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Released in 2001, Operation Flashpoint: Cold War Crisis is a Tactical Shooter/Soldier Sim that was quite revolutionary for its time, earning critical acclaim for its innovative open world gameplay and consistent focus on realism (so much so that the engine was even adapted for real militaries to use as a training simulator). OFP let players roam on massive islands tens of square kilometers in size and use a wide variety of vehicles however they see fit, and all this at a time when most FPS games limited the player to oppressive indoor settings and small outdoor arena-style maps, and typically only featured usable vehicles in on-rails shooting sequences, if at all.

Being the first ever game of Czech developer Bohemia Interactive Studios, OFP was a bit rough around the edges graphically and had more than its fair share of bugs, but its gameplay innovations and the sheer scope of the game won it favor with gamers and critics. Two expansion packs and an XBOX semi-remake later, its developer Bohemia Interactive Studio and publisher Codemasters split ways; BIS took the rights to the engine, Codemasters got the rights to the name. BIS has since released three Numbered Sequels based on further developments of this engine, called ARMA (short for Armed Assault), while Codemasters developed its own "official" sequels, Dragon Rising and Red River. Essentially, the BIS sequels closely resemble the original, except they have much better graphics and improved gameplay, while OFP: DR and RR feel, well, different from the original OFP, and a lot of old veterans seem to think that it suffers from New and Improved Syndrome.


Works within this series:

  • Operation Flashpoint: Cold War Crisis (2001): The game that started it all.
    • Red Hammer (2001): Mini-expansion pack by the publisher, Codemasters, that contains a new campaign depicting the conflict from the Soviet side.
    • Resistance (2002): Major expansion pack by BIS. Contains significant engine updates, a new island, and a new campaign.
    • Operation Flashpoint: Elite (2005): A slightly modernized Xbox remake of the first game that was met with lukewarm reviews on release, made on an early version of the ARMA:Armed Assault Engine.
    • ARMA: Cold War Assault (2011): A free Remake (or refurbishing if you will) mega patch (v1.99) for the original Operation Flashpoint, released in celebration of the game's 10th anniversary by the developers. Because of the whole legal debacle with Codemasters, Bohemia Interactive reclaimed the rights to the assets. Applying this patch to an installed copy of OFP will therefore rename the game to ARMA: Cold War Assault. The patch also removes the Codemasters-produced Red Hammer expansion and omits it from new installations of Cold War Assault, although the official story is that Red Hammer wasn't licensed for re-release.

      NOTE: Please don't confuse the original Operation Flashpoint with the ARMA series proper — it's only a predecessor and set in the same universe, but otherwise completely separate. The new title is there only because BIS can't release the patch under the original name of the game which is owned by Codemasters.
  • Virtual Battlespace (2002): Taking the Operation Flashpoint engine, BIS developed this engine to sell to the United States Marine Corps, the Australian Defence Force, and other military organizations as a training tool. It was eventually sold to many modern militaries all around the world... although according to BIS, it was ironically competing at one point with a modified version of Operation Flashpoint.


For its two different Spiritual Successors, please see ARMA and Operation Flashpoint (Codemasters).

Not to be confused with the Canadian series Flashpoint.

Now featuring a character sheet.


The Operation Flashpoint series provides examples of the following tropes:

  • Ace Pilot: Sam Nichols is a downplayed version. While he's pretty skilled in piloting various transport and attack choppers, he himself admits his inexperience in flying the A-10 Thunderbolt and other fixed-wing aircraft.
  • A.K.A.-47:
    • Nearly all firearms and vehicles in the unmodified games use their real-world names.
    • The only exception to this would be Vz. 58 (aka SA-58), the Czech standard infantry rifle. Despite being completely unrelated to any Kalashnikov design it's referred to as "AK-47 CZ" in-game (although it still shows up as "SA-58" on the weapon selection and mission planning screens).
    • Also played straight with most of the civilian vehicles (Trabants, Mini Coopers, Zetor tractors, Å koda passenger cars), particularly the brand logos above their grills.
  • Alternate History: The plot of Cold War Crisis involves a conflict between U.S. and Soviet troops in an Eastern European island chain (the titular flashpoint), which started when the Soviets invaded a neutral island nation protected by NATO. The Soviet authorities deny any involvement in the invasion, saying the local commander (one General Guba) has gone rogue (which is implied to be a lie to maintain Plausible Deniability). What starts as a skirmish soon becomes a full-blown war with heavy casualties on both sides, and the situation is only defused when American forces defeat Guba and prevent him from launching nuclear missiles at the neighboring islands. Dialogue in the following cutscenes suggests that both governments covered up the entire incident, with Western radio reports describing the conflict as a terrorist attack on a U.S. training camp that was easily resisted.
  • All Your Base Are Belong to Us: The invading Soviet army most of the time, with the defenders Watching Troy Burn. Inverted later, when the NATO and La RĂ©sistance forces finally start recapturing conquered territory.
