Nice editing. I did know about this game, but never took interest in it. Thanks for some insight like those weapon sounds, they are indeed beefy and powerful. The thing that I didn't know is the development of this game. You see, development of the game started on November 11, 1997. Filmmaker Steven Spielberg held a meeting with DreamWorks Interactive staff, outlining an idea for a video game, a first-person shooter set during World War II. The idea originated from the experience his son Max had from playing the game GoldenEye 007 and Spielberg's deep interest in World War II. The game was written and produced by Peter Hirschmann. Dale Dye served as the game's military advisor. Spielberg had previously worked with Dye on the film Saving Private Ryan. By March 1998, the game had reached its prototype stage with significant differences from the original version in the works. When the game reached its finishing stage in November 1998, there was an angry letter sent from Medal of Honor recipient Paul Bucha who rejected the release of such a game, claiming it was a dishonorable project. Peter Hirschmann showed Bucha a demonstration and gave a talk, saving the project from cancellation altogether. Original animation tests for enemies took place around December 1997. Enemies were structured with up to 250 polygons. Blood and gruesome deaths were originally included in the game, but the game developers removed them due to the 1999 Columbine High School massacre. Medal of Honor was released on PlayStation Network as a PS one Classic on June 2, 2009 in North America. Truly a gem of it's time. Thanks Br0leg.
@@Br0leg I wouldn't blame you considering it doesn't automatically select that option when a compatible controller is plugged in, either way it helps when firing on the move
I still have my copy of Medal of Honor for the ps1 today. I first played the game when I was 13. It helped me learn a lot about WWII history and the firearms that were used during the time. It’s such a great game. It’s like if Indiana Jones was a spy instead of an archaeologist. Jimmy Patterson even looks like Harrison Ford.
Both of these games has settings for controls, there are a couple of configurations which allows to use left stick for movement and right stick for camera/aiming, which makes this game feels more flawless. You should def try it out and it also my recommended way for replaying these classic titles
Medal of Honor Underground is my childhood game, I loved playing it so much even though I did have a really bad time with the Wewelsburg Dark Camelot level, as it was quite scary for me back then 😅
You missed one very important thing Steven Spielberg himself directed the very 1st MoH and produced the second one, and Michael (Chad)ccino (The Incredibles, Lost, Cloverfield, Jurassic World) composed the soundtrack of the first 3 games As far as i remember the dude who made The music for The boys and Lost in Space composed for the rest of the games
I remember towards the end of the game there were way more baddies with machine guns and more accuracy that made it annoyingly hard. Or the "clown car" never-ending Nazis in the snow missions on Allied Assault, that would constantly spawn from the bunkers.
@@Br0leg nah, Marketplace wasn't that bad if you abused strafing shots. I remember an 8 year old me spamming strafing and shooting at them until I got a hit anywhere cuz I knew they'd be stunned and would allow me to stop and properly aim at the head... man I was either a master strategist or a fucking psycho as a kid lol
You can actually get a more modern style control scheme in the in-game options menu, where the left stick is just movement and the right stick is just aiming.
@@anthonyjohnson6199 not all Germans were members of the National Socialist Party. Field Marshal Erwin Rommel wasn't one plenty of other officers and regular Soldiers weren't party members.
there this one moment where they try to Surrender but alot of times they will pull out the P38 on you and in Underground you will be killing Photographers and Archeologists
It was weird seeing that Allied had chunckier animations, like they were made on lower fps, but in the old ones are so fluid, like holy shit, even though I still play these masterpiece to this day. And if anybody wants to play basicly a PS2 version of these old games, go play Frontline.
Never thought I'd see someone review these gems on this platform, especially in the way you did it in. I grew up with these games so I really appreciate this.
@@ArcturusOTE It is the single worst port of an fps ever ported to a 16 bit system, not just hand held system, I mean any 16 bit gaming platform that has ever existed. I would rather play doom and wolf 3d on the snes before I ever consider touching that shit again. GBA shooters and ports of shooters kind of range from bad to decent for the most part with some exceptions, where as MOHU Advanced is just awful, if ever a port deserved a 1/10 score, it's that abomination.
