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Men of Valor | 
enlarge | From: Vivendi Universal Category: Video Games
List Price: $9.99 Buy New: $3.00 You Save: $6.99 (70%)
New (20) Used (27) from $1.40
Avg. Customer Rating: 19 reviews Sales Rank: 4380
Platform: Xbox ESRB: Mature Media: Video Game Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Number Of Items: 1 Batteries Included: No Age: 17 - 20 years Operating System: Xbox Shipping Weight (lbs): 2 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6
MPN: 72216 Model: XBVVD 020626722162 UPC: 020626722162 EAN: 0020626722162 ASIN: B0001R0426
Release Date: October 19, 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | Battle through 16 historical missions, from the coastal plains of Chu Lai to the ancient city of Hue during the Tet Offensive | | • | Advanced, cunning AI and detailed graphics put you on the frontlines | | • | Immersive, cinematic, real time scripted events and intense first person gameplay | | • | Lead search and destroy missions around Da Nang airbase, battle in the counterattack on Hue and more | | • | Experience your tour of duty in multiplayer mode, as you play either U.S. forces or Viet Cong guerillas |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Men of Valor is a historical shooter that recreates infantry combat during the Vietnam War. Follow new recruit Dean Shepard as he and his Marine squad fight through the jungles of Southeast Asia, during the 1960s.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 14 more reviews...
Don't Play Without A SmartJoy Frag! October 15, 2006 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
This game is tough. Even on the easy setting. There are no cheat codes to the XBox version of the game. I am not one of those people online who you can never touch in a DM or any other type of online match. In fact, I usually end up with the highest number of deaths before the round is over. I don't have good reflexes and being able to properly aim at someone moving and jumping around in a microsecond is near impossible for me. Shoot, I have a hard enough time as it is with the VC in this game who stand still and take a few rounds from me.
Although there are checkpoints in certain levels of the game, you cannot save your progress. When you turn your XBox console off after having saved a checkpoint in the game, you will have to restart the entire level all over again. This is annoying, and it can cause a novice player such as myself to become frustrated and give up easily. Sometimes you have to sit through an in-game video before you can play. But at least you can move your mouse to look around when the in-game video is playing, and it doesn't take away from the gameplay since most of the vids don't really last that long. The key word for this game is patience. I have to make sure I drink plenty of water and have enough protein in me before playing this game so I don't get frustrated with myself when I run out of respawns and have to start the level over from the beginning (the maximum number of times you can respawn your character from the most recent saved checkpoint is 12, so don't die too quickly if it can be helped). This game is hard, but it's worth trudging through. I also like the weapons. The storyline alone is worth it, not to mention the laugh-fest I have when I hear the things the Viet Cong yells out to me and my virtual squadmates. At first, I had to put the game on pause so I wouldn't get shot while laughing.
I have been playing computer games using a keyboard and mouse since 1997 with the release of Quake II, so I'm not at all accustomed to using a controller which is rather foreign to me. That being said, it is a lot easier (for me, anyway) to play Men of Valor with a PS/2 (Not Playstation 2) keyboard and mouse combo, which is where the SmartJoy Frag comes in. I am not an experienced console gamer, so when I use the SmartJoy Frag for the XBox, I actually forget that I'm playing this game on a console rather than a PC, and I spend my energy taking the enemy down and enjoying the game instead of re-training my brain to use a five year old controller that I have never wanted or needed in the first place. I'm sure that by this time most of the people who have an XBox are quite accustomed to using the XBox controller, even for first person shooter games like Men of Valor, but I am not one of those people, and I would not have been able to get through the first level were it not for the SJF. Just make sure your keyboard and mouse are both PS2, not USB. I will never go back to using a standard console controller (wired of wireless) for an FPS.
Excellent Co-Op May 24, 2006 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
My Sister & I (both females) love this game and have played it several times. We are always looking for coop games to play together especially military games. We love the different levels, shooting (especially-sniper shooting), sneaking around and general mayhem. I would definately recommend this game to anyone. It's a must buy.
