Perfect balance between open distances, enough cover for everyone and a bit of CQB when capturing the points. For now I tested only the Moscow one and it is near to perfection in my opinion. New Invasion maps - that is always welcome. New flamethrowers in Normandy sound really fun, but there is still a lot of grind between me and them - more feedback on them as soon as I manage to get them I don’t know if that is the case atm, but it would be much better to translate those quick messages automiaticly into each players chosen language, so we can communicate without language barrier make new voicelines for soldiers that will fit the phrases used in quick chat (it will greatly increase immersion) Quick messages system - it is of course very roughly made at the moment but I like that it is here. I have no possibility to test all new content at the moment, so I will leave only part of the feedback at the moment and update it later. That’s very problematic, in the first “major” update of the game we got more premium content than F2P content when most of the community is totally F2P. So overall we got 12 free new campaign levels and 29 new premium squads and campaign levels So how many free campaign level we got this update? So overall we got 29 new premium squads, 8 if you want to “remove” the Berlin premiums that you need to buy to access other premiums and the new campaign levels.Įach side on two campaigns got 3 levels (we don’t count the 15 Berlin levels because they are behind pay wall). So how many premium squads and campaign levels we got this update? We got 2 premium squads for each nation in each campaign and there are 3 campaigns + the two premium squads you need to buy to even buy the premium squads in Berlin + Mineola (NY): Dover Books.More premium content than F2P content (not including maps). Annals of a fortress: twenty-two centuries of Siege warfare. Dartford (CT): University Press of New England. Excavating the Sutlers' house: artifacts of the British armies in Fort Edward and Lake George. Journal of Conflict Archaeology 2: 189–211. War as a paradigmatic phenomenon: endemic violence and the Finnish Sub-Neolithic. Two men in a trench: battlefield archaeology - the key to unlocking the past. Journal of Conflict Archaeology 4: 109–36. Archaeological investigation of military sites on Inchkeith Island. Journal of Conflict Archaeology 4: 159–89. The archaeology of the siege of Leith, 1560. Journal of Conflict Archaeology 1: 133–80. Survey and excavation of an Anglo-Zulu war fort at Eshowe, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Portsmouth (NH): Greenwood Publishing Group. Haecker (ed.) Fields of conflict: battlefield archaeology from the Roman Empire to the Korean War: 314–36. Seven eventful days in Paraguay: reconnoitering the archaeology of the War of the Triple Alliance, in D. Hougoumont: the key to victory at Waterloo. Journal of Conflict Archaeology 5: 273–82. Digging deeper: recent publications on First World War archaeology. Lincoln (NE): University of Nebraska Press. Charlottesville (VA): University of Virginia Press. San Antonio: The University of Texas, Center for Archaeological Research. Archaeological and historical investigations at the Alamo North Wall San Antonio, Bexar County, Texas (Archaeological Survey Report 224). ‘Servant to the king for his fortifications': Paul Ive and the practise of fortification. Journal of Conflict Archaeology 1: 93–113. Siege fields: an archaeological assessment of English civil war ‘small’ sieges. Journal of Conflict Archaeology 3: 147–73. Mud, blood and missing men: excavations at Serre, Somme, France. Historical Archaeology 18: 103–7.įraser, A.H. Building materials indicative of status differentiation at the Crown Point Barracks - 1759–1783. Archäologie in Deutschland 1: 26–9.įeister, L.M. Memento Mori - Söldnerbestattungen der Schlacht bei Wittstock 1636. London: English Heritage.Įickhoff, S., A. Cold War: building for nuclear confrontation 1946–89. Quebec: McGill-Queens University Press.Ĭocroft, W.D., R.J.C. Beneath Flanders fields: the tunneller’s war 1914–1918. Hillforts at war: from Maiden Castle to Taniwaha Pa. Available at: (accessed 3 September 2012).Īrmit, I. Archaeologists uncover skeletons and weapons from 1628 battle.
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