"Tunisia": KS 750 Squad
DLC for Enlisted
Details
- Release date:
- Xbox One, Xbox X|S
September 7, 2021 - PS4
November 25, 2021
- Xbox One, Xbox X|S
- Genre: Action, Adventure, Shooter, Simulation
- Developer: Darkflow Software
- Publisher: Gaijin Distribution KFT
- ESRB Rating: Mature
Current prices
|
Xbox X|S / Xbox One
Digital |
Unavailable
|
Price history
All time low | ||
Xbox X|S / Xbox One | $34.99 | |
PS4 | $17.49 | (-50%) |
Description
This bundle includes:
- KS 750 motorcycle equipped with a machine gun MG 34.
- A premium squad of 1st Grenadier Regiment "Hermann Göring" of the 1st Fallschirm-Panzer Division "Hermann Göring" for the Wermacht forces in Tunisia campaign.
- Soldiers are equipped with a MP-40 submachine gun, a Walther PP gun and an explosive pack;
- 300 Gold.
The premium squad, the soldiers in it, and weapons all have maximum level immediately upon purchase. Premium units receive + 100% experience gain in battles.
Enlisted is a squad-based first person MMO shooter covering key battles from World War II. The game carefully recreates weapons, military vehicles and the atmosphere of that era, while demonstrating really massive clashes of numerous soldiers, tanks and aircraft with artillery and naval support.
Features:
– Epic battles that look as massive as the historical battles, like the Normandy Invasion. Players assume the roles of an infantry squad or a tank crew commander or an aircraft pilot.
– High input of each player in the team victory: despite the massiveness of the battles, the result is significantly defined by the performance of each player.
– 10+ distinctive squad classes like assault, sniper, heavy gun, mortar, flamethrower, anti-tank, engineer, radio specialists, tank crews, aircraft pilots and others.
– Hundreds of weapons, ground vehicles and aircraft types. Each of them is based on a real model used in the specific historical campaign of World War II.
– A player can customize and train squads according to their individual playing style, unlock perks and upgrades as long as this does not contradict the historical accuracy principle.