Red Baron II (PC)

CNET Editors' Rating

3.5 stars
    Overall score: 7.1 (3.5 stars)

Very good

Starting at: $94.94

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Red Baron II (PC)
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GameSpot Editors' Review

CNET Editors' Rating

3.5 stars Very good
    Overall score: 7.1 (3.5 stars)

Red Baron II has a lot to offer, but its rushed shipment makes for a game that's appealing only to those sim fans willing to deal with quirks and inconsistencies while awaiting patches.

Review:

The original Red Baron is a true classic, with one of the longest lives of any computer game. (A discounted version is still on shelves at many stores, seven years after the program's release.) The game set new standards for graphics, flight modeling, and overall realism. With a pedigree so lofty, Sierra's Red Baron II faced quite high expectations when it was released just before Christmas. Unfortunately, it appears the game - already a year late - was rushed to make it onto the holiday plate and probably should have been simmered until around Easter. Red Baron II ... Expand full review

The original Red Baron is a true classic, with one of the longest lives of any computer game. (A discounted version is still on shelves at many stores, seven years after the program's release.) The game set new standards for graphics, flight modeling, and overall realism. With a pedigree so lofty, Sierra's Red Baron II faced quite high expectations when it was released just before Christmas. Unfortunately, it appears the game - already a year late - was rushed to make it onto the holiday plate and probably should have been simmered until around Easter. Red Baron II is a game that has much to recommend it - which makes the glaring problems all the more frustrating.

Set at the dawn of air combat, Red Baron II lets you experience just about any part of the World War I air war. You can enlist in any of four air services - British, German, French, and American - and 22 of the sim's 40 aircraft are flyable. The entire course of the war is covered, with Americans enlisting before Feb. 16, 1918 joining the French Lafayette Escadrille (which is a nice touch). With squadrons flying the proper planes from the correct airfields over the course of the war, there's no doubt that the historical research behind this simulation was quite thorough.

It's a shame, then, that the program was shipped before much of this research could be incorporated. The original plan had been to let gamers configure individual aspects of each plane's handling, adding realism levels to match their own skill levels. But all that ended up in the game were two flight models: easy and authentic. And unfortunately, the authentic mode is anything but. Although the flight physics are decent - planes stall, spin, and lose energy in turns - the performance figures are way off. These underpowered WW I aircraft climb like World War II fighters. Sierra has announced that a patch is on the way that will incorporate accurate flight model data, a change that should please purists.

The AI is fairly good - when it's working. Computer-controlled planes are challenging opponents, and your wingmen are capable as well. Occasionally things go awry, with the other planes in your flight circling their home airfield endlessly instead of leaving on their mission. (This is one of a number of problems fixed in the first patch.)

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Quick Specs

  • ESRB: Everyone
  • Developer: Dynamix
  • Genre: Simulation

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