Gaming News - May 2003
Los Angeles, CA (May 14, 2003) - The U.S. Army today unveiled new
roles and missions that it will incorporate into its highly successful America's
Army PC game. These roles and missions, which debuted today at the Electronic
Entertainment Expo (E3) in Los Angeles, include Special Forces, Stryker Combat
Brigade and Combat Medic missions.
From the U.S. Army:
America's Army, which provides civilians with an inside
perspective and a virtual role in the U.S. Army, has become
an online phenomenon and is currently one of the five most
popular PC action games being played online. Since its
public release on July 4, 2002, more than 1.07 million
players completed their virtual exploration of the basic
training portion of the game and progressed to complete more
than 130 million missions logging over 13 million hours of
gameplay.
"The public's positive reaction to the America's Army game
has been far stronger than our most optimistic projections,"
said Col. Casey Wardynski, project originator and project
director. "The Game has exhibited very high levels of
growth in terms of new players, repeat players and numbers
of games played. This success is due to the Game's realism
and its ability to engross and entertain young adults as
they explore Soldiering within the U.S. Army. By embedding
information about Soldiering within the popular culture, the
Game has proven to be a valuable channel to place
information about Soldiering within the decision space of
high potential young Americans."
In addition to debuting new game content, the Army will
present a set of dynamic demonstrations at E3 to highlight
the high fidelity with which its America's Army game
portrays Army capabilities, operations, units and
technologies. Above the Los Angeles Convention Center
(LACC) the sky will be alive with action as instructors from
the Army's elite Air Assault School conduct mock air assault
insertions, rappelling from a Black Hawk helicopter. Guests
arriving at E3 via the convention center's South Hall
entrance will have the opportunity to inspect the Army's
newest armored vehicle, the Stryker. This vehicle embodies
graphic user displays and situational awareness that will
make any gamer's pulse race. It combines information
technology with tactical maneuverability and strategic
mobility to place Army combat power where and when it is
needed to achieve decisive victory. Visitors will also be
able to inspect an Army workhorse, a combat version of the
HUMMV. In the West Hall, Green Berets from the Army's 20th
Special Forces Group accompanied by Soldiers from the elite
101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) and 3d Armored Cavalry
Regment will demonstrate their skills in a mock combat
search and rescue mission. The Army also will conduct live
tournaments including the final match between a team of four
civilians and four active duty U.S. Army Soldiers in the
America's Army Ultimate Arena E3 Tournament (Thursday, May 15).
America's Army was designed and developed to use online game
technology as a virtual portal through which young Americans
can explore Soldiering in the U.S. Army. In America's Army
they can explore and dominate challenges ranging from basic
training to Special Forces Assignment and Selection. They
can join various elite Army units and see the power of Army
teamwork, values and technology. Since the Game uses online
game technology to model Soldiering, all of this occurs in
an engaging and entertaining format that lowers the
information search and assimilation costs formerly
associated with learning about Army career opportunities.
"Our developers work closely with active duty Soldiers to
create realistic experiences and that formula has turned out
to be a phenomenal success," said Maj. Chris Chambers, the
project's deputy director. "This coming year, we look
forward to releasing game mission packs that realistically
mirror the dynamic nature of Soldiering in the U.S. Army and
allow players to more fully explore the technologies,
opportunities, adventures and training that make the U.S.
Army the world's premier land force."
With these mission packs the game will expand to include new
roles presented in both single and multiplayer formats.
Players will explore progressive individual and collective
training events within the game. Once they successfully
completed these events they will advance to multiplayer
operations in small units. These new roles include skills
ranging from Combat Medic to Special Forces Engineer Sergeant.
Building upon the Game's successful deployment, the Army has
expanded support for America's Army to new platforms and
operating systems. In June, America's Army is planned for
Apple Macintosh. In July, the Army will release both client
and server versions of America's Army for Linux. The Army
has also established relationships and strategic plans to to
take America's Army to entirely new platforms.
The new game attributes featured at E3 include:
Combat Medics
* Individual training begins with classroom instruction
at Brooke Army Medical Center, Fort Sam Houston, Texas,
where players learn the ABC's of lifesaving. When emergency
situations occur command of these fundamentals of lifesaving
are essential. In game, players who master these skills
will bring unique lifesaving capabilities to operational
missions.
Special Forces
* Starting in June 2003, new monthly editions of
America's Army will allow gamers to virtually explore the
development and employment of Special Forces (SF) Soldiers.
* Players will progress toward the goal of earning the
right to wear a coveted Green Beret by completing missions
drawn from the Special Forces Assignment and Selection
(SFAS) process. Players who successfully complete SFAS
during the summer and fall will advance to Special Forces
Qualification Course (Q-Course) missions to explore new
roles such as 18D – Medical Sergeant, 18B - Weapons
Sergeant, 18C – Engineer Sergeant, 18E - Communications
Sergeant, and 18F – Intelligence Sergeant.
* As players successfully complete each phase of the Q-
Course they will gain new attributes and capabilities that
will propigate across operational missions in America's Army.
* When America's Army: Special Forces is fully deployed
by the winter of 2003, gameplay will culminate with missions
that span the capabilities of a Special Forces Operational
Detachment Alpha (ODA) to include combat search and rescue
(CSAR, to be debuted at E3), direct action, surveillance and
reconnaissance, and unconventional warfare.
Stryker Combat System
* This spring, the Army's first Stryker Brigade will be
ready for operational employment. As this advanced
organization joins the Army, the Stryker will also make its
first appearance in the America's Army game. Incorporating
advanced information systems, lightweight armor, a grenade
launcher or a 50-caliber remote weapons station (RWS), the
Stryker brings new capabilities to America's Army beginning at E3.
America's Army will also unveil other significant advances
at E3. These include: implementation of OC3's Impersonator
technology, new character models, a new game system
interface that provides new styles of gameplay to include
enhanced roles for leadership positions as part of mission
planning phases, and new game modes that incorporate
friendly, enemy and non-combatant AI.
To create the realistic levels presented in America's Army:
Special Forces, developers worked with Green Berets ranging
from the Commander of the J.F.K. Special Warfare School to
cadre at events such as the the Special Forces' Robin Sage
training exercise at Fort Bragg, NC. The team also worked
in concert with Army scientists at the Armament Research,
Development & Engineering Center at Picatinny Arsenal, NJ,
to model new systems such as the AT4, the BDM and RPG-7V
that will enter service in the game this summer. America's
Army developers also joined with elements of the 1st Brigade
25th Infantry Division and 3rd Brigade 2nd Infantry Division
at Fort Lewis, WA to model Stryker systems and missions.
Even the designers of the Game's E3 West Hall demo area
relied upon combat camera reference materials recorded by
Soldiers in action in the War On Terror.
America's Army is rated T for Teen and is available as a
free CD at local Army Recruiting stations, ROTC Detachments
and Army events, and can also be downloaded from various
partners listed on the www.americasarmy.com site.
Through the efforts of the more than 1.2 million soldiers in
the active Army, Army National Guard and Army Reserve the
U.S. Army is the world's premier land force. Today's Army
soldiers are on the frontline in the ongoing global war on
terrorism and joint-service missions for the Department of
Defense. The Army will be 228 years old on June 14 and is
major part of a Transformation revolution for America's
future national defense needs. For more information on the
Army, go to www.goarmy.com or
www.army.mil.
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