  • Anachronism Stew: Some of the firearms present. The M16A2 is the standard assault rifle of the American NATO soldiers in Cold War Crisis, whereas in the real 1985, it was a brand new version of the more ubiquotous A1 and hadn't been fully distributed en masse to the regular branches of the U.S. Army. Also, in the Resistance expansion, set in 1982, James Gastowski supplies Viktor Troska's partisan group with a few Steyr Aug rifles - even though they still aren't very widespread in the U.S. armed forces and were fairly new back in the early 80s (the first marketed version was produced in 1977). Another firearm seen too early is the aforementioned Russian Bizon SMG, used by the Spetsnaz soldiers since the Resistance expansion. It's a pretty awesome gun - except for the fact it started being produced in the early 90s and couldn't possibly be used by Soviet troops ten years earlier. The Bizon was probably included because of balancing issues (to give the Soviets their own silenced SMG)... or just because of Rule of Cool...
  • Another Side, Another Story: The missions and overall story of the campaign in Cold War Crisis alternate between four main characters: An infantryman (Armstrong), a tanker (Hammer), a Special Ops soldier (Gastovski) and a pilot (Nichols). The opposing side also gets a P.O.V. Sequel in the form of a separate campaign from the Red Hammer expansion pack.
  • Anyone Can Die: And they do, mostly. The only unique characters are either player characters or simply kept out of harm's way entirely (Colonel Blake, for instance, is only seen in cutscenes). The minor exception is the player's squad in the first half dozen missions. They can die too, but they just reappear in the next mission until they're killed off for good later on.
  • Artificial Brilliance: Although it hasn't aged particularly well, the infantry AI in Operation Flashpoint was extremely good for its time. As long as they stayed outdoors. The vehicle crew and pilot AI was... significantly less impressive.
  • Artificial Stupidity: To varying degrees. The AI soldiers generally handle themselves pretty well given the complicated circumstances they often find themselves in, but they get confused in tight spaces (sometimes to the point of getting stuck), their driving is terrible and their flying skills are even worse.
    • Several mods exist that that "fix" or tweak AI capabilities, and in addition to the latest stable patch (v1.05 as of this writing) BIS occasionally releases "beta patches" whose changelogs claim specific AI fixes, etc.
  • A-Team Firing: Averted. Enemies are plenty accurate, sometimes shooting you from a few hundred yards off. Your own soldiers have the same abilities as enemy soldiers. Try to shoot from anything but point-blank range with the crosshair turned off and not using iron sights, and this trope is played horribly straight.
  • Attack Its Weak Point: It's more than possible to defeat some vehicles using just small arms by targeting specific areas; for example, a helicopter can be forced into a crash landing by shooting out either of its rotors.
  • Attack Pattern Alpha: Groups of soldiers usually use various formations, even when moving around on foot. As squad leader the player can order their men to assume any one of several formations at any given time. Each one is suitable for a different situation - column is best for fast movement, wedge is the general-purpose combat formation (for when you're not sure where the enemy are), line concentrates fire to the front, and so on.
    • In their default "aware" state, groups always move in a formation. This was slightly goofy in the Tonal mod for the original OFP: Even groups of "disorganized" civilian militias would move in perfect formation.
  • Awesome Personnel Carrier: APCs feature heavily, from the M113 to the BTR. Infantry fighting vehicles such as the Soviet BMP and its American equivalent - the M2 Bradley - fit the bill in particular. The BMP is a common sight throughout and a very capable vehicle in good hands, being relatively fast, amphibious, and well-armed. The Bradley is similarly capable and its TOW missile launcher makes it an appreciable danger to even the strongest of Soviet tanks.
  • Biblical Names: A map created by the in-game editor is stored on the disk in a directory. The directory name extension is a code to identify which map a mission belongs to: Eden for Everon, Abel for Malden, and Cain for Kolgujev. The desert island received Intro, and Nogova received Noe.
  • Bittersweet Ending: Resistance has a very moving one: Victor Troska saves the island of Nogova from the Soviets' genocidal plans, but dies in the process, with Liz, his friend's widow also dying beforehand.
  • Broken Bridge: If you stray well beyond the initial warning to get back in formation (usually 1km away), most early missions will instantly kill you and justify it by playing weapon fire noises after you die.
  • But Thou Must!: The second mission in the Resistance campaign offers the player a choice to either help the invading troops' army by revealing the location of a member of the titular resistance, or be summarily executed. You can actually choose to help the invaders, and you're even given a unique mission to find the location of the resistance base. When you do, you're again given the choice to join them or carry out the mission. Of course, since the leader of the invading army is not a very rewarding leader, he'll execute you if you carry out your mission anyway, so it's pretty much in your best interests to join the resistance.
    • Averted the rest of the time - although there's a set plan for each mission, and you'll get constantly nagged over the radio if you don't carry it out, the game never actually forces you to obey orders. 'Course, those orders are usually given for a good reason, so it's generally a good idea to follow them regardless unless you like high-angle shots of your own dead body.
    • In the original game, you are forced to miss the evac from Everon and be captured by the Soviets. This is despite the fact that you can actually reach the evac point in time if you manage to hijack a Soviet vehicle (you'll just find an empty town if you do).
  • Cardboard Prison: Sam Nichols is kept within an open tent, and there's also a nearby crate of weapons.
