

One can voice chat with their designated unit, with whoever is near their current location, or of course commanders can functionally talk to the entire army by talking directly with leaders of each unit.

As previously mentioned though, communication is the main key here. Both of which are basically centered around the concept of a huge map where up to 100 players compete for control of the map’s handful of zones scattered throughout the area while a timer ticks away. Once on the ground, you’ll want to immediately begin and sustain constant communication with as many of your squad mates as possible, as the most organized and efficient team of 50 is often the winner of the game’s 2 main modes Offensive and Warfare. Hell Let Loose doesn’t waste much time before thrusting you into its mix of first person shooting and real-time warfare strategy. While its unforgiving nature might be an acquired taste for many, and it likely won’t really click with you until you’re several hours in, this particular road to hell is likely worth traveling for those looking for a truly hardcore World War 2 simulator. It proudly wears its intentions as well as its flaws on its sleeve and makes no apologies for either. If that is the case, then Black Matter’s Hell Let Loose might just be the ticket for you. It might be that your gaming palette just demands something a bit more methodical and grounded now. If the twitchy, arcade-y run ‘n guns that populate the vast majority of the first-person shooter genre aren’t doing it for you these days, you may not be having a problem with the genre per se’.
