Installa Steam
Accedi
|
Lingua
简体中文 (cinese semplificato)
繁體中文 (cinese tradizionale)
日本語 (giapponese)
한국어 (coreano)
ไทย (tailandese)
Български (bulgaro)
Čeština (ceco)
Dansk (danese)
Deutsch (tedesco)
English (inglese)
Español - España (spagnolo - Spagna)
Español - Latinoamérica (spagnolo dell'America Latina)
Ελληνικά (greco)
Français (francese)
Indonesiano
Magyar (ungherese)
Nederlands (olandese)
Norsk (norvegese)
Polski (polacco)
Português (portoghese - Portogallo)
Português - Brasil (portoghese brasiliano)
Română (rumeno)
Русский (russo)
Suomi (finlandese)
Svenska (svedese)
Türkçe (turco)
Tiếng Việt (vietnamita)
Українська (ucraino)
Segnala un problema nella traduzione
'Contextual Lean System: Whether you’re on the attack, or stuck in a firefight looking for cover, players can naturally lean around obstacles without having to worry about learning new button combinations.'
If I'm to understand this correctly, either the computer leans for us, or we don't lean at all (there are no button mappings for manual leaning apparently).
Also, something in what I quoted caught my eye.
'[W]ithout having to worry about learning new button combinations.'
Am I to understand that they think Q and E (the typical leaning keys) have magically become hard keys to get to?
Indeed we shall--we've no other choice.
I haven't played BF4 though, and I'm not sure it's wise to presume many others have.
Like I said, not particularly wise. I'll take your word for it on the quality though--I have heard some good things about it.
A few missions into the SP on this one; just seems like a poor port of MW1 with the dog from 'Air Bud' thrown in.