One of the best soundtracks and some of the most hilarious bonus content in a game. Like the OSS info videos translating German. Played the hell out of Underground.
Great video, and I totally agree with MoH1 having by far the best gun sounds, especially for the Winchester 1897 and the Springfield 1903 imo. The 1903 sniper rifle from Destroying the Rail Cannon missions is my personal favorite, I haven't seen other FPS games have a rifle with such a booming echo for a muzzle report like MoH's Springfield does. It's definitely stayed with me even after all these decades, haha
Both of those games were some of the best educational war games ever made i got my hands on a copy of the original medal of honor and play it on my ps1 still
In both ps1 mohs you can change the control layout with does allow you to move and strafe with one stick and look with the other. Even Frontline and Rising Sun did this. (Edit even the late 90s - early 00s EA 007 games too)
gotta say im surprised you didn't bring up that this game was actually written and pitched by Steven Spielberg of all people. Partially made it because he found out about gaming because of his son and blended that with his love for WW2. Very cool story and the respect given to soldiers in the little documentary bits in each game always warmed my heart.
Valhalla and knight levels are kinda historically correct considering the Castle Wevelsburg where it happens was the headquarters of Himmlers occult shenanigans, knight larp included.
I have to thank my father for getting both games and playing with him in 2001 when I was three. After years of reflection, I came to the conclusion that I'm passionate about World War 2 and an absolute tank geek because of the early exposure to this game. This game forged a great deal of the person I am today as it sparked my interest in military history, in particular, the equipment used and most importantly, armoured vehicles. I remember playing that tank mission over and over; I was obsessed with their firepower, their ability to one shot you across the room if you weren't careful enough; their aesthetics, with that green colour, the Balkenkreuz and straight lines; how they worked and the way they swivelled the turret; how resilient and powerful they were with even a hull MG which shredded you if standing in front of the vehicle for a long time. The OST is also memorable, the MoH games have always had an excellent soundtrack. Cheers!
I still have the two original copies of these games on a dusty shelf and honestly, I want to play them with an emulator and I think I will now. What really kept me enjoying the games was really the enemy animations and some of their dialogue. As a kid and even now, I still laugh my guts out with some of them like blowing up the guy and after flying backwards, he lands and just SITS DOWN before laying down and it kills me. Every. Damn. Time. The games are timeless masterpieces. I want a forever digital copy of them.... they deserve to be eternal.
Nice to see someone reviewing this game after all these years. I still own my og MoH and MoH Underground games. they came in a double pack over here. This game was strangely cinematic for it's time. From the cutscenes to animations and weapon sounds. The unique and awkward control scheme is etched into my memory to this day along with some Panzerfaust deaths. I should check these games out again sometime.
Underground is literally my favorite game from my childhood. It has a charm to it that is pretty hard to describe. I played it to death on the PS store over and above my PS3 titles
Michael Giacchino made a fire soundtrack, to the point where I instinctively hear his music when watching WWII docos! Also I remember thinking the AI was pretty advanced for the time! The only other game I could compare it to then was Half-Life.
Watching that animation clip with the shotgun reminds me of how damn satisfying it was to just run around blasting guys with it without even aiming and watch them go flying backwards
MoH and MoH:Underground were my childhood. Played splitscreen multi with my family. Not a lot of FPS games had the same impact. Well except Black and MW1.
Fun fact; If the particular level was towards the end of the war the Germans using Sten Mk IIs may also be authentic. The MP-38 and MP-40 were actually rather difficult to mass produce compared to some other SMGs of the war, and as a result there are are some documented cases of Germans using captured Stens late in the war, as well as SMGs based off the Sten known as the MP-3008 (which is hilarious because the Sten was descended from a MP-28 clone).
Yea its true, but I doubt the game gave them sten guns due to that fact, but rather because they didnt want to waste the weapon model xdddd Still doesnt break immersion due to the fact that they used the captured weapons.
