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Long read: The beauty and drama of video games and their clouds

"It's a little bit hard to work out without knowing the altitude of that dragon..."

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Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon

Spectral forces.

Ghost Recon introduces two ideas to the on-rails shooter template. The first is the ability to manually move between pieces of cover when under fire. Each scene has one or two cover options and you can move back and forth between them with a point and click. The system is intended to introduce some mild tactical seasoning to the point-and-shoot core; you can split the two-man team in order to divide your enemies' attention. However, the options are usually so restrictive (and only become selectable at seemingly random moments) that it adds little to the experience.

Secondly, it's possible to a trigger a bullet-time mode if you have the appropriate pick-up, useful in situations where enemies overwhelm you. Nevertheless, these two simple ideas fail to make up for the dull stage design. Ghost Recon, by way of its po-faced licence, is limited to a clutch of uninteresting weapons and scenarios.

There's none of the arcade exuberance of Time Crisis and Ghost Squad, whose energetic set pieces heighten what have become rather antiquated thrills. While some interest is added by enemy units that wield rocket launchers and engineers who send a seemingly limitless supply of explosive RC cars towards you for detonation, the faux-realism of the scenario precludes the outrageous scenes of creative destruction that the contemporary on-rails shooter needs to hold your interest.

Some effort has been made to add variety with sections in which you control the series' cherished drones or must eliminate all of the enemies in a scene quickly before your character breathes in too much gas. But the weak sound effects fail to make up for the poor visual feedback for kills and, stripped of the score-attack trappings of the arcade game, there's little incentive to press on.

Some of these shortcomings are made up for in the game's straight Arcade mode which, by adding score readouts to every kill and rewarding headshots, turns the game into a competitive or co-operative two-player scramble for high scores. Here the developer manages to claw back some of what makes the genre enjoyable. There are 14 characters to play as (unlocked as you progress through the campaign mode) and the less straitlaced presentation works in its favour. But Arcade mode features just a handful of acts from the main campaign, relegating what should have been the package's main attraction a mere sideshow.

The result is a game that simultaneously fails to understand what made its forebears enjoyable or to grasp the features and emphases that make its assumed genre compelling. Players wanting an exciting, fast-paced, on-rails light gun shooter on the Wii are far better served by SEGA's Ghost Squad and House of the Dead: Overkill. The developer's failure to fully embrace the arcade approach ensures this game serves no-one, least of all its tired licence.

3 / 10