Wasn't it important to be beautiful inside?
Your behavior will be evaluated by assigning the classic Notoriety Points, obtainable by sinking enemy ships, completing objectives and saving allied crews left at the mercy of the waves: these points will then be invested to improve not only the technologies at your disposal (radar, sonar, baits and so on), but also your crew, enlisting more experienced men or with certain skills, all obviously taking care of historical fidelity: you will not be able to mount nuclear warheads, so to speak, and any upgrades will be available only when they are really appeared on the historical scene.Ī small note of applause: the new dynamic campaign is much more crowded than that of the previous chapter the possibility of crossing convoys, colliding with planes and witnessing epic battles has significantly increased, to the delight of all of us submariners, thus reducing downtime to a few real minutes. The "dynamic" attribute indicates that your every action will lead to a consequence, positive or negative: if you fail an assigned mission you will not encounter the game over, but as it happened in reality, this will have a negative impact on the success of future objectives not sinking Japanese landing ships will (probably) lead to the conquest of an allied port, thus forcing you to choose a mooring point much further away, exposing you to the risk of running out of fuel prematurely (and crossing the ocean with electric motors is not just the best). The strength of Silent Hunter 4 is represented by the new dynamic campaign, now enriched with new missions no longer limited to just patrolling a specific sector for a certain period of time, but it will also be up to the player to take care of photographing an enemy port, to work for the insertion of allied troops in a territory or to sink a specific ship, obviously without forgetting the special operations.
In this new chapter the scene of the clashes has moved from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean and, more specifically, to the seas bordering the Philippines: as commander of an American submarine you will have to face, since 1941, the entire immense Japanese fleet, actively contributing to its defeat.