Idk if you knew this, but the soundtrack was composed by Michael Giacchino, which also wrote the score to Medal of Honor, Underground, Frontline, and Allied Assault. I highly recommend just listening to all the soundtracks. Also I recommend reviewing MoH: Pacific Assault, I've found it to be a very enjoyable game even though the campaign maps feel very linear.
what an amaizing piece of my childhood you brought back to my mind, that secret level, that f*ucking level full of bazookas and tanks, man first time in yeeaaars that I hear that soundtrack!! thanks dude
Considering this is call of dutys predecessor we should give this game credit for pioneering the features that move onto later games by activision like call of duty modern warfare, black ops, and other call of duty titles!
Very nice video about this masterpiece. I remember back in 2007 aproximately when we and some boys played that game. The only thing I remember was a german officer dying while emptying his mp40 and it was really hilarious that kept in my mind forever.
I remember that death animation 😂 I was always under the impression that their finger got caught on the trigger and it’s just unloading before they collapse face first
Allied Assault is still in my heart... About downfall of series... EA strolled into fight, thinking they can - out of blue - compete in genre of modern warfare FPS.
@@Br0leg Just to let you know Br0leg, in the fourth mission in Medal of Honor: Rising Sun (The level name is "Pistol Pete") You actually encounter Martin Clemens, a Scottish Guerilla fighter who actually fought in the Battle of Guadalcanal. Also, in Medal of Honor: Rising Sun, there are 8 tapes that you can find in the first 8 levels. These tapes are called, "Valor in History", in which a soldier who fought in the Pacific is interviewed, and yes, Martin Clemens is one of them.
I loved MOHU. I have a very clear memory from my childhood of doing multiple runs of the level with those exploding guys from the extra campaign. It was so much fun tearing through this level with the BAR. I played it so much I pretty much had the level burned into my muscle memory.
Great review. Congrats on 125k, homie. Don't forget about your gamers that have been here since 5k~ish subs. Glad to see all the content is paying off as it rightfully should.
Played the hell out of this game as a kid. I love how I only figured out so many years after I stopped playing PS1 that you can actually set up controls in-game to aim like on a modern console and not have to stop and hold down a button.
Controls are changeable in the menu into a twin stick model comparable to modern controls. Also never really had a lot of chugging nor gun dissappearing on my ps1. The ost was made by michael giacchino. The man who nade the rattatouille and UP movie soundtracks. The ps1 was also sold as a cd player, sound quality was one of it's perks, not a deficit
I remember how long ago me and my uncle used to play this in split-screen, it was my first time i went "why do i hear boss music" way before this meme ever existed.
Most of the graphical glitches are actually the fault of the emulator. Aside from frame drops, there are no problems in the original games on the PS1. I tried replaying both of these recently and literally got softlocked on each of them because at some point half the world turned into a star-filled void.
MoH underground and Final Doom were amazing back in the day even if 4 year old me had no idea what i was doing. Still have memories from some levels though
That extra level confused me greatly as a kid. For some reason I didn't comprehend what "bonus levels" were and that it was a joke. I just couldn't for the life of me figure out why, after you beat the final level, there was another one with dogs walking around and riding tanks.
the intro is amazing, since as a brit, my day immediately gets ruined and i cry in my sleep when a 7 year old tells me 'im not teng im batty creest' if you guys dont know what those words mean, those words are bad mean words! they entire purpose is to make you rethink about your life choices and hurt your mate with a trench mace
Sometime in the 2000s, computer club, Medal of Honor over LAN: "Who tf uses bazooka?" "That kid over there" "Oh, okay, you can play it" That child were me.
I would love to see a mousehack for this game like goldeneye, that made the entire issue of aiming just disappear and made the game way more accessible
3:22 Now i'm gonna stop you right there, because you can actually change the control scheme in-game to make it play like a modern console fps, sure you may not be able to change every single button but you can still change it, and i know that because i have both of the ps1 MoH titles
Back when games were based
@Zoomer Waffen Playing as the "bad guy" is always a plus.
@Zoomer Waffen Depends to who you ask but I agree. I'm more of a Eastern Front type of guy anyway.