  • Cold War: The setting of the series, complete with a very "Eighties Cold War era" feel to it.
  • Concealment Equals Cover: Averted. While hiding in bushes or tall grass makes you effectively invisible unless somebody directly stumbles upon you, giving away your position will still result in enemy troops targeting your hiding place. Hiding behind tree trunks, rocks, buildings, sandbag barriers or even just vehicles or dead bodies is the way to achieve cover (of course, stuff like vehicles can still be destroyed by anti-tank weapons, so they're not fully reliable protection against enemy fire).
  • Continuity Nod: A lot in Resistance towards Cold War Crisis, courtesy of Resistance being a prequel to the latter and all... If you pay enough attention, you'll find out why Gastovski retired and where the Everon resistance got their weapons and equipment from. OFP also gets a lot of these nods from its successor ARMA.
  • Contractual Boss Immunity: Averted. When you finally catch up with the defeated Big Bad General Guba in the penultimate mission of Cold War Crisis and disable his vehicle, he's not even armed and you can either take him into custody or gun him down when he tries to escape. You can even get him to act as your driver!
  • Crew of One: Utterly averted. Tanks have the full crew of three (driver, gunner, and commander), though you can do without a commander in a pinch (and suffer impaired visibility as a result). In the tank missions the player typically acts as a tank commander, giving movement orders to the driver and targeting and firing orders to the gunner over the radio.
    • Usualy played straight with most aircraft, though, as the pilot can set forward-facing weapons to manual fire, but he'll still need other people to use any side-mounted guns.
  • Decoy Protagonist: The game starts with Armstrong as the player character which makes him look like the protagonist, but as the story progresses more playable characters appear with Gastowski getting the highest importance.
  • Dirty Communists: The Soviets are generally portrayed in a very negative light.
  • Distant Finale: The final (bonus) mission of the Cold War Crisis campaign is set 6 years after its events (in 1991) and focuses on a friendly reunion of the four main characters.
  • Does This Remind You of Anything?: The Republic of Nogova Island from Resistance is invaded by the Soviets on the 21st of August. The devs are Czechs. Do the math.
    • The whole atmosphere of "warfare on sparsely inhabited subarctic archipelagos" is very reminiscent of The Falklands War (except for the far larger presence of armoured vehicles in land combat).
  • Do Not Run with a Gun: It is possible to fire while running, but it's so terribly inaccurate that hitting anything is akin to winning a lottery. Nevertheless, AI soldiers can sometimes be seen doing it. Firing while walking is somewhat more practical, but only at the closest of ranges.
    • Part of the issue with firing on the run is that unless you actually raise the weapon (as if aiming down the sights in first person view), two-handed small arms will be pointed down and to the left while you're running, so that's where the bullets will go.
  • Easy Logistics: Completely averted. No weapon in the game has unlimited ammo, not even stationary weapon emplacements, and as such everything must be resupplied from an ammo truck or crate during extended engagements (and these, too, have limited supplies). Additionally, vehicles need fuel, and infantrymen can only carry a realistically limited amount of ammunition and other supplies.
  • Enemy Exchange Program: Since everyone has a Universal Driver's License, there's nothing to stop the player from making use of any vehicles the enemy are foolish enough to leave lying around. Some missions even require you to steal vehicles such as tanks, helicopters and boats from the enemy. Only vehicles designated as locked are unaffected by theft attempts.
    • One or two missions in the Resistance campaign focus on this. The problem: The ill-equipped resistance forces lack tanks or any other appropriate combat vehicles. The solution: Steal several from the enemy!
    • Of course, some mods will avert this and require that you be playing a character of the appropriate role, i.e. crewman or pilot.
  • The End of the World as We Know It: Implied to be the worst alternative in Cold War Crisis, if general Guba succeeds in his nutty plan to provoke World War III between NATO and the Warsaw Pact.
  • Fackler Scale of FPS Realism: Very far towards the realism end of the scale, especially for its time. Ballistics are realistically simulated - incorporating bullet travel time and drop, a single shot to the head or a few to the torso from any gun can kill any character (including the player), and even sound travel time is simulated, meaning that it's possible to be killed by a bullet before you hear the report of the rifle that fired it. This is about as realistic as you can get in a game that simulates Real Life combat.
  • Faction Calculus: Of the "three factions" variety.
    • Subversive: The guerilla fighters (focus on stealth and clever ambushes; very little heavy weaponry and vehicles, often substituted for by civilian firearms and cars or by captured weapons and military vehicles).
    • Powerhouse: The Soviet troops (more variety in tanks; more versatile and hard-hitting APCs and helicopters, but with little variation).
    • Balanced: The U.S. NATO forces (only two types of tanks, but one of them is the strongest in the game; weaker and overspecialized but somewhat nimbler APCs; better overall airpower, including troop-carrying helicopters of two different crew capacities).
