On the October 16, 2007, the game was refused classification by Australia's federal classification board, the Office of Film & Literature Classification(OFLC).[7] This effectively banned the game throughout Australia as video games which have been refused OFLC classification cannot be sold, advertised or imported. Activision modified the game to meet OFLC standards and it was re-classified with an MA15+ rating. This version does not include radical violence; dismemberment has been completely removed.[8] [9] Activision released the modified game in Australia on February 28, 2008.[3]
Germany
Soldier of Fortune: Payback was banned in Germany, due to its incredible amount of violence.
Multiplayer
Up to 12 players can play online for the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 and PC. Multiplayer has only five maps and game modes available, such as Deathmatch, Team Deathmatch, Capture the Flag, Demolition and Elimination.
Reception
The game was met with mostly poor reviews.
Jason Ocampo of gamespot.com[10] scored it a 4.5/10. He claimed that "This shooter is a painful exercise in pattern memorization plus frustrating trial-and-error gameplay." Ocampo complained that the game suffered from "Terrible, frustrating, painful gameplay," that it "Falls well below standard set by previous two games" and had "Lousy artificial intelligence and gunplay." On the positive side, he said it "looks pretty."
Jay Frechette of 1up.com[11] comically quipped that the game was more like "Soldier of Welfare." He scored the game a 5.5/10. Frechette said "Soldier of Fortune doesn't cross the line of being a bad game, but it hardly ever breaks the surface of mediocrity either."
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