Still based
what does that even mean
Zoomer Waffen still based
BRI'ISH??? DAY ABSOLUTELY SLAUGHTERED
DO YA EVEN SHAG MATE?
every day :(
Slaughtered true
With a knoife
@@vovabars1234 show me ya lice'nce or I'm calling the coppers
Truly a game meant for the most GIGA of chads.
❤️
Thanks man ... one of my favorite games as a child and now ... a manchild.
Not manchildren... W'RE ALL SONS OF THE PATRIOTS NOW!
1:03 *the first moh has drop-shotting capability*
_E S P O R T S R E A D Y_
*E S P O R T S R E A D Y*
COD PLAYER WAS MADE IN PS1 AGE
1v1 me on split screen
@@Br0leg oh no.
@@Hyperio606 oh ye
So, the level in medal of honor with knights and Lego soldiers as an enemies is not my fever dream as a kid afterall? Good to know!
I feel that lol
the Nazi Dogs too but the Knights I was like wtf they def got the drop on me
Those are not LEGO soldiers, those are nutcrackers, lol
"Honey, wake up, it's a new broleg video"
🗿
🗿🗿
5 more minutes...
Dogs with SMGs is some Danger 5 level of weirdness
SCP Type shit
Quiet, Girl.
it was the Knights for me i was like wth?
Nice editing. I did know about this game, but never took interest in it. Thanks for some insight like those weapon sounds, they are indeed beefy and powerful. The thing that I didn't know is the development of this game. You see, development of the game started on November 11, 1997. Filmmaker Steven Spielberg held a meeting with DreamWorks Interactive staff, outlining an idea for a video game, a first-person shooter set during World War II. The idea originated from the experience his son Max had from playing the game GoldenEye 007 and Spielberg's deep interest in World War II. The game was written and produced by Peter Hirschmann. Dale Dye served as the game's military advisor. Spielberg had previously worked with Dye on the film Saving Private Ryan.
By March 1998, the game had reached its prototype stage with significant differences from the original version in the works. When the game reached its finishing stage in November 1998, there was an angry letter sent from Medal of Honor recipient Paul Bucha who rejected the release of such a game, claiming it was a dishonorable project. Peter Hirschmann showed Bucha a demonstration and gave a talk, saving the project from cancellation altogether.
Original animation tests for enemies took place around December 1997. Enemies were structured with up to 250 polygons. Blood and gruesome deaths were originally included in the game, but the game developers removed them due to the 1999 Columbine High School massacre.
Medal of Honor was released on PlayStation Network as a PS one Classic on June 2, 2009 in North America.
Truly a gem of it's time. Thanks Br0leg.
If this Baucha guy was so butthurt over a name of the game, then devs should simply change the name.
Yea that baucha guy story was hella cringe
@@Br0leg Out of topic but both games actually do have modern twin stick controls, iirc it's the one with L1 to crouch and R1 to action
@@ArcturusOTE literally played these games my entire 22 years and never knew that.
@@Br0leg I wouldn't blame you considering it doesn't automatically select that option when a compatible controller is plugged in, either way it helps when firing on the move
My dad was a massive Medal of Honor fan, he had every game up until warfighter.
I grew up with those games.
Those german shepards with mp40s terrified me as a kid
This video kicks the shit out of that other Egyptian brown skinned Anubis monstergirl doom clone one you did. Or am I mixing that up with Sseth's?
Wait till you see the next game I’m reviewing ;)
@@Br0leg is that Hdoom? 😏
Шлеппа говорит:это не военное преступление,если тебе было весело
да
Базированно
это фундамент
Бэйзед
ладно
I still have my copy of Medal of Honor for the ps1 today. I first played the game when I was 13. It helped me learn a lot about WWII history and the firearms that were used during the time. It’s such a great game. It’s like if Indiana Jones was a spy instead of an archaeologist. Jimmy Patterson even looks like Harrison Ford.
