This game is really fun and it is the best FPS game i've ever seen because it has no cheats and fun players to play with

User Rating: 10 | WarRock PC
This game is really fun and it is the best FPS game I've ever seen because it has no cheats and fun players to play with. I highly recommend the game because it contains more options compared to Counter strike 1.6 and Counter strike source. This is the most wonder full and the most awesome game i played in my entire life because we can ride vehicles such as jets, motorcycle, boats, even car!. I really love this game and i will rate it a very addictive with a 10 score. I played it more then 100 hours because the players are also friendly. The game has many weapons such as the AK-47 and the maverick M4A1 also the Colt pistol. There are also the Melee such as swords or balistic knives. There are also some awseome weapons such the double scorpion and the winchester
The Good
• A couple of different modes to choose from • Occasionally intense gameplay on a bunch of decent maps.

In the northern tribal regions of the Republic of Derbaran, a small town began to stir as the pink light of dawn colored the desert mountaintops in the distance. Bakers and merchants, midwives and school teachers emerged from their mud brick homes to begin their day. As always, they threw nervous glances at the razor wire and concrete compound of the Derbaran military depot that squatted below a yellow banner just beyond the village. The coexistence was an uncomfortable one; the Derbaran government had little love for the tribal minorities in the area. Cries of alarm rose from the men stationed at the depot when a column of tanks and trucks crested a rise. They flew green banners, the colors of the National Independence Union, the rebel coalition of minority tribes. But these were not poor peasants with cheap rifles. The Derbaran soldiers scrambled in panic as the NIU tanks rained explosive rounds on the ammo depot, shattering concrete bunkers and crushing soldiers beneath a hail of rubble. NIU trucks disgorged scores of men who peppered the defensive positions with small arms fire. When it was over, the only sound came from the crackle of flames and the screams of wounded and dying Derbaran soldiers. The villagers slowly emerged from hiding. They gasped when they recognized the man who climbed from the lead tank and stood on the turret to address them. Even in this small village, the televisions in the tea houses and shops had shown his face many times. He was General Ikram Karmali, decorated officer of the Derbaran military and military advisor to the President. The pride of the Derbaran military had become a rebel.
"My people," General Karmali said, "I cannot stand by any longer while President Zaripov and his government oppress us. I renounce my allegiance to Zaripov. The NIU will take this country back!"
The helicopter touched down amid a dusty whirlwind at the NIU operating base. Captain Ramazan, commander of NIU's special forces unit called the Desert Dogs, climbed from the helicopter and strode through the dust. Salutes snapped at him from both sides. He had earned this respect with his blood, spending ten years in the Derbaran military under General Karmali before they had both defected to the NIU. Many of the men here who saluted him had served under him before the rebellion. They were battle tested, hardened men. But there were others here too, the goatherds and farmers who fought only because they believed in the cause.
The NIU was not short on heart. What they had been short on was weapons. Even the People's Press, the underground newspaper that was the voice of the rebellion, had openly questioned whether the few tanks and weapons General Karmali had brought from the military would be enough to pose a serious threat to the Derbaran government.
And then the mysterious deliveries had begun.
A convoy of trucks was rumbling out of the encampment back to wherever they had come from, their mysterious payload of crates stacked neatly beside the armory. Already men were prying them open and removing the weapons from their packing. They were the reason Ramazan had come.
In his temporary headquarters General Karmali was whispering quietly with a handful of his commanders. The general dismissed them with a terse gesture when Ramazan entered.
"Don't ask me any questions, my friend," the general preempted him.
Ramazan pulled the folded piece of paper from his breast pocket and scanned it. "Assault rifles, pistols, rocket launchers, all dropped at a half dozen of our operating bases that are supposed to be secret," he said. "And I hear talk of vehicles too. Armor. Even aircraft."
"No questions," the general repeated.
"At least tell me where they're coming from," Ramazan said. "How are they getting through the borders?"
"The people supplying us have the funds and the contacts to make it all possible," the general said. "What matters is that we are armed well enough to stand a serious chance against the Derbaran military. Without the help of these friends, we wouldn't have much of a chance. You know that as well as I do."
"But why should they help us?" Ramazan demanded. "What the hell do they care about our little rebellion? This is a domestic matter."
General Karmali only smiled. "Let's just say they have a vested interest in the NIU winning the war. Now take up those arms and call out your Dogs, Ramazan. There's a war on."
Major Selik sat at the boardroom table reading a newspaper, looking for all the world like an accountant waiting to see a client. As the head of the Derbaran military's Security Services arm and leader of the elite Nightwatch 1 strike team, looking innocuous had served him well.
He tossed down the newspaper. The Derbaran National Press Agency had gotten wind of President Zaripov pulling resources from the country's many oil operations to redeploy them to the much smaller uranium mining sector. There were, as expected, questions. Of course Zaripov could have had the story squashed. But that would have caused rumors. And the president had made it very clear how much he wanted to avoid rumors right now.
President Zaripov and his cadre of advisors swept into the room.
"With all due respect, Mr. President," the portly Minister of Economy was saying, "the blow to our revenues is too much. You can't take that much manpower away from oil. Uranium doesn't provide us with adequate cash flow. And we'll need funds for this war."
"I'm not concerned about revenues just now," the President responded. "Uranium will soon become a much more important component of our national security." The Minister began to retort but the President held up a hand for silence. "I won't discuss it further."