      • However, note that some of the more unique aspects and strengths/weaknesses of the U.S. and Soviet faction have been balanced out in the final, latest versions of the game by official patches with various official addons by the developer (e. g. the NATO forces originally lacked an AA vehicle like the Shilka, so they were given Vulcan M113s to balance it out; the Soviets lacked a good ground-attack helicopter comparable to the American Apache, so they were given an early version of the Kamov Ka-50, the V-80, etc.). With these changes, the more unique imbalance of the factions from the very first release has been heavily diminished. This made the NATO and Soviet armies a bit closer to Cosmetically Different Sides - but both of them still have enough strengths, weaknesses, differing specialties and unique units to subvert the aforementioned trope.
  • False Flag Operation: Guba's Genghis Gambit to hit one of the two superpowers with his stolen Scud missiles, in order to provoke World War III, if his demands are not fulfilled on time.
  • Fighting for a Homeland: The Nogovan freedom fighters from the Resistance expansion, known as FIA (Freedom & Independence Alliance). Also, the Everon partisans from Cold War Crisis who have implied connections to the former Nogovan partisans.
  • First-Person Ghost: Averted, with both a third-person view mode and a free look option available in both first-person and third-person view modes, the camera's "pivot" point being at the character's head/neck area.
  • Fission Mailed: In one mission in the first game's campaign, the player's job is to take a major town, Montignac. Regardless of whether the battle is a success or failure, the order soon comes to abandon the mission and evacuate the whole island. In the process of doing so you're ambushed and end up alone in enemy territory with your entire squad killed in action. You then have to sneak your way about a kilometer through enemy territory to the last remaining safe zone on the island, which is overrun just before you get there. You're then diverted to an alternate extraction point, which is also overrun just before you get there. Then you're taken prisoner.
  • Game Mod: Literally thousands, and more are being released every day, ranging from simple unit retextures to full-length campaigns complete with voice-acting, including a Vietnam War total conversion and a Stargate SG-1 total conversion.
  • Gatling Good: While there are many powerful weapons in the games, the GAU-8 Avenger on the A-10 Warthog is probably the single most devastating anti-tank gun in the game. Its ammo is powerful and BIS does not downplay the firing rate. All you have to do is aim your gun sight slightly below your target, then the nose a slight nudge up while firing a half second burst. This will destroy any tank in the game, virtually every time you do it.
    • Additionally, the A-10 is built like a brick and is virtually impervious to anything except guided missiles or heavy AA fire. However, there aren't many AA infantry in most missions, and the A-10 has Maverick missiles that can knock out AA guns from several kilometers away.
  • General Ripper: Soviet general Alexei Vasilievich Guba.
  • Genre-Busting: Especially when it first came out in 2001. There were nearly no serious war-themed simulation games back then. FPS games were still getting the hang of things like vehicular combat sections or adding more realism to the way weapons were used in-game. OFP already had things like huge continuous sandbox-style maps with no loading during a mission, both stealthy and confrontational infantry combat, iron-sighting, a slew of different ground-based, water-going or aerial vehicles available to the player, and showed the modern battlefield as an eeriely tense and chaotic place, not a big pre-scripted set piece extravaganza centered around the player.
  • Good Guns, Bad Guns: Pretty much averted, particularly in the campaign of the Resistance expansion pack, where you act as the leader of a resistance group fighting to liberate his homeland from a recent Soviet invasion. Practically all the standard guns of your partisans are either Warsaw Pact or civilian/hunting models. Most of your arsenal is therefore identical with that of the Soviet soldiers. On the other hand, there is a subversion later on, when the freedom fighters manage to acquire aid from a local NATO garrison: After this, they can also use a small supply of western firearms (e. g. FN FA Ls, Steyr Augs and M21 sniper rifles).
  • Gun Porn:
    • A more tame example, but there's still lots of cool guns to admire (especially if you throw in some quality fan-made addons to expand the game's basic arsenal).
    • The Heckler & Koch G36, added into the game via one of the later official patches, is a subversion. Even though it couldn't have existed in the 80s (since it's been manufactured only since the 1990s) it doesn't appear in the story-relevant missions, so it's apparently not meant as deliberate Anachronism Stew.
  • Have a Nice Death: A YOU ARE DEAD screen, plus a quote about war from various famous personalities underneath it.
  • Heroic Mime: Averted. The protagonists of the campaigns regularly speak outside the cutscenes during crucial moments.
  • Heroic Sacrifice: Victor Troska in Resistance's final mission.
  • Hide Your Children: Many civilian characters appear in all the games, but there are no young ones to be seen.
  • Holiday Mode: In the first game, around Christmas time all of the small pine trees turn into Christmas trees, complete with presents. Also, some community members have made addons with Santa Claus and Jack Frost as playable units.
  • Hollywood Silencer: Averted.
  • Hollywood Skydiving: Partially.
    • Basically, when the player exits any aerial vehicle that flies above a certain altitude, he will magically be attached to a parachute. On the other hand, jumping e.g. from a car you just drove over the edge of a cliff will result in the player falling to death.
    • However, the parachuting itself appears quite realistic. The parachute takes time to fully open and landing in rough terrain may result in severe injuries.
    • In Real Life, crews of helicopters are not equipped with 'chutes as helos, especially those for close air support, mostly operate below the safe opening altitude of a parachute. Crew safety in helicopters instead relies on passive shock-absorbing techniques to dampen the impact. In OFP however, you quite often see parachutes from crippled helos.
