BF2 Hacks

BF2 Hacks

Full Feature List:

Aimbot :

  • Auto Aim/Auto Shoot
  • Choose from L-Mouse, R-Mouse, or M-Mouse buttons.
  • Choose from different Hitboxes to aim for; Head/Neck/Chest/Waist
  • Select Enemies, Friends, or Everyone as your target.
  • Smooth Aim, Slows the movement of the aimbot to look more like a natural player.
  • Aim by ‘Field of View’ or ‘Distance’.

ESP :

  • Name Tags, Show names of all friendlies and enemies.
  • Health Tags, Show health of all friendlies and enemies.
  • Visual Tags, Shows an icon or frame around enemies to give away their position, even behind walls.
  • Class Tags, Show class of all enemies and friendlies.
  • Distance Tags, Show the distance between you and all friendlies and enemies.

Crosshair:

  • Select from four different custom crosshairs to make manual aiming easier. Includes Red Dot and Semi-Crosshair.

View Distance :

  • Select from three varying distances to allow you to see the entire map.

Removals:

  • No Recoil (Passive/Aggresive/Off), Causes all shots fired to be confined to the exact point where your crosshair lies.
  • Remove Blur, Removes shellshock effect when explosions occur nearby.
  • Remove Grass, Removes Grass and other vegetation to reveal enemies and gain FPS.
  • Remove Sky, Blackens the sky to reveal light silhouettes of enemies on the horizon. Also makes aiming the TV missile on Dragon Valley easier.
  • Remove Fog, Removes fog to make enemies easier to see.

MiniMap :

  • Reveals enemy positions on the Minimap. Includes all vehicles.

Misc:

  • Trigger Bot, Lets you be more discreet by only firing when your crosshair hovers over the enemy.
  • Unlock Kits, Unlocks all weapons.
  • Chamz, paints a bright color skin, visible through walls, on both enemies and friendlies.

Commander Hack :

  • On/Off
  • Supplies to my location
  • UAV to my location
  • Vehicle to my location
  • Artillery to my location

Battlefield 2

Battlefield 2 (BF2) is a first-person shooter that integrates elements of RPG and strategy into its gameplay. It is the third full game in the Battlefield series, preceded by Battlefield 1942 and Battlefield Vietnam.

Belittled by some gamers as nothing more than a marginal improvement over Battlefield 1942’s Desert Combat mod, this sequel actually features an almost revolutionary gameplay and a replay value that’s rarely found in many games. Developed by Digital Illusions and published by EA in 2005, it remains as one of the most innovative and enjoyable shooter-based multiplayer games ever released.

Setting

BF2 occurs in a near-future with a hypothetical conflict between three factions: the United States, China and a fictional Middle Eastern Coalition. It has 15 playable maps (originally 12), each coming in one of three different sizes. The smaller maps (intended for 16 players) have a Counter Strike-feel with a limited movement area while the 32 and 64 player maps are considerably huge with plenty of battlefield estate.

The maps offer a diverse selection, from swamp areas such as the Songhua Stalemate to urban centers like the Strike at Karkand. Some maps favor armored warfare while others are focused solely on infantry battles. For every map, the US Marine Corps will go up against either the People’s Liberation Army (China) or the Middle Eastern Coalition (MEC). The Chinese army will be available in maps set in the Far East theaters while the MEC plays adversary in settings that take place in the Middle East.

Its unique approach to military multiplayer will see a team’s victory rely almost exclusively on every member of a squad working together and executing objectives the same way units are expected to in real life. It is possibly the most realistic game of its kind - and can turn an ordinary night of play into a truly memorable experience.

Graphics and audio are excellent in the game, facilitating truly immersive environments that make the absorbing gameplay even more intense. As a downside, however, both hardware and bandwidth requirements can prove steeper than usual.

Gameplay

BF2 can be played both as a single player or a multiplayer over the web or a LAN. Strangely though, it only comes with one game mode - Conquest (a second mode called Cooperative is exactly the same save for the fact that AI players are allowed). While the lack of a story mode can feel like a step backwards in some way, BF2’s strengths lie in its team play and preference for coordinated action, neither of which are affected by the lack of a compelling linear tale. While the mode is available, this game is hardly enjoyable as a single player title. For the most part, the single player can be used as a way to practice but nothing more.

In Conquest, two teams of up to 32 players each duke it out in a good old battle for supremacy. Victory in the game is played out in tickets and control points, with tickets representing a team’s ability to progress in battle and the control points representing key areas that need to be captured in the map. The army that either captures all control points or depletes all of their opponents’ tickets win the game.

There are seven class types in BF2 - Spec Ops, Sniper, Assault, Support, Engineer, Medic and Anti-Tank - all of which are available in either of the three armies, with a good balance in kits and weapons between each. Players choose a class at the start of the game but can respawn as a new one after dying or change class in the middle of the game (by picking up a weapon or kit identified with the new class). As with the previous Battlefield titles, there are a wide variety of vehicles that players can take control of, including battle tanks, Desert patrol units, helicopters and planes.

Despite the conquest type of battle being fun and immersive, the game can prove severely lacking in sparse servers without sufficient amount of players. When you lack the right number of people to populate the map, it can feel like a game that goes around in circles without anything much getting done.

While in earlier BF games, armies ran around in unorganized battle scenarios, BF2 is set up to be played as several squads serving under a single commander. A 32-player team, for instance, can be split into six squads with one leader each, all under the direction of one commander, turning what would have been a free-for-all melee into a coordinated combat unit.

The commander keeps an eye on the battlefield, endowed with a unique bird’s eye view of the map. They can scan the field for enemy personnel, facilitate intelligence for their squads, fly in supply crates and perform artillery attacks on enemy squads.

A large number of hacks are available right now for BF2 including classic and modern aimbots, including an unique TV Missile Aimbot. Other hacks on offer include chams, wallhacks, warning displays for enemy kits and opponents, a special hack for commanders and more.

Communication

Despite all the game’s highlights, however, BF2’s main gameplay innovation is perhaps the brilliantly-designed voice chat system. The setup is tightly integrated into the game’s concept of commanders and squads, opening the communication lines only within a prescribed hierarchy.

Commanders communicate directly with their squad leaders, issuing orders for carrying out in the field. Squad leaders, in turn, can use one channel to chat with the commander and another one for communication with their team. Squad members can only use the chat system among other members of their crew.

Boosters And Expansions

BF2 has one expansion pack out, Special Forces, which features various updates to the game’s infantry-based combat. The expansion allows for six armed forces that players can use, namely the Navy Seals, Spetsnaz, British SAS, MEC Special Forces, rebels and insurgents. It comes with eight new maps, ten new vehicles and various equipment that can help alter the gameplay considerably.

Two booster packs (add-ons) have also been released, designed to add to the originally gameplay as opposed to being a game on their own, namely Battlefield 2: Euro Force and Battlefield2: Armored Fury. The booster packs adds new maps, weapons, armies, vehicles and objectives and were both released in 2006.

article source

The views expressed on this blog are the opinion of the author and should not be taken as fact.

Leave a Reply