James Hoyle Latest articles by James Hoyle The new Call of Duty may have revived the WW2 shooter... but here's the fascinating story of how Medal of Honor defined it By James Hoyle published 29 November 17 Retrospective It's all thanks to Steven Spielberg, a harsh military advisor, and Nazis posing with snowmen Retrospective Sign up to the GamesRadar+ NewsletterWeekly digests, tales from the communities you love, and moreContact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsors LATEST ARTICLES1"You can't build clever little games anymore," says RPG legend, unless you get lucky like Clair Obscur Expedition 33: "That doesn't please the stock market"2Arc Raiders lead was surprised The Last of Us players really liked the game, "they just didn't like to have PvP all the time"3Saros aims for bite-sized 30-minute runs, and the cool-off makes you "ready for another", its game designer tells me47 reasons why Saros has me hooked on its eclipse-powered roguelike runs, and why it might be PS5's most impressive release of the year5Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2 devs were "experimenting" for the first game, but came armed with knowledge and about 100 more staff members for the sequel: "It had to stand taller"
The new Call of Duty may have revived the WW2 shooter... but here's the fascinating story of how Medal of Honor defined it By James Hoyle published 29 November 17 Retrospective It's all thanks to Steven Spielberg, a harsh military advisor, and Nazis posing with snowmen