    • An additional issue is the fact that some jet planes mimick ejector seats by blasting player plus parachute dozens of feet into the air in order to allow for parachute opening even from lower altitudes. However, if not destroyed such aircraft can be re-entered again, though technically the whole pilot's seat would have been gone.
  • Hyperspace Arsenal / Bottomless Magazines: Severely averted. In the original game, you could carry 1 rifle, 1 optional missile launcher, and you had 10 ammo slots (and a pistol holster with 4 ammo slots in the Resistance expansion). That meant that you were carrying a maximum of 300 rounds, and quite often you could be reduced to crawling around the battlefield frantically looking for more ammo.
  • Imperial Stormtrooper Marksmanship Academy: The games make mincemeat of this trope. The AI is usually murderously accurate, and the only "safe" way to engage enemy infantry is to shoot at them from a kilometer away with a .50 Barrett. Or better yet, vehicles...
    • Or, if you have the corresponding mods and available guns, call in artillery.
  • Improbable Use of a Weapon: Completely averted. Unlike in most other action or war games, OFP actually teaches you how firearms would be used in Real Life.
  • In-Joke / Shout-Out / Creator Provincialism: BIS threw tons of shout outs to both Communist-era Czechoslovakia and the late 20th century Czech Republic into the original Operation Flashpoint installments. Traditional Czech rural architecture and East Bloc era concrete buildings are practically everywhere, along with 1960s Czech buses, motorbikes, Praga V3S army trucks, 1980s Å koda passenger cars and Zetor tractors. The local resistance groups use the Sa 58 as their standard assault rifle. The Resistance expansion in general takes the references up to eleven.
    • There's also an Easter Egg referencing M*A*S*H. You can find it on the medic tent.
    • One of the most fondly remembered fan-made game mods added the Communist-era Czechoslovak army to the whole NATO-USSR conflict of the original games. This faction's campaign story was generally... less serious than usual...
  • Inspiration Nod: U.S. Army Special Forces Major James Gastovski introduces himself to the commander of American forces at Everon as "Gastovski. James Gastovski." This is a homage to James Bond 007, the iconic spy which Gastovski apparently idolizes and considers his inspiration for becoming a stealth soldier.
    • Also, the title for Mission #34 - "Maverick" - can be considered a tribute to the 1986 blockbuster U.S. Navy fighter pilot movie Top Gun starring Tom Cruise. In this mission, Major Sam Nichols, a UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter pilot, flies a U.S. Air Force A-10 Thunderbolt II attack jet as part of a bombing run.
  • Just a Stupid Accent: The English dub of the series gives the locals a fairly stereotypical Slavic / Eastern European / whatever accent. Oddly, Viktor Troska speaks with a British accent. This is averted in the Czech dub of the series where almost everyone is dubbed by a known actor. Bonus points if you know who.
  • La RĂ©sistance: Cold War Crisis had a number of missions in which your character worked alongside the Everon resistance. In the Red Hammer expansion, you fight against them but later join them. The Resistance expansion went one step further and centered its entire campaign on one resistance member. Furthermore, your character in that expansion, Victor, initially doesn't want to fight the invading Soviets, but he is eventually convinced to because the Commies are so horrid. He joins a rag tag outfit, becomes its leader, succeeds in defeating the enemy, and then gets blown to pieces in a noble effort to save the island from being napalmed.
  • Law of Inverse Recoil: Averted. Everything but rocket launchers has appropriate amounts of recoil (depending on the weapon).
  • Life Meter: There is no health indicator at all, to determine the extent of your injuries you simply check your body for wounds. Any wound to a vital area has a good chance of killing you outright, and wounds to the limbs affect your movement and accuracy. If the player character is shot severely in the legs, he'll even have difficulties standing up and will be effectively crippled, unable to walk and forced to grovel all the way. Though there aren't any health packs as such, you can get the wound treated by a medic if you can find one. If the last medic in the platoon just bought it and a tank ran over the field hospital tent, however, tough luck!
  • Like Reality, Unless Noted: The various fictional archipelagos and the respective countries and settlements that occupy their area. The islands have become an integral element of the series, since practically every game takes place there - not once do you leave them to fight in a Real Life location. The very existence of the islands makes the game's setting akin to an Alternate Universe, and even helps kick-start the whole "Cold War gone hot" Alternate History plot.
  • Mad Libs Dialogue: The games are infamous for this. They don't just insert words into otherwise prerecorded sentences, they create entire sentences out of individual words. This leads to dialogue like this: "OH NOOO, two, IS DOWN ! CONTACT ! ENEMY, tank, AND, missile soldier, TO OUR, front, DANGEROUSLY CLOSE ! ALL, GO TO, that, BUSH, at, 4 O'CLOCK ! BE ADVISED, unknown, MAN, AND, MAN, AND, UAV, at, GRID, 132niner81..."
    • Take out that Enemy MAN.
    • Supposedly, they didn't have a budget to make it better. There would have to be a lot of separate lines to record if they went all out.
  • Meaningful Name / Bilingual Bonus: Viktor Troska from the Resistance expansion. "Troska" is Czech for "(piece of) debris" or "(human) wreck".
