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Soldiers: Heroes of World War II: Difference between revisions
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[[File:LeeEnfield4Rifle.jpg|450px|thumb|none|Lee-Enfield No. 4 Mark I - .303 British]] | [[File:LeeEnfield4Rifle.jpg|450px|thumb|none|Lee-Enfield No. 4 Mark I - .303 British]] | ||
[[Image:SoldiersHeroesEM-2-Mosin.jpg|thumb|none|600px|A British soldier holds his "EM-2", but the close-up available by disabling camera clipping in the editor shows that the model used by the unit is actually a Mosin.]] | [[Image:SoldiersHeroesEM-2-Mosin.jpg|thumb|none|600px|A British soldier holds his "EM-2", but the close-up available by disabling camera clipping in the editor shows that the model used by the unit is actually a Mosin.]] | ||
[[Image:SoldiersHeroesEM-3LeeEnfield.jpg|thumb|none|600px|A British soldier holds his "EM-3",] | [[Image:SoldiersHeroesEM-3LeeEnfield.jpg|thumb|none|600px|A British soldier holds his "EM-3",]] | ||
==M1A1 Carbine== | ==M1A1 Carbine== |
Revision as of 23:34, 26 September 2023
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Soldiers: Heroes of World War II is a 2004 real-time strategy video game by Ukrainian developer Best Way and is a precursor to the Men of War series, running on an early version of the GEM engine used in that series.
The game has four campaigns for the Soviet Union, United Kingdom, United States, and Germany (the British campaign notably makes use of permadeath, with the player controlling a small squad of British commandos whose inventory and surviving members carry over between missions, something not done in any other campaigns in the series).
The game received three expansions developed by Dark Fox, a Russian developer. One of these came to English-speaking markets as Silent Heroes: Elite Troops of World War II while the rest remained Russian-only. These expansions only feature the Soviet faction as a playable faction, despite the English box art for Silent Heroes depicting US troops. (Some weapons also have slightly different names in Silent Heroes, often listing the weapon's IRL calibre despite still using the generic Pistol/Rifle/Machine Gun ammo system.)
Gameplay is mostly similar to its successor, however the inventory system is much more limited and big battles are almost entirely absent, with the player only having control of a small handful of soldiers (who have increased health to compensate but are still cut down quickly if the player has poor tactics). The famous MoW series staple, the editor, must be downloaded separately from the game.
The game also makes an odd arcadey decision with weapon distribution that the first sequel, Faces of War, would continue, where submachine guns are the main weapons of all armies, with machine guns being not too far behind, and the should-be-standard bolt-action rifles being some of the rarer firearms. That said, rifles are generally far more deadly, possessing range and damage more akin to the sniper rifles of Men of War proper.
The following weapons appear in the video game Soldiers: Heroes of World War II:
Handguns
Colt M1911A1
The Colt M1911A1 appears as the US handgun.
Walther P38
The Walther P38 appears as the "Valter" and its 3D model is reused for several pistols.
Welrod Mark I
The Welrod Mark I appears as in the British campaign as the only suppressed weapon in the game, likely for balancing reasons, it uses rare rifle ammo instead of pistol ammo, a design choice that would oddly stick around for later Men of War games, despite them introducing other suppressed weapons such as the Suppresed Nagant that still use pistol ammo. In Multiplayer, the Welrod is used by the "Scout" unit for all factions due to being the only suppressed firearm. It takes up 1X3 slots in the inventory as opposed to the 1X2 of other handguns.
Nagant M1895
The Nagant M1895 appears as the secondarry Russian pistol.
Smith & Wesson M1917
A revolver appears as the "Web.45", but is clearly not a Webley revolver. Rather, it appears to be a Smith & Wesson M1917 and is used as the secondary sidearm of the US forces and more often by the British faction. It re-uses the P38's 3d model.
Submachine Guns
M3A1 "Grease Gun"
The M3A1 "Grease Gun" appears and reuses the MP40's in-game model. It is used by US and British troops. Oddly in multiplayer, it is only used by the British as an alternative to the Sten for certain classes, while all American submachine gun troops use the Thompson.
MP 40
The MP40 appears as the most common weapon used by Germany.
PPSh-41
The submachine gun of the Soviet faction. It is fed with 71-round drum magazines and is highly effective in hosing down groups of enemies.
Sten Mk II
The British submachine gun of choice is the Sten Mk II. It is mistakenly referred to as the "Sten MK-I".
SIG Bergmann
The SIG Bergmann appears and is incorrectly named the "Type 100". It is only available in the editor and this same mistake would be repeated for Men of War, this is one of 3 unused Japanese weapons in the editor (and two hats) indicating a Japanese faction was cut.
M1A1 Thompson
The M1A1 Thompson appears as the "Thom Gun" and is mainly used by the American faction, with the British making light use of it it in the campaign.
Rifles
Arisaka Type 99
Possibly a leftover from the cut Japanese faction, the Arisaka Type 99 bizarrely appears used by German soldiers in Silent Heroes at least in the first mission.
Gewehr 43
The Gewehr 43 appears as the "G-41" German Sniper Rifle.
Lee-Enfield No. 4 Mk. I
Called "EM-2" scoped and "EM-3" unscoped, the Lee-Enfield No. 4 Mk I is used by British riflemen. The naming convention is rather odd, considering the "EM-2" is a very different rifle from the Lee-Enfield.
M1A1 Carbine
The M1A1 Carbine is used in the campaign by both British and American troops, it doesn't appear in multiplayer.
Mosin Nagant M1938
The Mosin Nagant M1938 is used by Soviet soldiers and its model is used for all sniper rifles and most rifles held by units. It is referred to as simply "Mosin".
Mosin-Nagant M1891/30
A Mosin Nagant M1891/30 with an PU sniper scope is used in the introduction cutscene to Silent Heroes; it is replaced by an SVT-40 during gameplay.
"SuperGun"
Accessible via the editor is the "Supergun", a rifle that holds 10 bullets in a magazine and fires fully automatic, it re-uses the Mosin's inventory icon but actually has a unique 3D model.
SVT-40
The SVT-40 appears as the Soviet sniper rifle.
Machine Guns
Bren Mk. I
The Bren gun is used by the British faction as their machine gun of choice for both infantry and vehicles.
Degtyaryov DP-27
The DP-27 appears as the Soviet Machine Gun. It is referred to as "DT-29", with the inventory icon depicting a Degtyaryov DT and being mounted on vehicles like the DT. The DP-27 does have a "Proper" weapon entity in the editor with the correct icon and capacity, however this is never actually used, every single Soviet Machine Gunner carries the "DT-29" instead. (Even in the Silent Heroes expansion where the DP-27 is clearly featured in the opening cutscene, it turns into the "DT" as it is called in that game once gameplay starts.)
Nambu Type 96
The Type 96 light machine gun is the final firearm intended to be used by the cut Japanese faction and is mistakenly called the "Type 99" which later games that bring it back would repeat, it re-uses the Bren's model.
Anti-Materiel Rifles
PTRD-41
The PTRD-41 appears as the Soviet anti-tank rifle and their main anti-armor weapon, it inaccurately holds 5 shots like it's a PTRS-41 and its 2D inventory sprites are of a PTRS-41.
PTRS-41
The PTRS-41 is used by the Soviets, it re-uses the 3D model for the PTRD-41.
Explosives
F1 hand grenade
The French F1 hand grenade appears as the Red Army grenade, it seems it was mistaken for the Russian F-1 that was actually used by the Red Army.