Pretty intense May 3, 2006 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
If you are into war games or shooters, then definitely try this game out. It's a blast to play. I am only several missions into the game so far but am having a great time. I do not recommend this game to children, though, due to the foul language used quite freqently so far in it. I put this game in and started playing it with my nephew and I had to turn it off b/c of the cursing in it. However, the multiplayer aspect was quite fun for my nephew and i due to the fact that there is no talking..only hunting each other to see who can take who out! lol You have absolutely no idea where each other are so it makes it quite fun trying to hide and stalk to find the other and it's really cool when they have no idea you have them in your sights and then "boom"! you got'em! lol cool!
Best "Vietnam" war game yet! February 22, 2006 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
It is! Its better than Conflict:Vietnam,ShellShock and BATTLEFIELD:VietNam. Its the most fun not to mention the best realism,best graphics and visuals. if you own an XBox this will be the top Vietnam war game.If you own a PS2-probably Conflict,a gamecube-Uhh Conflict? i own all three systems-MOV is best.
The Most Realistic Nam Game January 24, 2006 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
My original review for this game was a lampoon of complaints. Now that I have actually beaten it on the normal difficulty setting and given it a second chance on the easy difficulty setting, I must say this game is probably the most accurate depiction of the war, realism being its primary principle. And I have played all the Nam games, with the exception of Purple Haze which I shall purchase sooner or later.
What I liked most about it was how it did not take a side. Meaning, no matter what your thoughts were about the war, you cannot disagree with the game. You see it through the eyes of a fictional soldier, who dose not question the right or wrong of the battle, but fights simply to survive. Your character, Dean, is developed mostly through letters he receives from his parents and the letters he writes home. Unfortunately, no attempt was made to bring the player closer to the other men. You do see them engage in tremendous acts of bravery, such as carrying a wounded comrade on their shoulders to safety under enemy fire. There was this one unforgettable scene where a soldier is weeping over the body of a dead commander, as napalm fire ignites forest in the background. This kind of humanism in fictional characters is what really brings a game like this home.
All the battles you engage are reenactments of actual battles during the real war, starting with simple patrols around the Da Nang airbase, followed by Operation Starlite, the first US military offensive in the war, and eventually taking you into the Hill Fights of Khe Sahn, the fight for Siagon, and the fight for Hue. The Tet Offensive, so to speak, where both sides agreed to a cease fire until the celebrations of the Vietnamese New Year was over (the truce broken by the NVA/VC). Let me tell you, your character, Dean Shepard, must be one tough motherfo to survive THAT long in-country! You will be immersed by jungle, by swamp, and by the tight walls of enemy trenches and underground tunnels. I just wish the game would have dedicated some disc space to Vietnam War life outside the battlefield, but...all is well.
In order to beat this game, you have to take every precaution in order not to get shot. You must spend the majority of your time taking cover behind trees and rocks in the jungle, shooting short bursts at enemies in the distance. You cannot advance without huddling behind every object you come across, even if there are no known enemies around, because the VC is constantly in wait, ready to ambush you and your squadron. This is really the only thing that makes the game so long, and it dose not fit into everyone's preference. A lot of the times, certain levels require you to beat it a *certain way, not just any way feasible. This, to me, is totally inexcusable. Especially when the level is so hard that it is impossible to sustain life for anymore than five minutes, but somehow you are expected to find the path the producers intended you to follow while you are under gunfire that is so heavy, if you stand up just for a second you will find yourself dead and starting the level all over again. Which brings me to the issue of there being no save feature. So, expect to play the same crap again, and again....and again.
Luckily, there is a difficulty setting where you can set it to easy which dose enhance the game dramatically. You will spend more time playing than dying on the easy level, except on those select few missions where you have to beat the mission a *certain way and spend hours dying while searching for that way. If there was no easy level, this game would not be worth a nickel because on the normal level I spent so much time dying on just one mission that I couldn't even follow the story and often forgot which battle I was in. The easy difficulty setting will provide a much more fluent gaming experience for those who are after *The Experience*. For those who are after a challenge and wish to die repeatedly (and you will, I don't care how good you think you are) then this game is right up your alley when set on normal. I don't even want to think what the hard setting is like. And you are reading a review from a person who thinks Doom 3 is easy on any difficulty setting, so I ain't no push over.
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