Produced by Monte Cristo and developed by Digital Reality, D-Day has been designated by the "Normandie Mémoire" committee as the official game for the 60th anniversary commemoration of the Normandy landings, and contains a documentary base with the strategic charts of the battles, films from historical archives as well as veterans' and local inhabitants' testimonies, some of which has not been available before.
"D-Day is a great game for history buffs and tactical strategy fans alike," said Bill Gardner, president and CEO of O~3 Entertainment. "The battles are recreated as accurately as is possible in a computer game, and the extras are really spectacular."
Offering a wealth of single-player and multiplayer modes, D-Day drops players into the role of World War II Allied forces in the final drive to liberate Europe. Throughout three campaigns and 12 missions in single player mode, players must successfully plan and execute the turning points in the liberation of Europe: the first hours of the beach landing at Omaha Beach, the paratrooper attack on Sainte Mère Eglise, the taking of the Cherbourg harbor, operation Cobra, the battle of the Falaise pocket, and the liberation of Normandy in August 1944. During the campaigns, players can call in the help of resistant
forces to recon the landing areas, take advantage of the Allies' air power (bomber, glider, paratroopers), and stop the German forces' counter attacks.
D-Day features over 60 historically accurate units, including rifleman, paratroopers, artillery, tanks, transports, and air support. The multiplayer mode uses GameSpy's online Matchmaking network, allowing up to 8 players to play simultaneously on 12 different maps using 3 different modes. An editor allows players to create their own multiplayer maps.
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