    • Every geographic name on Nogova is this to an extent (considering the locals and their culture are sort of a Fantasy Counterpart Culture to Commie Land era Czechoslovakia). It appears quite a lot of these names were made up for sheer Rule of Funny. The most obvious examples would be the villages of "VidlĂ¡kov" (which in English means something like "Hickton / Hicktown"), "Mokropsy" (lit. "Wetdogs"), "Dolina" ("The Valley") or "Kvilda" (probably from the verb "kvĂ­lit"-"to wail"; which seems pretty fitting, since it's a seaside hamlet with wailing winds). Some of the settlements have much more typical Czech names though (e.g. Modrava, Petrovice, Lipany).
  • Military Alphabet: Used regularly by your squadmates, as well as the voiceover of your character when you're commanding a squad.
  • Missing Backblast: In a game which generally does its best to be realistic, the lack of backblast is somewhat jarring. Many mods add this, though.
  • Mook Chivalry: Averted 99% of the time thanks to Artificial Brilliance. The remaining 1% plays it straight because of occasonal Artificial Stupidity on part of the friendly or enemy infantrymen.
  • More Dakka: From light machine guns to large stationary ones to the ones mounted on tanks and aircraft. You name it...
  • Multitrack Drifting: Possible at sufficiently high speeds in tanks, due to somewhat slippery physics.
  • Necessary Drawback: The way the game achieves its high level of realism. Going prone while running doesn't make you stop instantly, but allows you to feel the inertia of forward movement. Movements like gun reloading or putting aside your main weapon and pulling out an anti-tank weapon (or even just a pair of binoculars) all take a believable amount of time to execute, much like the ones you'd experience in real life. The rest of the realistic drawback aspects are covered in various entries on this page. Simply put, you don't behave like a run-and-gun superhero, but like a real human being who just happens to be a soldier.
  • New Meat / Ensign Newbie: Private David Armstrong and tank commander Robert Hammer, the starting protagonists of the first installment's campaign.
  • Night-Vision Goggles: Along with binoculars, a staple of optional special equipment. Handled believably, since the games try to be realistic military simulations. The characters can use real military night vision devices, a.k.a. "noctovizors", which render one's vision in grainy green hue and via a somewhat claustrophobic lens-like shape. The goggles are of course useful for missions set at night time, but even this gets subverted in an interesting fashion: If the visual field gets flooded with light or the night background is illuminated by stars, the goggles become actually less effective than the viewer's own eyes.
  • Nintendo Hard: Thanks to how realistic the game is, you'll have to do your best imitating military tactics to win the game, and no one ever says their jobs are easy.
  • No Campaign for the Wicked: Averted after the addition of the Red Hammer campaign in the first expansion.
    • Then again, you will have to join The Good Guys during the campaign, so it's more like a double subversion.
  • Nothing Is Scarier: In a military shooter game, of all places. But It Makes Sense in Context. Don't believe it's possible in a non-horror game ? Just wait until you're trapped alone behind enemy lines, your magazines are almost empty and you have to hide in the bushes because you hear an IFV scouting around the area, very close to your hiding place.
    • Also, the Wham Episode mission from the campaign of Cold War Crisis, where private Armstrong manages to hide in a forest after his entire squad has been ambushed and gunned down. His two-way radio is malfunctioning, so he can't contact the nearest NATO camp and hears about NATO forces evacuating the island. Worse yet, some of the Soviet soldiers readying the area for re-occupation are out to hunt him down. Good luck crawling it out of the forest and then trying to sneak through a highly visible meadow and through several groves and forests to the nearest evac site. It lies several miles from your starting position and is surrounded by enemy-infested terrain...
  • One Bullet Clips: Averted. Ammunition is divided into tangible magazines, and if you reload when your magazine still holds any ammunition (even if it's only one round) it goes back into your inventory to be used later when you run out of full magazines. This can be a headache for compulsive reloaders, because they'll soon end up with half a dozen half empty magazines.
  • One-Man Army: Sort of played straight in sneaking and sabotage missions - if you're skillful enough. Otherwise completely averted. In the more demanding missions, you can't get much done without some proper teamwork and combined arms tactics.
  • P.O.V. Sequel: The Red Hammer campaign from the eponymous mini-expansion pits you on the side of Guba's army, where you play the role of recently demoted soldier Dmitri Lukin.
  • Prequel: The Resistance expansion, taking place in 1982, three years prior to the events of Cold War Crisis.
  • Real-Time Strategy: The game engine can technically handle the player commanding forces as large as battalion-sized, although this is never actually put to use in the vanilla game, which never has the player commanding anything larger than individual squads or tank platoons. There are multiple Game Mod campaigns which take more of a strategy approach, though.
  • Red Scare: And how. Cold War Crisis and Resistance has you fighting a lunatic Soviet general and his army of faithful fanatics.
  • Refusal of the Call: Viktor Troska at first. But he soon has a change of heart, once he realizes his fellow citizens need him.
  • Renegade Russian: General Guba is the Big Bad of the entire series.
  • Retcon: In mission Montignac Must Fall, you might take cover in the forest with other squadmates, but After Montignac states you are the only squad member left.