im pretty sure indy canonically worked for the OSS once ww2 kicked off
Both of these games has settings for controls, there are a couple of configurations which allows to use left stick for movement and right stick for camera/aiming, which makes this game feels more flawless. You should def try it out and it also my recommended way for replaying these classic titles
I remember playing as a velociraptor in the multiplayer version....back when cheats/cosmetics/chracters weren't locked in microtransaction
Medal of Honor Underground is my childhood game, I loved playing it so much even though I did have a really bad time with the Wewelsburg Dark Camelot level, as it was quite scary for me back then 😅
You missed one very important thing Steven Spielberg himself directed the very 1st MoH and produced the second one, and Michael (Chad)ccino (The Incredibles, Lost, Cloverfield, Jurassic World) composed the soundtrack of the first 3 games
As far as i remember the dude who made The music for The boys and Lost in Space composed for the rest of the games
As a kid back then, this was a blast experience for me. The monastery part was the hardest level as far as I can remember.
bazooka guys in underground were managable i feel , but my god the salt mine in MOH those guy would literally spawn behind you without warning
Yea the mine was ass, but it’s only the mine though. Operation Marketplace imo was much worse
@@Br0leg You mean Airborne's Market Garden?
Cus the last part was definitely ass blasting, with all the bazooka troopers and stormtroopers
I remember towards the end of the game there were way more baddies with machine guns and more accuracy that made it annoyingly hard.
Or the "clown car" never-ending Nazis in the snow missions on Allied Assault, that would constantly spawn from the bunkers.
@@Br0leg nah, Marketplace wasn't that bad if you abused strafing shots. I remember an 8 year old me spamming strafing and shooting at them until I got a hit anywhere cuz I knew they'd be stunned and would allow me to stop and properly aim at the head... man I was either a master strategist or a fucking psycho as a kid lol
That Garand firing noise gives me massive nostalgia. God damn.
Thanks for shining a spotlight on this old gem.
You can actually get a more modern style control scheme in the in-game options menu, where the left stick is just movement and the right stick is just aiming.
The "Don't Commit War Crimes For 10 Seconds" challenge is just insane. Has anyone ever managed to complete that one?
Killing nazi's is never a war crime.
@@anthonyjohnson6199 not all Germans were members of the National Socialist Party. Field Marshal Erwin Rommel wasn't one plenty of other officers and regular Soldiers weren't party members.
there this one moment where they try to Surrender but alot of times they will pull out the P38 on you and in Underground you will be killing Photographers and Archeologists
What if we hotchkissed under the vent?
Just kidding haha
Unless?
Also do serious sam 2 next
serious Sam based
Medal of honor for PS1, both were way ahead of its time in some aspects. Two memorable games that i will take to my grave.
Thanks for putting The Wolf Among Us OST in the intro just to rub it in that there is still no sign of season 2.
don’t loose hope !
AMONGUS
The Wolf amogus 😳
S 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 gusamon lobotomy 😎
You're like me.
I played the game and memorized it like my name, keep it up champion, a new follower from the Arab lands ❤
СЛЕДУЮЩАЯ АХУЕННАЯ ПЕСНЯ ЗВУЧИТ СПЕЦИАЛЬНО ДЛЯ ПАЦАНОВ
It was weird seeing that Allied had chunckier animations, like they were made on lower fps, but in the old ones are so fluid, like holy shit, even though I still play these masterpiece to this day.
And if anybody wants to play basicly a PS2 version of these old games, go play Frontline.
I loved MoH Frontline so much
Never thought I'd see someone review these gems on this platform, especially in the way you did it in.
I grew up with these games so I really appreciate this.
;)
At first I thought this was gonna be about the very special GBA port
We don’t talk about that port
What port?
@@Juliansnake1000 The GBA port for Underground which has atrocious framerates, low render distances, and is easily the worst way to play MOHUG
I spent an hour tweaking the emulator because i tought it was an error on my end, but no, it is unplayable
@@ArcturusOTE It is the single worst port of an fps ever ported to a 16 bit system, not just hand held system, I mean any 16 bit gaming platform that has ever existed. I would rather play doom and wolf 3d on the snes before I ever consider touching that shit again. GBA shooters and ports of shooters kind of range from bad to decent for the most part with some exceptions, where as MOHU Advanced is just awful, if ever a port deserved a 1/10 score, it's that abomination.
One of the best soundtracks and some of the most hilarious bonus content in a game. Like the OSS info videos translating German. Played the hell out of Underground.
