Play Silent Hunter Online

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Paulette Dzurilla

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Aug 4, 2024, 4:17:58 PM8/4/24
to introsookcar
Theres no such thing as playing fair when you're the captain of a submarine. It's your job to hide, literally, under the radar; to hit your enemy when they're least expecting it and be away before swift retaliation arrives to send you drowning to Davy Jones' endless locker. Silent Hunter Online is a cut-down version of the experience, but looks to make up for it by letting you bring friends, and taking the F2P route to putting the You Bastard into U-Boat.

The setting is the Atlantic, between 1939 and 1945 - a version based on actual Kriegsmarine maps. You of course are on the Axis side, as the captain of between one sub and a whole flotilla, with a team of NPC officers at your beck and call. Not comfortable with torpedo firing solutions? There's a guy for that. You're free to ignore them completely and do everything yourself, but they're there if you need a helping hand with anything from fighting enemy destroyers to getting back home for repairs, upgrades, and a celebratory bratwurst. You're also in charge of making sure you have enough fuel, torpedoes and other resources, and levelling up your crew to make your submarine more efficient. You can lose submarines during a mission, and if so, they're apparently gone for good - though you'll always have one to avoid a Game Over.


The online side kicks in with the ability to team up with three other players to form a wolfpack, and really go to town on the strategic side. All combat is PvE based, with a certain amount of randomness added to the missions to keep them fresh even on a replay.


The most interesting part of the game is the dynamic campaign. While missions are preset, and you work through them individually, everybody's successes and failures are tracked and affect the overall server campaign. At the start for example, you may see plenty of undefended freighters. As players blow them up though, missions will start generating more opposition like destroyer escorts. It's not clear how great this will be for players who join the campaign during a victory streak, but early missions at least should still guide them into the action instead of throwing them into a tutorial where they're expected to fight seven destroyers and Great Cthulhu. Every server (one per continent is planned, though that may change) will have its own version of the war running, with power constantly shifting back and forth between Axis and Allies.


While working through the campaign, you'll also be upgrading your submarines. Microtransactions are likely to kick in hard here, for individual pieces and upgrades, as well as Time Compression points to get you between missions and back to base quicker than you can say "Ahem" while rubbing two fingers together in a pointed way. Every player will have a certain quota of time compression points, which refill every 24 hours, but they're an obvious thing to sell. It doesn't sound like you can simply head out to sea and look for a fight though - everything seems completely mission based, with those missions selected from a map.


(I know, I know. I hate to be so wooly with words like 'sound' and 'seem'. Unfortunately, the demo I saw consisted entirely of watching someone else jump straight into battle, instead of personally being allowed to take command of a sub, and the focus was firmly on the fancy 3D side of commanding a sub rather than more mundane things like getting from A to B.)


Somewhat oddly though, you don't just jump into the missions outright. Ubisoft talks about having to do things like set course for a mission in the morning, then log in again later on to actually play it, with it taking over a day of real-time to cross the ocean without time compression.


To be clear, that's not necessarily a bad "Hmm"; just the curious kind of "Hmm". Taking the full real-time route makes perfect sense in a regular Silent Hunter game, and it may well do here as well. It sounds slightly out of place though, in a world with no grand apparent grand strategy going on outside the isolated missions. Also, while I'm told that nothing will happen to your submarines while you're not there to watch over them, there was no mention of whether anything can happen if you are. Hopefully there's at least a chance of some wet wandering encounters to make travelling the oceans more than the pure timesink it sounded like.


Running in a web browser will at least make it easy to pass the time by flicking over to TV Tropes for a few hours, but it feels like it might be a feature too far for this version. Maybe. Unsurprisingly, and frankly, mercifully, staring at a map for eight hours wasn't part of the demo I saw, so it could well be more interesting than it sounds on paper. Someone with waaaay more time and patience than me will no doubt find out when the closed beta starts.


If you want to be one of the first to find out, said beta is due to start very soon, and you can sign up right here. No specific launch date for the final version has been announced, but don't expect it to see it raising its periscope this side of 2013. Even with time compression.


In a statment shared with IGN, the publisher said: "As stated in our support article, only DLCs and online features will be affected by the upcoming decommissioning. Current owners of those games will still be able to access, play or redownload them.


"Our teams are working with our partners to update this information across all storefronts and are also assessing all available options for players who will be impacted when these games' online services are decommissioned on September 1st, 2022. It has always been our intention to do everything in our power to allow those legacy titles to remain available in the best possible conditions for players, and this is what we are working towards."


As reported by PC Gamer, this follows announcements last week that the company would decommission online services in some of its older games from September, including Assassin's Creed Liberation and Silent Hunter 5.


Since then, AC Liberation HD and Silent Hunter have been pulled from sale on Steam, with the following message appearing on the page: "At the request of the publisher, [this game] is no longer available for sale on Steam."


Ubisoft replied to the controversy in a statement sent to VG247, saying: "We don't take the decision to retire services for older Ubisoft games lightly, and our teams are currently assessing all available options for players who will be impacted when these games' online services are decommissioned on September 1st, 2022."


The spokesperson continued: "We are also working with our partners to update this information across all storefronts, so players will be fully informed about the removal of online services at the point of purchase as well as via our support article where we shared the news."


Ubisoft also said last week it'd decommission online services for Space Junkies -- as a multiplayer only title, that means that the game will be retired entirely from September. It has already been removed from Steam as well.


Used to play Silent Hunter III a lot. Got some great memories from it.

I once completed a patrol on 1x speed without pausing (as a teenager during a school holiday). Took me about one week. Would sleep in short sessions with the sound maxed out in case of emergency. ?


I got Silent Hunter 4 back in 2012, the disc version. Had lots of fun with it. I got Silent Hunter 5 the year before; it also came with the disc of Lost and Found: The Legacy of USS Lagarto. I generally liked SH5 more mainly because you could walk about the sun but disliked sinking battleships as part of campaign objectives and bugs. I could go on for hours talking about how I as a Grade 6 student then loved the Mare Nostrum campaign and how much I learned about the Siege of Malta and the Regia Marina, and the Arctic Convoys. Pretty amazed with the story of Operation Pedestal. Shortly after getting the game I saw Das Boot.


Can't imagine what it would have been like on a U-boat in real life, but I feel like it does an excellent job at capturing the atmosphere. Massive respect for those guys.

Also love it when a movie makes you root for the 'bad' guys.


Hello friend, I also played a lot with silent humter 3 and 4 and I enjoyed it, but silent hunter 5 I couldn't make it work, after the installation I was always told that my hardware wasn't sufficient until after I got really angry I threw away the CD.


Mine came in a cardboard reinforced box with some extras.

Note that it mentions "The Original Extended Version" on the box, but it's also known as "The Original Uncut Version". (Runtime is 281 minutes.)


1. The Periscope and Observation scopes now have an additional zoom level (a total of 3 magnifications, stock game has 2). 1st level is increased by 100% over stock 2nd level is the same as the stock max level 3rd level is increased by 100% over stock max level


3. The Binocular image now has 2 magnifications. Use the mouse wheel or Tab key when on the bridge to use the Binoculars. The first setting is the same as the stock Binoculars at 7x, the second will increase the magnification by approximately 150% over stock about 18x. Reversing the zoom level takes you back to the standard Bridge view.

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