  • The Revolution Will Not Be Vilified: Both Resistance and Cold War Crisis play it straight, but it's justified. The Malden islands and Nogova never provoked the Soviets into attacking and the Soviet Union invaded only to secure its grip in the would-be independant countries. Once the Soviets invade (with official sanction in Resistance and unofficial in CWC), the locals logically adapt an Occupiers Out of Our Country stance, but have no political goals beyond getting their independence back. Despite this idealistic setup, the BIS devs didn't shy away from showing what effects a prolonged and nerve-wracking war would have on said La RĂ©sistance. So, while The Revolution Will Not Be Civilized never comes into play, there is a definite atmosphere of We ARE Struggling Together in the latter parts of the Resistance campaign. Especially the events of this cutscene, where an argument leads to pointless tragedy (spoiler warning). On the upside, these events become the Determinator and Growing the Beard moment for the Nogovan resistance groups.
  • Revolvers Are Just Better: The vanilla versions of the games only contain one revolver - a .357 Magnum Smith & Wesson, used as a sidearm by some NATO pilots - but it's the most powerful handgun in the series. It also has the biggest recoil (really noticeable when firing it).
  • RPG Elements: Going with the whole "build up a guerilla army" theme, the Resistance expansion added new features like the ability of soldiers to gain experience (and get promoted) after each successful mission, the possibility to carry over captured weapons and equipment from one mission to the next, and more dynamic management of your equipment stockpile and loadout than in Cold War Crisis or Red Hammer.
  • Ruritania: The Malden islands in Cold War Crisis and Nogova island from the Resistance expansion are a non-monarchic, more modern, Cold War era version of this trope. They generally resemble the more rural regions or countries of the former East Bloc. In a Played for Laughs stereotypical way, no less.
  • Sadistic Choice / Player Punch: The protagonist of the Resistance expansion, Viktor Troska, has to betray a few of his La RĂ©sistance pals and sacrifice them to general Guba's soldiers, in order to stay alive. Trying to outsmart the soldiers and solving the mission by taking a third option is virtually impossible. But this matters little in the long run, since Viktor eventually manages to reach the remaining guerilla fighters and leads them on their Roaring Rampage of Revenge to victory, pulling a Plan or two on the invaders and adapting as he goes.
    • This is a slight exaggeration. It is actually quite possible - albeit fairly difficult - to fight and triumph. Indeed, this is the preferred method for veterans to begin building up their arsenal early by taking out the mooks doing said threatening. That being said, there is a reason it is mainly done by the veterans.
  • Sean Connery Is About to Shoot You: The cover on this trope page says it all... The cover of the Resistance expansion pack followed the theme, replacing the NATO soldier with a member of the Nogovan resistance. A pre-release version of the cover art featured a similar stock image, although the soldier was noticeably chubbier than the hollow-cheeked killing machine who made it to the final box art.
  • Shell-Shocked Veteran / Retired Badass / Hired Gun: Viktor Troska from Resistance is implied to be this.
    • James Gastovski also becomes a Retired Badass after the events of Resistance. He's back in action during the events of Cold War Crisis.
  • Shown Their Work: To an absolutely jaw-dropping degree.
  • Sighted Guns Are Low-Tech: One of the first games to thoroughly and effectively avert this.
  • Simulation Game: The games are both tactical shooters and ground and air combat sims.
  • Sniper Pistol: More or less averted, but the more powerful sidearms can act like this if you are really good at taking accurate headshots. Otherwise they're purely emergency weapons used in combat at close distances (and are therefore particularly useful for snipers, who can't rely on their rifles for self-defence).
  • Sniper Rifle: The Americans have the M21, while the Soviets use their well-known classic, the SVD Dragunov. The Resistance expansion added one for the resistance fighters as well. Since they're understandably lacking a lot of purpose-built military equipment, they use a scoped Remington hunting rifle to fill in the role.
  • The Squad: You and your fellow fighters.
  • Squad Controls: The AI in the campaign frequently uses them, and when Armstrong gets promoted to Lieutenant, he gets to use them as well. The available commands are quite numerous, and are detailed enough to allow micromanaging a squadmate to plant a satchel charge near an enemy tank (and when therefore ordered to attack that tank, will run away before detonating the explosive.)
  • Stealth-Based Game: Stealth is a viable (and vital) infantry tactic and there are lots of Stealth Based Missions - for regular soldiers and commando units alike. One of the four playable characters in the first game is a special forces saboteur that specializes in sneaking around behind enemy lines, but other characters get to be stealthy as well, depending on the situation. Regular infantry assaults are usualy preceded by stealthy crawling and maneuvering towards the target. One of the Attack Pattern Alpha commands for your squad is literally "use stealth". Since the game is a realistic soldier sim, the stealth is purely line-of-sight (no chance the enemy soldiers will forget about you once you alert them of your presence).
    • Of course, as with much about the games, this can be adjusted and modded.
  • Sticks to the Back: Primary weapons and launchers do this when not being held.
  • Subsystem Damage: Both infantry and various armoured fighting vehicles have this.