Great video, and I totally agree with MoH1 having by far the best gun sounds, especially for the Winchester 1897 and the Springfield 1903 imo. The 1903 sniper rifle from Destroying the Rail Cannon missions is my personal favorite, I haven't seen other FPS games have a rifle with such a booming echo for a muzzle report like MoH's Springfield does. It's definitely stayed with me even after all these decades, haha
"But all of the sudden... BRI'ISH"
I wonder if this is how bostonians felt after the boston tea party
Боже, сколько воспоминаний нахлынуло, а ещё "мультиплеер" с братом на разделенном экране телевизора))
Medal of honor?
Do you mean War Crimes Medal?
Also: this game is so nostalgic,i remember playing all the medal of honor games on ps2
Я нереально запутан в том, какой национальности автор, но мне дико нравится то, что я посмотрел
Both of those games were some of the best educational war games ever made i got my hands on a copy of the original medal of honor and play it on my ps1 still
In both ps1 mohs you can change the control layout with does allow you to move and strafe with one stick and look with the other. Even Frontline and Rising Sun did this. (Edit even the late 90s - early 00s EA 007 games too)
I can not believe this video exists 😂. It's a perfect mix of what I would say back in 2000 and now in 2024.
Goldeneye: *enemies have a plenty of animation*
Medal of honor: "hold my animations"
Btw goldeneye when?
Idk why I randomly thought about this game, but sick editing n cool video
Every time br0leg posts feels like Christmas morning. Both because I’m happy to watch the video and for how long it takes to come out
1 month of editing later
gotta say im surprised you didn't bring up that this game was actually written and pitched by Steven Spielberg of all people. Partially made it because he found out about gaming because of his son and blended that with his love for WW2. Very cool story and the respect given to soldiers in the little documentary bits in each game always warmed my heart.
7:54 Spicy input there my friend LOL
Valhalla and knight levels are kinda historically correct considering the Castle Wevelsburg where it happens was the headquarters of Himmlers occult shenanigans, knight larp included.
Babushka, can we have Ssethtzeentach?
Niet Boris, we have Ssethtzeentach at home.
Ssethtzeentach at home: *Br0leg*
I have to thank my father for getting both games and playing with him in 2001 when I was three.
After years of reflection, I came to the conclusion that I'm passionate about World War 2 and an absolute tank geek because of the early exposure to this game. This game forged a great deal of the person I am today as it sparked my interest in military history, in particular, the equipment used and most importantly, armoured vehicles.
I remember playing that tank mission over and over; I was obsessed with their firepower, their ability to one shot you across the room if you weren't careful enough; their aesthetics, with that green colour, the Balkenkreuz and straight lines; how they worked and the way they swivelled the turret; how resilient and powerful they were with even a hull MG which shredded you if standing in front of the vehicle for a long time.
The OST is also memorable, the MoH games have always had an excellent soundtrack.
Cheers!
I still have the two original copies of these games on a dusty shelf and honestly, I want to play them with an emulator and I think I will now. What really kept me enjoying the games was really the enemy animations and some of their dialogue. As a kid and even now, I still laugh my guts out with some of them like blowing up the guy and after flying backwards, he lands and just SITS DOWN before laying down and it kills me. Every. Damn. Time. The games are timeless masterpieces. I want a forever digital copy of them.... they deserve to be eternal.
Nice to see someone reviewing this game after all these years. I still own my og MoH and MoH Underground games. they came in a double pack over here. This game was strangely cinematic for it's time. From the cutscenes to animations and weapon sounds. The unique and awkward control scheme is etched into my memory to this day along with some Panzerfaust deaths. I should check these games out again sometime.
reminder that even the ingame controls settings allowed you to set the controls to the "modern" standard of twin stick and fire on trigger
first video i see of Br0leg and im already a fan, in love with the editing, the best amount of crust i like on my videos
I just love how he includes russian memes even thru his audience is mostly non-russian speakers
Underground is literally my favorite game from my childhood. It has a charm to it that is pretty hard to describe. I played it to death on the PS store over and above my PS3 titles
Michael Giacchino made a fire soundtrack, to the point where I instinctively hear his music when watching WWII docos!
