There are plenty of guns, tanks and missile launchers scattered around the game s five worlds, but the real fun starts when you hop into a Warhawk or a Nemesis. These zippy aircraft fly like a dream, and they re packed with powerful weapons like missiles, lasers and cluster bombs. The battles are fast-paced, and it may take you a while to get the hang of all the options, but once you do you re in for the most frenetic action available on the PS3.
Three stars out of four. _"Blazing Angels 2: Secret Missions of WWII" (Ubisoft, for the Xbox 360, $59.99; 43): "Blazing Angels" takes place in a more familiar setting: the skies over Europe and Asia during World War II.
And while there s definitely been a glut of WWII games, it s still kind of a thrill to engage in a dogfight over the Kremlin or the Eiffel Tower. "BA2" includes a healthy assortment of more than 50 aircraft, from the familiar British Spitfire and Japanese Zero to the experimental German Go 229 flying wing. And the usual arsenal of missiles and cannons is complemented by exotic defensive weapons, the flash blinder and the Tesla coil, that incapacitate enemy planes.
There s a surprising amount of variety among the game s 18 missions. You may be sent to destroy a gigantic zeppelin, defend an allied submarine or even drop a friendly spy onto a moving train. The controls are smooth and intuitive, and the on-screen displays make it easy to find your next target.
"BA2" probably isn t realistic enough for serious flight-sim junkies, but it s a lot of fun for the more casual flyboy wannabe. Three stars. _"Medal of Honor Airborne" (Electronic Arts, for the Xbox 360, $59.
99; 43): The latest "Medal of Honor" adventure starts in the sky but not in the cockpit. Instead, you re a paratrooper in the back of a plane, and once you jump you get a spectacular aerial view of combat. You have to steer your parachute behind enemy lines, and where you land may determine how tough your mission will be.
Once you re on the ground, "Airborne" plays like any other "MOH" game. Your goal, of course, is to kill Nazis, but each level gives you a variety of tasks take out snipers, blow up an anti-aircraft gun that you can attempt in any order. None of the challenges are particularly fresh, though, and once you get past the parachuting gimmick, "Airborne" doesn t do much to distinguish itself from dozens of other World War II shooters.
Two-and-a-half stars.
