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Tom Clancy's HAWX (PlayStation 3)

GameSpot editors' review

After tackling squad-based third-person combat in Ghost Recon, stealth action in Splinter Cell, and strategy in EndWar, Ubisoft's Tom Clancy brand takes to the skies in HAWX (High Altitude Warfare--Experimental). The game features intense dogfights, gorgeous scenery and planes, and an instantly accessible, arcade-style air combat experience. Multiplayer options are limited, and different planes don't offer as much variety as they should, but HAWX lives up to the quality of the brand and is a good aerial-combat game in its own right.

Tom Clancy's HAWXscreenshot
HAWX's enhanced-reality system helps you shake missile locks and target enemy aces.

HAWX follows the story of the titular squadron and its leader, Major David Crenshaw. After you're transferred to HAWX as squadron leader, the group is disbanded by the US Air Force in 2014, following events in the Ghost Recon Advanced Warfighter games. (You get the cool task of rescuing Captain Mitchell and the Ghosts in the first mission of the game.) After this, Crenshaw joins Artemis, a private military contractor that works both for corporations and the Brazilian government. Artemis attacks US forces, causing Crenshaw to have a change of heart and goes back to what he does best: defending the US against hostile forces, namely Artemis. HAWX's story, like those in other Tom Clancy games, is presented via cutscenes, radio chatter, and video updates. The story is largely inconsequential, but it sets the scene well enough for your numerous engagements and keeps the game moving along at a brisk pace.

HAWX is instantly accessible and is a lot of fun to pick up and play in short bursts. The controls are uncomplicated and work well enough that even issuing orders to wingmen during a dogfight is easily accomplished. One of the major gameplay innovations in HAWX is the Enhanced Reality System. ERS is essentially a series of gates projected onto your heads-up display that, when you fly through them successfully, let you shake missile locks or catch up to challenging enemies. For example, in one mission ERS helps you fly a predetermined course to avoid radar detection, which in turn lets you knock out a base's air-defence grid. There are a number of scenarios in which ERS proves useful, but thankfully it's not a system that you can use as a crutch to get you through every single mission.

The ERS definitely makes portions of HAWX significantly easier than they would be without it, so for the experienced pilots among you, there's an option to fly with all of the assistance turned off. Unlike similar options in racing games, the assistance option can be toggled on the fly by double-tapping one of the triggers. When flying without assistance, you can perform sharper turns to avoid missile locks, but you're more susceptible to stalling if you brake too hard. In this mode, the camera angle switches to a wider view of the landscape, which affords you a better view of your current target and incoming missiles. However, because the camera is constantly moving, it can be a bit disorienting and makes controlling your plane even more difficult. HAWX's gameplay is fast-paced, frantic, and ultimately satisfying. It's easy to get swept up in the tense saga while dogfighting over famous cities and picturesque landscapes, and there's enough variety in the missions that the action never gets stale. Dogfights are nothing like bombing runs, and escorting a friendly VIP is a quite different challenge compared to defending a base. There are 19 missions in the single-player campaign, spanning multiple continents that you'll visit both in daylight and at night. Locales include famous city skylines such as Washington, Tokyo, and Rio de Janeiro, as well as remote areas in Nevada and the Magellan Strait.

Tom Clancy's HAWXscreenshot
There's only one competitive multiplayer mode, but it's a lot of fun.

HAWX is an arcade-style game rather than a simulation at its heart, which is why your payload can include upward of 100 missiles for each mission. As you progress through the story, the odds against you become increasingly steep, as enemy aircraft are joined by ground and naval forces and antiair defences become more common. Thankfully, you have a large and varied arsenal at your disposal that includes long- and short-range missiles, antiground "dumb" bombs, cannons, rocket pods, and countermeasures. Though it would be unrealistic for a small, single-seater jet to carry that much firepower in real life, it's a triumph of gameplay over realism that in HAWX you can stay in the heat of battles without ever needing to land and resupply.

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  • alaTest.com

    Editors' rating: 92

    Summary: alaTest has collected and analyzed 64 reviews of Tom Clancy's HAWX from international magazines and websites. Experts rate this product 67/100 and users 77/100. Comparing these reviews to 660579 other Video Games reviews gives this product an overall alaScore™ 92/100 = Excellent.

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  • wired.co.uk

    Editors' rating: 70

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Tom Clancy's HAWX (PlayStation 3)