Also I remember thinking the AI was pretty advanced for the time! The only other game I could compare it to then was Half-Life.
Underground and Rising Sun were my two favorite MOH games as a kid
Watching that animation clip with the shotgun reminds me of how damn satisfying it was to just run around blasting guys with it without even aiming and watch them go flying backwards
everyone talkin about doom guy, no one talks about jimmy fucking patterson singlehandedly ending a world war with his balls of ss slaying steel.
Dude, you got me with that ATF joke.. now if you'll excuse me, I need to find some body armor for my pup.
The Dark Messiah of FPS games, very underrated.
MoH and MoH:Underground were my childhood. Played splitscreen multi with my family. Not a lot of FPS games had the same impact. Well except Black and MW1.
Fun fact;
If the particular level was towards the end of the war the Germans using Sten Mk IIs may also be authentic. The MP-38 and MP-40 were actually rather difficult to mass produce compared to some other SMGs of the war, and as a result there are are some documented cases of Germans using captured Stens late in the war, as well as SMGs based off the Sten known as the MP-3008 (which is hilarious because the Sten was descended from a MP-28 clone).
Yea its true, but I doubt the game gave them sten guns due to that fact, but rather because they didnt want to waste the weapon model xdddd Still doesnt break immersion due to the fact that they used the captured weapons.
It is actually the mp3008 they are meant to be using it says so in the mission briefing, but this mission is set in 1942 so it shouldn’t exist yet.
One of the best PS1 games ever.
BFV and CoD WW2 kids will never understand the charm of old games.
From now on, this video is my breakfast every single day.
Idk if you knew this, but the soundtrack was composed by Michael Giacchino, which also wrote the score to Medal of Honor, Underground, Frontline, and Allied Assault. I highly recommend just listening to all the soundtracks. Also I recommend reviewing MoH: Pacific Assault, I've found it to be a very enjoyable game even though the campaign maps feel very linear.
what an amaizing piece of my childhood you brought back to my mind, that secret level, that f*ucking level full of bazookas and tanks, man first time in yeeaaars that I hear that soundtrack!! thanks dude
On the Small Soliders PSX game there was an early trailer for MoH with blood and blasting heads off. Wish there was a gore cheatcode or something.
Yea same, it’s really missing that aspect
Considering this is call of dutys predecessor we should give this game credit for pioneering the features that move onto later games by activision like call of duty modern warfare, black ops, and other call of duty titles!
Medal of Honor, Medal of Honor Underground "Grandfather's", Allied Assault "Father" of WWII game shooters
Very nice video about this masterpiece. I remember back in 2007 aproximately when we and some boys played that game. The only thing I remember was a german officer dying while emptying his mp40 and it was really hilarious that kept in my mind forever.
I remember that death animation 😂 I was always under the impression that their finger got caught on the trigger and it’s just unloading before they collapse face first
I played the hell out of Rising Sun and Frontline as a kid, it’s really sad the way this franchise died.
They might be next on the list 😳
Dude same
Allied Assault is still in my heart...
About downfall of series... EA strolled into fight, thinking they can - out of blue - compete in genre of modern warfare FPS.
@@Br0leg Just to let you know Br0leg, in the fourth mission in Medal of Honor: Rising Sun (The level name is "Pistol Pete") You actually encounter Martin Clemens, a Scottish Guerilla fighter who actually fought in the Battle of Guadalcanal. Also, in Medal of Honor: Rising Sun, there are 8 tapes that you can find in the first 8 levels. These tapes are called, "Valor in History", in which a soldier who fought in the Pacific is interviewed, and yes, Martin Clemens is one of them.
I loved MOHU. I have a very clear memory from my childhood of doing multiple runs of the level with those exploding guys from the extra campaign. It was so much fun tearing through this level with the BAR. I played it so much I pretty much had the level burned into my muscle memory.
at least, back then, they liked reality, but now, world war 2 games are not world war 2 games without *automatic lee-enfield*
Alexis Texas siren isn't real, Alexis Texas siren can't hurt you
Alexis Texas Siren: 0:47
обожаю тебя Олег) сначала наткнулся на рофловидики по думу, подписался. теперь ты постишь игры моего пс-1 чайлдхуда, что может быть лучше?
