Although it has been a few months since EA released Red Alert 3 for the PC and Xbox 360, the publisher is just now putting the final touches on the PlayStation 3 version of the real-time strategy game. While the game has trailed the other versions, EA has taken the extra time to polish up the conversion and add content to give PlayStation 3 owners some love. We recently had the chance to get a look at a work-in-progress version of the game, dubbed Red Alert 3: Ultimate Edition, and get our hands on it for a bit to see how it's shaping up.
If you missed Red Alert 3 last year, here are some highlights. The game is the third entry in the Command & Conquer spin-off series that takes the real-time strategy action and drops it into an alternate past. This time out, the game's story has a lot of fun with time travel and mixes up the technologies of the different playable factions. Thanks to a time-travel-fueled assassination, the American, Russian, and Japanese nations have taken some interesting development paths. Mechs, cyberbears, and all manner of borderline-zany units are tossed into the game's pool of infantry and vehicles.
The PS3 game will have all the content found in the original 360 and PC games, so plan on campaigns for the Allies, Soviets, and Rising Sun factions, each with increasing difficulty levels and high-quality video cinematics starring some big-name talent. In a welcome twist, the campaigns will support online co-op play, replacing your AI co-commander in offline play with a human one. In addition, the game will feature an online skirmish mode for you and three friends, which is just two shy of the PC game's six-player support and is on par with the 360 multiplayer. On top of all the content found in the original 360 and PC games, the PS3 version will feature the content found in the PC Premiere Edition of the game, which includes documentaries, a soundtrack, bloopers, video unit profiles that offer useful information, and excerpts from the Battlecast programming the team has been running for a while now. The meaty additions actually come close to filling up the game's Blu-ray disc.
Beyond the game content, there are a few extra odds and ends of note in Red Alert 3: Ultimate Edition. First, the game will feature trophies, 50 in fact, which are the same as achievements in the 360 version and are spread throughout single-player, skirmish, and online play. Second, the game doesn't contain any of the content from the upcoming expansion pack for the PC. We asked about DLC for the game and were told it has yet to be determined. Finally, our third bit of info is a heads-up on the game's install, which is shaping up to be 3.8 gigs.
Control is on par with the approach taken in the 360 game. The game uses a radial menu and it maps controls across the Dual Shock in an intuitive fashion that works really well. While it's still not a replacement for a good old keyboard and mouse, it's probably one of the best ways to do an RTS on a console.
Though Red Alert's controls haven't seen much tweaking, the visuals have. The Xbox 360 game was basically fine, but it was a bit muted. The PS3 game, however, benefits from sharper textures and a markedly brighter color palette, putting the game closer to the impressive look of the PC game. On the performance side of things, the action looked to be smooth and didn't hiccup, although we didn't get a chance to flood the map with units.
Based on what we saw and played, Red Alert 3: Ultimate Edition is looking like a shinier conversion of the PC game with a good number of extras. Given that the number of real-time strategy games on the PS3 can be tallied on one hand, the game is a welcome addition to the system's library. Red Alert 3: Ultimate Edition is slated to ship at the end of March for the PlayStation 3.
Command & Conquer Red Alert 3 Ultimate Edition Trailer
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