Depressingly, the game was developed by a company on the south-coast of England.
About the Game
Venezuela is left in a state of civil war after the government was brutally overthrown by a military coup. With factions fighting to reinstate democracy, the U.S. government has offered their assistance, though the new government regime has threatened to deploy nuclear weapons if the U.S. meddles in Venezuelan affairs. The threat needs to be neutralized, and the U.S can’t risk nuclear war.
The CIA Special Activities Division operates in isolation and secrecy. If captured, any link with the U.S. Government will be denied.
Conflict: Denied Ops is a highly accessible co-op FPS featuring massive, extremely explosive firefights across destructible environments. Work as a team to utilize the specific skills of each operative and experience the ultimate in destructive satisfaction with tons of exploding objects and an endless barrage of terrorists who are begging to be blown to hell.
- Two-Man Tactics – Switch between team members at any time in single-player mode for maximum control, or have a friend join your game through either online, system link or split-screen.
- Explode Your Enemies – Levels are built around massive fire fights with a continuous stream of enemies, and tons of exploding objects littered around the level to help your cause.
- Destroy Everything – Obliterate your enemies with explosions, demolish buildings, blow through walls and destroy almost anything in the environment.
- Accessible Action – In single-player mode, give commands to your team mate simply by pressing or holding a single button. Concentrate on the action, not complicated menus or control schemes.
- Puncture-Tech™ – Utilize strategic destruction made possible with new Puncture-Tech™ technology developed by Pivotal Studios. Blast open new pathways, shoot unaware enemies through walls, or create holes in your cover to generate firing paths.
ALL FOR $49.95





3 responses so far ↓
1 Matt Cole // Feb 23, 2008 at 9:33 am
Not this one again…..
1) First off, its a shit game. Its even shit for a very generic release. Everyone who would play this is playing Call of Duty 4. About 5 people are going to play it. It has the shelf life of Yogurt without a fridge.
2) The fact that only a few games have been set in a state which is a) close to the US, b) its leader spends most of its time saying ‘the US is going to invade us’, is the actual miracle, not that someone would even DARE suggest Chavez may be a gravy boat short of a dinner set.
3) Why all the furore over Venezuela, when in the past year we have had hordes set in the middle east, and even Cheynobyl? I really don’t see why the setting is more ‘radical’ and ‘controversal’ for the guardian/daily mail than those.
In short, stop giving a bad game exposure because of its ’scandelous’ setting!
(Hits Nads with the Naughty stick, repeatedly :D)
2 Naadir Jeewa // Feb 23, 2008 at 12:42 pm
I didn’t realise the Guardian and Daily Mail picked up on it.
I turn on Steam and that flashes in my face.
I get annoyed.
I write blog post.
What I’m trying to say to Valve is, “Don’t flash stupid game ads in my face.”
3 Matt Cole // Feb 24, 2008 at 4:27 pm
I know I know, I actually find steam a bit tacky these days. So much for it being a life line for indie gamers….
Talking about indie games, I’m totally addicted ‘Sins of a Solar Empire’ by a company called IronClad. It’s awesome. Ok, takes four fours for the smallest skirmish, but I can’t remember such an easy to play yet deep strategy game being released for aaaggggeesss.
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