Call of Duty: World at War

Meanwhile the other player covers him and handles the infantry, at one point using a flamethrower to set fire to a huge field of corn, scorching several ghillie-suited Japanese soldiers and grimacing at their pained screams. The blowtorch certainly has a Return to Castle Wolfenstein feel (understandable, as many of the staff from Gray Matter – RTCW’s developer – are now working at Treyarch), but now has more practical uses in its ability to set fire to trees and any hidden snipers, as well as spreading between soldiers that are touching or are too close to each other.

Another help is that they’re using the multiplayer from Call of Duty 4, right down to the matchmaking and the excellent leveling-up system that makes playing CoD4 online so engrossing. WaW also has a new attachments system, allowing guns to be realistically modified (e.g. bipods can be connected to machine guns, letting you to lean the gun on a wall to make an accurate turret). Players will also have dedicated vehicle-based games, including some in specially made vehicle-only combat zones. Treyarch are promising great things, but they’re keeping mum about them for now. Rumour is that you’ll be able to use the LVT – an amphibious transport vehicle – to sneak up on people from the water.