


The biggest surprise of your life is to survive the war. The biggest sadness of your life is to see friends falling.

When you keep your word despite desperately desiring to flee the screaming hell all around, you earn honor.Įarning honor under fire changes who you are. In war it is understood that you give your word of honor to do your duty to stand and fight instead of running away and deserting your friends. Were the mouths of my fallen combat friends not stopped with dust, they would testify that life revolves around honor. Even with the low price tag, that fiver could be put to better use -such as folding it to make the Queen look like she's smiling.As a combat veteran wounded in one of America’s wars, I offer to speak for those who cannot. The level of professionalism in this game can be summed up by the fact they haven't even bothered to translate all the text. But there's no forgiveness for game-obstructing visuals: the iron sight on your default weapon is a big grey blob that could obscure a double-decker bus from 10 metres. This is a budget game, so I can forgive the graphics looking older than ha'pennies rusting behind a nan's sofa. When it works, "intelligent" isn't really the way to describe the enemy -they shoot at walls, stare vacantly into the distance and even blow up their own vehicles in incidents of cross fire that I don't even remember being involved in. On the first play through, saved games don't load in some areas, and restarting the level causes you to spawn back at the start, unable to move.

Avoid it as you would death itself.Ĭode of Honor is a basic FPS from the budget Polish publisher, that throws you into the French special forces, and asks you to kill people in a bug-ridden anti-paradise. By Now You're probably -aware that if you see a game published by City Interactive you should probably avoid it.
