For many years, I considered myself to be an avid gamer. From high school through college, and even the first few years after getting married and having kids, there were plenty of times when I would stay up until 3 or 4 in the morning blasting away.
When network gaming came out and became wildly popular along with the Internet itself, the late night gaming episodes increased in frequency.
However, as Iâve gotten older and the kids and job have become more demanding and time consuming, those late-night episodes eventually faded away into a distant memory.
But I must admit, there are times when I discover yet another game â" another highly addictive, networked game â" when I am brought back to my heyday college years of binge-gaming and lots of caffeine. Recently, I stumbled across just such a tank war game called BZFlag, and I had to share.
A Strategic Tank BattleI first caught wind of BZFlag in Timâs article on open source games. Tim didnât actually write about it, but one of the readers briefly mentioned, and I quote, âbzflag rules!!!â
Once I downloaded and installed BZFlag, I realized why the excitement. It is a really cool tank war game.
BZFlag stands for Battle Zone capture the Flag. Itâs a 3D tank battle game thatâs fast paced and at times pretty intense. There is no single-player game â" itâs all about team-match network gaming. Some of the games may be set up as one huge team against a second huge team in a classic capture the flag game. Other games are set up in smaller teams â" much more intense.
From what I can tell, there are lots of active game servers almost always available, with plenty of players available.
My favorite part of the game is just how much information is on the screen at once in a pretty cool heads-up display. There are a lot of controls, which take a little bit of time to get used toâ¦it took me a while to realize why all of the other players were flying around whenever I tried to shoot them â" you can jump with the Tab key!
The HUD display has the real-time scoreboard in the upper left corner, status updates at the top, team scores at the upper right, a scrolling kill roll at the bottom, and most importantly â" the radar at the lower left. The radar is the area of the screen youâre going to want to watch the most often, because itâs where you can aim your shots to ricochet off walls to destroy the enemy tanks. Trust me â" itâs a lot harder than it sounds, as you can see from the screenshot below.
Thatâs the screen youâll see when you get destroyed â" I saw it more often than not. Some of these folks have gotten really good. At first youâll want to try to get up close and personal and blast tanks away like a first-person shooter. Most of the time the enemy tank will launch itself into the air before you can do anything.
After a while, youâll see that the real art of this game is carefully planning your shots so that it cuts off the path of the enemy tank when he or she least expects it. Or bouncing your shot off a wall nearby and blasting the tank from behind. Getting the knack of jumping helps too. Here I am soaring over the battlefield after some dude tried to blast me.
Another helpful tactic is shooting through the barrier/shield doors (enemy bullets canât get through, but yours can), and taking pot shots at the enemy tanks through the slots in the walls, like the one Iâm peeking through in the screenshot below.
Most of the strategy of this game takes place in that little radar window at the lower left. In the screenshot below, you can see my tank in the center of the screen against a square wall. If you look closely, you can see where my shots (just little specks on the radar) went through the openings in the walls, bounced off the corner wall, and headed for the red cluster of enemy tanks. The goal is to outsmart them before they outsmart you.
Is BZFlag worthy of being called one of the most popular open source tank war games ever? Iâm not sure about that, but I do know that itâs very easy to get addicted to it. I was informed by my wife that I had been playing the game for three hours (it felt like 30 minutes). Thatâs the sign of a great game.
Give BZFlag a shot (get it?) and let us know what you think. Is it fun, or do you find it boring? Whatâs youâre take? Give your feedback in the comments section below.
Tagged: fps ⢠mmo ⢠multiplayer games ⢠open source ⢠video games
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