointed in Army Men: World War. While it is a decent war simulation, it doesn't break any new ground. In fact, it re-wraps several old packages in a green plastic shell and that's not enough to insure good quality gameplay. On a final note, while I am not a big fan of ratings systems on video games, the ESRB's decision to give Army Men: World War an 'E' for 'Everyone' (meaning that the game is suitable for all ages) is atrocious. Even though, the little green men are only toys, the violence is very graphic intensive. This is especially true when you lose all your men in a campaign. The animated end sequence shows a soldier gasping for breath, moaning in pain and then dying. This is a much more realistic presentation of death than in many fighting games which have received harsher ratings from the ESRB. I strongly advise parents to check this game out before allowing younger players to have access.
Graphics: Graphic presentation breaks no new ground, with the exception of painting soldiers solid colors.
Sound: The sound scheme is average, but occasionally, too many sounds hitting at once make it hard to follow.
Enjoyment: The bad control scheme sucked the fun right out of the fighting and campaigns.
Replay Value: With several facets to explore in Army Men: World War, an online following might make playing the sub-par action worthwhile.
People who downloaded Army Men: World War have also downloaded:
Army Men 2, Army Men, Army Men: Air Tactics, Army Men: Sarge's War, Army Men: Air Attack, Army Men: Sarge's Heroes, Army Men: RTS, Army Men: Toys in Space
This can, however, be a well-concealed trap. Previous 3DO Army Men Games have tried to capture that feeling by giving us a bucket of army guys to fight wars with. Sadly, while these games may have struck a twangy chord of nostalgia, they seemed to fail at actually being fun. Appeal to nostalgia all you want, but if the game itself isn't fun, then you might as well have not wasted our time and yours.
But undaunted by past games, 3DO plowed on and created Army Men RTS, and luckily for both of us, they got it right this time. They made a fun game throwing together the engrossing nature of an RTS and the backyard, kitchen table army men games one would play as a child. With engrossing art (and a movable camera that allows you to get close up to some more bizarre obstacles -- like a rotting apple outside or a rubber ducky in the bathroom) and a solid RTS, Army Men is sure to amuse and engross you.
If you compare this Army Men game with previous Army Men attempts, it's very clear which one comes out on top. However, if you compareArmy Men RTS with other RTS games, hardcore strategy gamers might find it a bit lacking. The game goes back to a simpler time in the world of real-time strategy, as your green platoon has only two resources to gather: plastic and electricity. Your units also have a limited movement command, with move and attack being the only actions most of your units can handle. When my base would be attacked with my guys standing just out of view, I sorely missed the 'patrol' command, and when they would charge into battle where they were horribly outnumbered, I could have used a good old 'stand ground' command that would keep them safe. But even though it's simpler than current RTS Games, there is little fun lost because of it.
The game is based on a simple premise: your green army men fight the tan army men. Your overall goal is to eliminate a former green solider that has gone mad and procured a bucket of paint and gone tan. Methinks the designers were a little into Heart of Darkness and the picture of the tan soldier sitting on a throne with a lollipop as a scepter is priceless. There's not much more plot than that but not much more is needed, honestly. When we staged elaborate battles on our lawns, in our childhood bedrooms, and even on our bathroom counters, we needed no more reason than that. The Greens were good. The Tans were bad -- even Tans that were formerly Greens.
The art design guys had a blast with this game, that's for sure. The detail in the messy house is a refreshing change from RTS games that give us trees, rocks and hills to maneuver around. Heavily detailed flying disks, watches, toothpaste tubes, potato chips, furniture and a massive scary spider all add to the feeling that you are crouched on the ground, trying to lead your army men into battle in unfamiliar territory. The thrill of running across a water gun or a dog's chew toy or measuring cups in the kitchen, and realizing you can gather resources from it, is testament that the art is doing what it's supposed to. The dichotomy of acknowledging the seriousness of war while running your squads underneath a skateboard, hiding them behind rotting apple and gathering resources from a dog's bowl makes for amusing play. The details in creating the world, from your headquarters being a buried soda can to the resource depot strongly resembling a blender are very well thought out. I especially liked the barbed wire posts made of little pencils.
Like other RTS Games, the generic units and the heroes have a variety of things to say as you're commanding them. The heroes' personalities come out with their comments (the minesweeper, Hoover, is a nervous wimp while the guy named 'Thick' is about as smart as you'd expect). Unit and vehicle sound is realistic enough for plastic war buffs, and the music, while not standing out, makes for good background as you plan your attack.
The resource management is refreshingly unique. The common way to gather resources is siphoning plastic and electricity from discarded toys, flying discs, batteries and watches, even poor Killer's food bowl. But that isn't the cool part. The designers remembered that these weren't people to be reduced to a red smear on the battlefield. They're plastic. When animated plastic dies, it stays plastic, it just doesn't animate anymore. You can recover the little blobs of plastic left by dead soldiers and destroyed building. As a furious micro-manager, I was thrilled with the efficiency of the system. You can also melt down your useless buildings (say a resource depot near depleted resources) for more plastic. I will have to add here that I would have preferred my dump trucks to not wander into the battlefield gathering plastic when the measuring cups are depleted. These strangely suicidal tendencies worry me. Still, their heads are made of plastic..
The different levels have a good amount of variety within them. While the classic 'gather resources, build base, build units, upgrade units, kill enemy' game style is there, they also give you a handful of heroes and require them to do a mission alone, fighting Tans as well as pests like ants and cockroaches. Each level has medal objectives. If you finish the level, then you get a bronze medal. However, there are voluntary goals to accomplish for better medals, things such as finishing within a time limit, killing all Tans or bugs, keeping your heroes alive, or finding all of the power-ups. Power-ups such as Full Heath and Weapons Upgrade are hidden around the map, and almost always worth the finding.
Army Men World War Free Download Torrent
MINIMUM PC REQUIREMENTS
- Pentium 233MHz Processor
- 250MB Hard Disk Space
- 64MB RAM
- 4X CD-ROM Drive
- 16MB DirectX Compatible Video Card
- DirectX Compatible Sound Card
- Keyboard
- Mouse
- DirectX 8.0
- MULTIPLAYER SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS
- 56Kbps Modem (internet play)
- TCP/IP Network (LAN play)
Download Games PC Army Men RTS Full VersionLink Download Games PC Army Men RTS Full VersionIndowebster
This Game uses the Russian language
Download
Download Games PC Army Men RTS Full Version Indowebster (Size:185 MB)
Password: blogguerrero / bolgueerror
Download
If The Download link is Broken you can Write it in the Comment Box
Army Men World War Pc
Army Men World War Free Download Utorrent
Army Men World War Free Download Pc Game
- Extract the Zip file first!, Do not run the RAR files from within the Zip file.
- After you have extracted the Zip file, you ar left with part1.rar and part2.rar.
- Using Winrar or some other tool, Run the RAR file, this will extract the Army Men Rts.exe set up program.
- Run the .exe file to begin installation. The install directory is set to C:program files and can't be changed as this is needed for the extra's etc.
- ***If anyone has problems and needs me to release a version for any directory just let me know and i will do it :(***
- Compiled by myself & 100% Virus Free - Checked on 1st Jan 2009 by Symantec Corporate Antivirus 9.0.0.38 scan Engine: 81.3.0.30