SWAT 4 is a first-person shooter computer game developed by Irrational Games and released by Vivendi Universal on April 5, 2005. It was built on Irrational Games's Vengeance engine powered by Unreal Engine 2.0 technology. SWAT 4 puts the player into the role of a SWAT team leader where he commands four other team members to resolve various situations, such as hostage standoffs or apprehensions of dangerous subjects. An expansion to SWAT 4, entitled The Stetchkov Syndicate, was released on February 28, 2006.
SWAT 4 features a single-player campaign where the player has to take his SWAT team through a number of missions. The missions are not related and there is no overarching storyline. The game aims to have gameplay similar to the real SWAT team experience, for example, it encourages the use of non-lethal weapons to subdue and arrest the suspects rather than shooting them dead. On the higher difficulty levels, it is impossible to progress to the next mission if the current one is not done well, such as suspects getting killed instead of arrested or other team members getting shot.
The player is the leader in a five-man SWAT team, which consists of him and four other men that can be split into two teams of two (called red and blue). The player does not assume direct control over the other officers, however, he can issue them orders such as guard an opening, entering and clearing a room (while at the same time using assorted grenades), handcuff suspects, and so on.
All missions start with a pre-mission briefing which describes the situation and gives whatever details are available on the subjects and/or hostage(s) or other civilians. The briefing also identifies mission goals, which typically are to secure (arrest or kill) all suspects and rescue the hostages or other civilians. Mission objectives are not limited to these, however. After the briefing, the player can choose equipment for himself and the other four officers, for some missions choose an entry point, and then the mission starts.
Usually the player then tries to resolve the situation in such a way as to arrest all the suspects, rescue all the civilians, and secure all the weapons - if that is done and no one is injured in the process, the mission is completed with a perfect score. The missions have very different suspects. Some are poorly armed and unarmored, and these are easy to arrest with the use of no or only non-lethal weaponry. Suspects in the later missions, however, include ones with fully automatic weapons such as AK-47s. Suspects may also be better protected by things such as gasmasks and full body armor. If it is not possible to arrest a suspect, then the team is forced to kill or "neutralize" the suspect.
SWAT 4 also has the concept of authorized and unauthorized use of weapons. Most situations require the officers to give the suspect a warning and ask him to surrender. Shooting without warning is considered unauthorized use of force or deadly force (depending on whether you injure the suspect or kill him) and has a significant point penalty for the mission. Shooting without warning is allowed if the suspect is pointing his weapon at a hostage or a SWAT team member or if he opens fire first. Suspect reactions to warnings differ - some may attempt to hide and set up and ambush, some immediately surender, others will flee and some will open fire. If a hostage is killed, it results in immediate mission failure.
Mission sequence
The SWAT team has various equipment, selected before the mission, available for use. Each officer can carry a primary and a secondary weapon, a number of grenades, an optiwand (a technically advanced version of a mirror on a stick) that makes it possible to see behind corners and doors, a toolkit that can unlock doors or defuse bombs, door wedges that can block a door completely, pepper spray, and either C2 explosives or a breaching shotgun for breaching locked doors. One officer can't carry all of these, so the player has to choose which equipment to use and which to leave out for a specific mission. Primary weapons can be powerful lethal guns (such as the M4A1 carbine or a pump-action shotgun) or non-lethal - a shotgun loaded with beanbags or a special paintball gun loaded with OC paintballs. Secondary weapons are either handguns or a taser.
Of special importance are various grenades. Having the team run into a room with suspects will usually result in failure, so the grenades have to be used to render the suspects less capable of attacking. There are three types of grenades: flashbang - blinds suspects for a while, can also blind you-, CS gas grenades - renders the suspects helpless for a while, less useful outdoors or in ventilated rooms, useless versus people with gasmasks (thus also has no effect on SWAT officers) - and stinger grenades - explode with small rubber balls, the grenade makes everyone near the explosion dizzy. Using grenades as well as pepper spray or tasers can help to make subjects compliant - that is, make them surrender.
Also, it should be noted that characters in SWAT 4 can not take a lot of damage. Even though the SWAT officers are equipped with armor, they can be easily incapacitated. As in reality, if an officer is shot in the head by a suspect, they are automatically incapacitated. If the player is incapacitated, the mission ends. Officers that are wounded but not dead suffer penalties based on where they're wounded - a shot to the legs makes them much slower, a shot to the arms reduces precision dramatically, and so on.
SWAT 4 also features several multiplayer game modes, all of which are team-based: SWAT versus Suspects. The multiplayer modes are:
The weapons available in SWAT 4 are:
Also, for all the guns, it is possible to choose between standard hollow point ammunition (which is better suited for those enemies in Light Armour as it has quite good stopping power),and full metal jacket ammo, which provides better penetration and is advised for usage against heavy armored targets. It is advised not to use FMJ ammunition against those with Light Armor as there is a chance that it may go through the one wearing it and hit someone behind, who may be a civilian.
2005 computer and video games | First-person shooters | Sierra games | Windows games | Computer and video games featuring cooperative gameplay