  • Super Drowning Skills: Unlike in its successor ARMA, no one can swim. Even though drowning isn't instantaneous, being underwater damages you (and this somehow results in bloody wounds just like if you're shot) and submerging any non-amphibious vehicle inexplicably causes it to explode.
  • Take That!: To Codemasters with the 10th anniversary patch, which removes the Red Hammer campaign made and released by them between Cold War Crisis and Resistance. A justified Take That!, since that campaign was made by Codemasters on their own and BIS can't take credit for it or release it with its own installments.
  • Tank Goodness: So many tanks. The Abrams in the original was particularly fun, due to its incredibly resilient armor.
  • Title In: The date is shown before the mission, as is the location/title.
  • Trapped Behind Enemy Lines: On many occasions, in many, many missions. But special mention goes to one of the early missions in the first game, where your character (private Armstrong) becomes the only surviving member of his squad after it gets suddenly attacked by several Soviet platoons and an Mi-24 Hind chopper. Your radio has malfunctioned, so you can't call for help. You have only a few minutes left to cross a few kilometres of enemy-ridden terrain and reach the evac site on the coast. And while you're groveling through a very exposed meadow teeming with hostile soldiers, you overhear from your radio, that the evac site has changed, since the coast has come under attack. You then head to the new site... but you get captured by Soviet infantrymen ! They take you prisoner. And then, a third twist occurs, when you are rescued by members of the local La RĂ©sistance. You then aid them in two or three missions and they help you get off the island and return to the army.
  • Unexpected Gameplay Change: And how. While you do spend much of the game as an ordinary infantryman, depending on the mission you can be doing anything from driving a tank to sneaking around behind enemy lines doing reconnaissance to flying various aircraft or any combination of these and more, to say nothing of commanding units on top of all of the above.
  • Universal Ammunition: Averted. Unless the type of ammunition is used in a closely related family/series of firearms, you'll have to find appropriate ammo for each gun. You won't have much luck trying to fire an AK-74 with an M16 magazine.
  • Universal Driver's License: Played straight as a rare case of Acceptable Breaks from Reality.
  • Unwinnable: A glitch in the last mission of the Red Hammer campaign can prevent the final credits and a "proper" ending from being unlocked. It CAN be bypassed, but the conditions to do so are a bit murky.
    • A glitch in one of the mid-campaign missions causes your helicopter to teleport and/or fly upside down, usually resulting in it crashing into the ground.
  • Unusable Enemy Equipment: Completely averted.
  • Vague Hit Points: If hit by a bullet that doesn't kill, you are wounded but not shown by what degree and are only shown the results of the attack. In case of vehicles, they do take damage but the exact status isn't always known to the passengers.
  • Villain-Based Franchise: Arguably so, since Guba is the only character to appear in all three installments and there wouldn't be much exciting action going on if he wasn't up to his old antics again...
  • Voice of the Resistance: A young and cheery radio amateur known under the moniker "The Tasmanian Devil", becomes invaluable to the Nogovan freedom fighters in the campaign of the Resistance expansion pack.
  • War Is Hell: The games pit you in the role of a completely ordinary, completely vulnerable and completely replacable young soldier... who's fighting in small scale conflicts that could easily spark World War III... No heavy-handed condemnations of war or sombre thoughts of your squadmates are ever heard, but the depiction of modern warfare in the game (subtle, yet straightforward) says more than a million words: It's nerve-wrecking, unpredictable, often completely absurd. Virtually Anyone Can Die... And they do - all the damned time... Despite being war sims, the games never glorify or trivialize war and the way it changes the world, society and individuals.
  • Where I Was Born and Razed: Happens in varying degrees in the city liberating missions of the Resistance campaign. Since all of them involve some tank warfare, expect the Nogovan resistance being forced to shell their own former homes and public buildings in order to smoke out the Soviet soldiers from their well-protected defences and hiding places.
  • Wide-Open Sandbox: None of the games have "maps" in the traditional sense. You load an entire island, of perhaps 200-400 square kilometers, and then you play a mission on that island. It's essentially the same concept but on a much larger scale and uses the surrounding oceans, rather than walls or cliffs, to prevent the player from leaving. While you're often restricted from just going anywhere you want on the island in the missions (because disobeying orders gets you in trouble and wandering deep into enemy territory is generally a bad idea anyway), many missions are set up in a sandbox manner, allowing you massive space to roam and a wide variety of equipment and support options. Occasionally, fan-made missions will put you in a Call of Duty-ish linear mission.
  • World War III: Subverted. In Cold War Crisis You're trying to stop Guba from sparking it at all, since the consequences of him succeeding in his provocation would be downright catastrophic.
  • You Always Hear the Bullet: Soundly averted. Sound itself takes time to travel through, meaning it's possible to get killed by a bullet before the report of the weapon that fired it reaches you. The same goes for any other sound; if a huge explosion from several miles away takes place, the auditory effects will come seconds later.
  • You Are in Command Now: During many of the more intense firefights, your commanding officers quite often get killed. So, does your squad immediately rout ? No, not to worry: You hear a "this is (number of troop), taking command, I say again, (number of troop), taking command, out" message on your radio and continue fighting. Your character will do this too, if his rank is the highest in the squad once your superior bites the dust.

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