However, Kurosaki was talking about the game's single-player campaign-which also depicts children caught in combat zones and chemical weapons attacks against civilians, among other serious topics. You have a command structure that you have to follow and orders that you have to follow and if you try to just be a bad apple, the game is going to smack you down for that." The game does not allow you to get away with going rogue. Later in the same interview, Kurosaki said the game will punish you for making mistakes on the battlefield: "If you were a soldier and you actually deployed into a theater of war and you shot down a bunch of innocent civilians, you would be arrested and court marshaled. It's about civilian collateral damage kind of being, unfortunately, part of the equation." It's about enemies who don't wear uniforms. It's in places that can suddenly become a battlefield at a moment's notice.
"Today, modern warfare means that the war isn't just over there," said the studio's narrative director, Taylor Kurosaki. Modern Warfare developer Infinity Ward told GameSpot recently that it doesn't want to shy away from hard-hitting issues in the upcoming shooter. Some Modern Warfare multiplayer maps take place in civilian areas, albeit without civilian characters present.
In real life, the use of white phosphorus-also known as "Willy Pete"-against civilians and in civilian areas contravenes the Geneva Convention, thereby classing it as a war crime.
#Call of duty modern warfare multiplayer killstreaks full#
Tune-in August 1st for the full Multiplayer Premiere.
Killstreaks make a return in #ModernWarfare.