Рад что не подвожу ожидания 👌
Great review. Congrats on 125k, homie. Don't forget about your gamers that have been here since 5k~ish subs. Glad to see all the content is paying off as it rightfully should.
5:12 when the oss agent is sussy O_O
3:06 Panzerfaust looks like anti tank flashlight 🔦
5:12 Red sus 🔺
Heavy Semi Fully auto Anti-tank piercing frag flash ground-to-ground light launcher shotgun
🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🦅🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥💥💥💥💥💥💥💥💥
When youtube recommends the random ass poll instead of the actual video. Working as intended
Played the hell out of this game as a kid. I love how I only figured out so many years after I stopped playing PS1 that you can actually set up controls in-game to aim like on a modern console and not have to stop and hold down a button.
8:25 my favorite part of the exploding german soldiers, is that they are designed after the nazi zombies from the movie Shock Waves.
Oh, that's good to know. Never heard of it - much less 20 years ago. Cool find!
Controls are changeable in the menu into a twin stick model comparable to modern controls.
Also never really had a lot of chugging nor gun dissappearing on my ps1.
The ost was made by michael giacchino. The man who nade the rattatouille and UP movie soundtracks.
The ps1 was also sold as a cd player, sound quality was one of it's perks, not a deficit
I remember how long ago me and my uncle used to play this in split-screen, it was my first time i went "why do i hear boss music" way before this meme ever existed.
In the theme song, you could slightly hear “Von telefonmast”
You know now that I think about it , these medal of honor games sure have a lot of war crimes in them
Dude I never thought about it as a kid but now that I came back holy fuck
“An age where developers cared about their games”
Oooo boi ain’t that the truth. Good times, too bad I was too young to appreciate these details.
Most of the graphical glitches are actually the fault of the emulator. Aside from frame drops, there are no problems in the original games on the PS1. I tried replaying both of these recently and literally got softlocked on each of them because at some point half the world turned into a star-filled void.
MoH underground and Final Doom were amazing back in the day even if 4 year old me had no idea what i was doing. Still have memories from some levels though
That extra level confused me greatly as a kid. For some reason I didn't comprehend what "bonus levels" were and that it was a joke. I just couldn't for the life of me figure out why, after you beat the final level, there was another one with dogs walking around and riding tanks.
I miss the "dog level". My grandma used to laugh at the sillyness of it! I miss her too...
imma make a remake w my friends for this masterpiece
Medal of Honor EX would be sick. Surprised no one has done this yet.
This was an excellent video man, successfully made me want to play through it!
Yoooo doomkid ❤️
I love this game, underground, and the franchise. Waiting 20 years to play these two masterpieces was a grave mistake.
Most memorable part? When I played deathmatch with my brother on the PS... Good old days :D
the intro is amazing, since as a brit, my day immediately gets ruined and i cry in my sleep when a 7 year old tells me 'im not teng im batty creest'
if you guys dont know what those words mean, those words are bad mean words!
they entire purpose is to make you rethink about your life choices and hurt your mate with a trench mace
just bri’ish things
@@Br0leg yep
the fookin uk m o i t e
Sometime in the 2000s, computer club, Medal of Honor over LAN:
"Who tf uses bazooka?"
"That kid over there"
"Oh, okay, you can play it"
That child were me.
4:35 Немцы использовали Стэн на заключительном этапе войны для СС и фолькштурма.
they should remaster this game to slightly update the graphics and controls but keep the other mechanics the same. It would be awesome
I would love to see a mousehack for this game like goldeneye, that made the entire issue of aiming just disappear and made the game way more accessible
Unfortunately duckstation right now doesn’t allow for mouse movement
My ADHD uniquely developed into stage 4 while watching this video _thanks_
3:22 Now i'm gonna stop you right there, because you can actually change the control scheme in-game to make it play like a modern console fps, sure you may not be able to change every single button but you can still change it, and i know that because i have both of the ps1 MoH titles