Medal of Honor is a series of first-person shooter video games created by American film director and producer Steven Spielberg.[1] The first game was developed by DreamWorks Interactive and published by Electronic Arts for the PlayStation in 1999. Medal of Honor spawned a series of follow-up games including multiple expansions spanning various console platforms and personal computers.

Quick Facts Genre(s), Developer(s) ...
Medal of Honor
Thumb
Logo used from 2020
Genre(s)First-person shooter
Developer(s)
Publisher(s)Electronic Arts
Creator(s)Steven Spielberg
Platform(s)
First releaseMedal of Honor
October 31, 1999
Latest releaseMedal of Honor: Above and Beyond
December 11, 2020
Close

The first twelve installments take place during World War II. The main characters are usually elite members of Office of Strategic Services (OSS), while later games focus on modern warfare. The concept, story, and executive production of the first three games was made by Spielberg, who later sold the franchise for Electronic Arts in February 2000. The music in the franchise was composed by Michael Giacchino, Christopher Lennertz and Ramin Djawadi.

Development history

The series began in 1999 with Medal of Honor. The game was developed by DreamWorks Interactive, when at the time the studio and series were jointly owned by DreamWorks SKG and Microsoft Games, with the game concept and story created by filmmaker Steven Spielberg. The game was released for the PlayStation on October 31, 1999.[2] Spielberg's inspiration for the series emerged while directing and producing the World War II film Saving Private Ryan to create a game that can concurrently be an educational and entertaining experience.[3][4]

In 2000, Medal of Honor: Underground, the sequel, was released for the PlayStation and Game Boy Advance. Medal of Honor: Allied Assault, the third game, was developed by 2015, Inc. and released for the PC, Mac OS X and Linux in January 2002. Allied Assault has expansion packs titled Spearhead (2002) and Breakthrough (2003). Fourth entry Medal of Honor: Frontline was developed and released for the PlayStation 2 in May 2002 and the GameCube and Xbox in November 2002. It was later remastered in high-definition and released in 2010 with the PlayStation 3 version of Medal of Honor (2010), the first game in the rebooted series. Medal of Honor: Rising Sun, the fifth game, was released for PlayStation 2, Xbox and GameCube in 2003 (a planned sequel was cancelled due to the game's mixed reviews). The sixth game, Medal of Honor: Infiltrator, was released for the Game Boy Advance in 2003. Medal of Honor: Pacific Assault, the seventh entry, was released for the PC, Mac OS X and Linux in 2004. It was followed by Medal of Honor: European Assault, the eighth game, which was released for PlayStation 2, Xbox and GameCube in 2005. Medal of Honor: Heroes, a spin-off and the ninth game in the series, was developed and released for the PlayStation Portable in 2006. Medal of Honor: Vanguard, the tenth entry, was released for the PlayStation 2 and Wii in 2007. It was the first Medal of Honor game to be released on the Wii console. Medal of Honor: Airborne, the eleventh game in the series, was developed and released for the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 and PC September 4, 2007; it was the first game in the series to be nonlinear. Twelfth entry Medal of Honor: Heroes 2 was released for the Wii and PlayStation Portable on November 13, 2007. It was a sequel of the first game in spin-off Heroes series.

The thirteenth game in the series, Medal of Honor (2010), was announced in 2008 as Medal of Honor: Operation Anaconda. The game was developed by Danger Close Games, a video game development team formerly known as EA Los Angeles merged in 2008. Medal of Honor (2010) was released for the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 and PC on October 12, 2010.[5][6] Its multiplayer component was developed by the creators of the Battlefield franchise. It is the first Medal of Honor game to be set in the modern day rather than during World War II. Medal of Honor received generally positive reviews from critics and was a commercial success.[7] Medal of Honor: Warfighter, the fourteenth installment in the series and the direct sequel to the 2010 game, was released for the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 and PC on October 23, 2012.[8] The game's storyline was written by real U.S. Tier 1 Operators, inspired by actual events. It is the first game in the series to run on EA Digital Illusions CE's Frostbite 2 game engine. Warfighter was both a critical and commercial failure. In January 2013, COO Peter Moore of Electronic Arts announced that the Medal of Honor series was taken out of rotation due to the poor reception and sales of Medal of Honor: Warfighter.[9] On September 25, 2019, Respawn Entertainment announced Medal of Honor: Above and Beyond for Oculus VR titled at the Oculus Connect 6 conference.[10]

Games

More information Year, Title ...
Titles in the Medal of Honor series
Year Title Developer(s) Platform(s)
Sony Microsoft Nintendo Other
1999 Medal of Honor DreamWorks Interactive PS
2000 Medal of Honor: Underground DreamWorks Interactive, Rebellion Developments PS GBA
2002 Medal of Honor: Allied Assault 2015, Inc. Windows Mac OS X, Linux
Medal of Honor: Frontline EA Los Angeles PS2, PS31 Xbox GameCube
Medal of Honor: Allied Assault Spearhead2 EA Los Angeles Windows Mac OS X, Linux
2003 Medal of Honor: Allied Assault Breakthrough2 TKO Software Windows Mac OS X, Linux
Medal of Honor: Rising Sun EA Los Angeles PS2 Xbox GameCube
Medal of Honor: Infiltrator Netherock Limited GBA
2004 Medal of Honor: Pacific Assault EA Los Angeles Windows
2005 Medal of Honor: European Assault EA Los Angeles PS2 Xbox GameCube
2006 Medal of Honor: Heroes Team Fusion PSP
2007 Medal of Honor: Vanguard EA Los Angeles, Budcat Creations PS2 Wii
Medal of Honor: Airborne EA Los Angeles PS3 Windows, Xbox 360
Medal of Honor: Heroes 2 EA Los Angeles, EA Canada PSP Wii
2010 Medal of Honor Danger Close Games, EA Digital Illusions CE PS3 Windows, Xbox 360
2012 Medal of Honor: Warfighter Danger Close Games PS3 Windows, Xbox 360
2020 Medal of Honor: Above and Beyond Respawn Entertainment Windows Oculus VR
Notes
  1. The PS3 version of Medal of Honor: Frontline is remastered in HD.
  2. Expansion pack for Medal of Honor: Allied Assault
Close

Gameplay

The gameplay originally focuses on the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), an American espionage organization during World War II, placing emphasis on using false papers and silenced pistols, but as the series and the technology has progressed, it has shifted emphasis towards front-line combat. Since the release of Medal of Honor: Rising Sun the series has focused on providing a more open-ended element to the games, allowing the player to have more options in each level instead of a linear path. The violence, up to Medal of Honor: Rising Sun is bloodless and simple, usually consisting of elaborate animations, while the violence in Medal of Honor: Pacific Assault and onward contains the occasional sprays of blood.

Compilations

Reception

More information Game, Metacritic ...
Close

The games have received negative, mixed, and positive reviews, with the most acclaimed title in the series being Medal of Honor (1999).[11] As of 2016, the series sold over 39 million copies, making it one of the best-selling video game franchises of all time.

Awards

Guinness World Records awarded the Medal of Honor series with a world record for Best-selling FPS franchise in the Guinness World Records: Gamer's Edition 2008.

Colette, a short documentary included in the gallery mode for Medal of Honor: Above and Beyond, won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Subject at the 93rd Academy Awards. Though not mentioned by name in the Academy citation, Medal of Honor is arguably the first video game series ever to receive an Oscar for its content.[41]

References

Wikiwand in your browser!

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.

Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.