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Warplanes: ww2 dogfight review
Warplanes: ww2 dogfight review








warplanes: ww2 dogfight review

Special missions are generally harder versions of attack missions, and provide extra gold. Naval missions involve air-to-air combat and/or attacks against ships (bombing or torpedoes or both, your choice), and provide extra prestige points. Defense missions are air-to-air combat, defending friendlies against bombers, and provide extra silver (there are some forced missions defending your own airfield). Attack missions involve air-to-air combat and/or ground attack (basically bombing), and provide extra gasoline. There are four types of missions, and each will provide extra of one kind of resource. Each combat mission will provide you with some of all four basic resources. Occasionally you'll be give the option to convert some of your fuel into a small amount of gold. Gold and prestige points can be converted to silver if you need more of that especially after you've finished all of your management training, it gives you something to do with your prestige points. Prestige points can be used for management training, reducing costs and increasing income. Either gold or silver can be used for buying gasoline, which is of course used by your aircraft. Silver is used for routine airfield maintenance costs and for airfield defense equipment, for upgrading aircraft, and for training crewmembers. Gold is mainly used to acquire aircraft, recruit crewmembers, and build aircraft-support facilities like hangars and fuel tanks. The combat sequences aren't connected to each other. The only progression is in your squadron equipment and people, airbase facilities, and reserve basic resources. This is fundamentally a resource-management game where aerial battle is how you acquire your basic resources. Gold is mainly used I suppose the game's title sets up some incorrect expectations. I suppose the game's title sets up some incorrect expectations.










Warplanes: ww2 dogfight review