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Star Trek: Armada

Click screen shot above,
to purchase this game
If there's one thing a Trekker wants, it's to be able to play
a game that salutes one of the best moments in Star Trek history:
the infamous battle between the Borg and the Federation. While
this game is not a re-creation of that specific battle in Trek
"history," it does let you plan strategies in battles
between the Borg, Klingons, Romulans, and/or the Federation.
It even allows for multiplayer, where each player is one
of these four races. How cool is that?
The
single player missions are performed in sequence, and tell a
story of the Borg's return to Federation space, and each alien
race's reaction to this threat. First you play with Federation
technology, then Klingon, then Romulan, and finally the Borg(!).
After completing each of these missions, an additional, final
set of missions opens up, completing the story (see "Note" below). These last few missions
are of the three alien races together --Feds, Klingons, and Romulans--
as they fight the Borg in unison. This was a great idea, that
leads to a truly fitting, satisfying finale.
Playing
the game itself is easy to get a handle on, particularly for
fans of games like X-Com.
Although 3D accelerated (the FX and animation are top notch;
more on that next), the game plays not unlike a 2D strategy game,
with a status bar at the bottom of the screen, to control all
major game options. Click on any ship and its potential orders are listed. Nearly all ships/stations can beam
officers to other ships (or even invade and command an enemy
ship!), be sent for repairs, and so on. Others have special weapons,
like the Enterprise's "Corbomite Deflector" (a salute
to Kirk's classic gambit, only these shields actually do
reflect enemy fire!). Additional weaponry might be "dimmed,"
and is only available if researched in lab stations (again, not
unlike X-Com). I'm not much of an avid strategy
gamer, so I liked the ease of use of this game's strategy structure.
Graphics
in the game are visually stunning. It's important to note that
each of the spaceship pix in this review were captured from the
actual game, and each is of a moment of the game that is fully
3D-accelerated; not a mere FMV video clip. If you are a Trekkie
with a high-end 3D accelerator, this might be the game you want
to use to show off your system's muscle. Order the construction
of a new vessel, and see it put together piece by piece (presuming
you have the time; after all, a battle is brewing!). Select as
many as 8 ships, click on an enemy to attack, press "z"
for cinematic view, and watch the 3D phasers fly! Awesome graphics
are definitely Armada's strong point.
Note :
Be sure you play ALL of the single player missions: 1/5th
of them don't appear until all campaigns are completed! After
the Borg missions are over, the "Omega Particle" appears
in the center of the mission selection screen; click it, and
you get a whole new set of missions...and the end of the game's
storyline! Even a few professional web sites missed this, and
claimed the game was "open ended". Oops! |
Gripes for this game are pretty minor, though enough to keep
it from a "Deep Impact" rating. For one thing, you
can only control 8 ships at once, which isn't much of an "Armada"
per se. The four types of fleets to control (Borg, Romulans,
Klingons, Feds) are also a bit too similar: each has a starbase,
a small ship construct station, a large ship construct station,
and so on, with less variety than you'd expect. As for the controls,
they rely on the mouse a bit too much; on a few occasions,
the game didn't know if I wanted to click on a ship to attack
it, or just to call up its "status screen." However,
these gripes are, as I said, pretty minor, and didn't keep me
from enjoying the game itself.
In the end, anyone who loves Trek --in any of its forms--
will want to give this game a try. It certainly seems to have
been made by fans of the show, and also has a better grasp of
what Trekkers want: to control the Enterprise in heavy
battle...in addition to the Borg, the Romulans, and the Klingons.
Armada lets you do all the above. K'pla!
---Techtite
| All text, Title
graphics, and pix not of reviewed product, are created by Techtite,
copyright 2000; all rights reserved. Screen captures of program
reviewed are discrete thumbnails, used only for the purpose of
review, and by no means represent any affiliation with Techtite and the distributors of that product. For further "legalese"
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