Delta Force: Black Hawk Down – Team Sabre

Delta Force: Black Hawk Down: Team Sabre

Developer(s) Ritual Entertainment
Rebellion Developments (PlayStation 2)
Publisher(s) NovaLogic
Sierra Entertainment
Ubisoft (Europe, PlayStation 2)
Platform(s) Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 2
Release date(s) Microsoft Windows [1]
  • NA January 20, 2004
  • PAL February 13, 2004
  • JP February 27, 2004
PlayStation 2 [2]
  • EU November 10, 2006
  • AUS November 16, 2006
  • NA November 21, 2006
Genre(s) First-person shooter
Mode(s) Single-player, Multiplayer
Rating(s) ESRB: T
PEGI: 16+

Delta Force: Black Hawk Down: Team Sabre is the expansion pack to Delta Force: Black Hawk Down. Team Sabre adds more weapons, that can be used in servers that only have Delta Force: Black Hawk Down. The Team Sabre expansion gives the player a new character to choose, the British elite commando unit SAS. Team Sabre adds a few more terrains which are mostly jungle and desert terrains. The expansion pack also gives the player two more campaigns which are in fictional based areas, fighting the renegade general Haatim Jaareah Kalb in the deserts of Iran and the elusive drug lord Antonio Paulo in the jungles of Colombia. The main difference from the original is the difficulty, with fewer saves and longer levels.

Sierra Entertainment and Novalogic announced in October 2006 that a PlayStation 2 version of Delta Force: Black Hawk Down: Team Sabre is being released in late November 2006. The video game, developed by Rebellion Developments, is a completely redeveloped version of Team Sabre featuring additional weapons and vehicles not seen in the original PlayStation 2 version of Delta Force: Black Hawk Down.

Contents

Plot

These descriptions are taken from the Black Hawk Down - Team Sabre guide.

Colombian Campaign

Following a Coast Guard discovery of a large shipment of drugs and guns headed for the United States, intel has revealed that a powerful drug lord, Antonio Paulo, is trying to increase his power in parts of Colombia. This drug lord controls entire regions in remote parts of the country and employs many well-armed guerrillas to fight for him in exchange for money and weapons to aid their anti-government cause. He is known for his heavy-handed actions, including the torture of captured Colombian and American soldiers.

Iranian Campaign

Iran's fundamentalist government has given way to a less hardline administration, friendly to the West. A significant portion of the old guard, appalled with the new government's embracing of economic relationships with the "corrupt, morally evil" western powers, has taken up arms in a second revolution against the state. While government forces aided by NATO troops have managed to keep control of Tehran, fundamentalist rebels have seized control of the oil terminal on Kharg Island and production facilities to the north and Bandar Shahpur. Oil represents three-quarters of Iran's economy and a serious risk to the interests of western investors. NATO and the UN have both agreed that military intervention, led by the United States, is warranted. Delta Force has been tasked with being the spearhead of the coalition forces.

See also

References

External links