America's Army will declare war on the fictional country
of Ganzia Sept. 27 when it launches "True Soldiers"
for X-Box 360, the latest evolution of the popular Army-sponsored
computer game. Players create a Soldier, go to basic and advanced
weapons training, then deploy to Ganzia, an American ally overrun
by a rebel militia. Each mission comes complete with a set of
battle orders providing background information, objectives and
intelligence.
True to its name, "True Soldiers" accurately
depicts the Army, from the smallest unit patch to the shadow
of a Raven unmanned aerial vehicle. Players can even give each
other "coins" for saving a battle buddy and receive
awards for valor.
Training and marksmanship tests reflect real Army standards,
and uniforms, guns and other equipment model the real thing.
(Article continues below)
"We have all these weapons in our studio and artists can
actually model them and texture them to make them look as real
as possible," said Randy Greenback, creative director for
the game. "Thanks to the Army, all of our developers were
trained on how to reload and fire weapons, and we actually went
out and did some training at Fort McClellan, Ala. We put everything
we learned and experienced into the game."
The game focuses on leadership and teamwork so groups play
together as units, but players may also participate individually.
"True Soldiers" is filled with background information
on ranks, units, specialty occupations and the core Army values
of loyalty, duty, respect, selfless service, honor, integrity
and personal courage.
"True Soldiers" also tells the stories of "America's
Army: Real Heroes," six real Soldiers who received a Silver
Star or Bronze Star with Valor for heroism in combat. The program
is scheduled to release four action figures of the Soldiers
in Toys "R" Us stores by the end of August and two
more later this year.
"It's a great way to tell our stories," said Real
Hero Sgt. Tommy Rieman, who will literally be the face of the
game. "It's an honor and it's pretty cool."
"This is all very authentic, even down to the face paint,
the goggles," he added. "This is one portion we bring
to the table. We show them this is what a Soldier looks like
and then the designers go in and put it into the game and you
have the United States Army."
Parents concerned that the game is a little too life-like can
set the program to use non-lethal training ammunition only.
Enemy soldiers will simply sit down after being shot.