The console versions' multiplayer revolves around securing flags and bunkers. The flag is usually in the center of the map. Bunkers are positioned around the map, and spawn either Soviet soldiers or American freedom fighters. A game can host up to four players via split-screen who may choose between the Soviet and American sides. Each side has a different set of weapons which the players can switch during battle. The players' charisma meters are set to eight, so each player can have a maximum of eight soldiers under their command; however, if it is a four-player battle, each player can control a maximum of four soldiers. The PC version does not support multiplayer.[5]
Freedom Fighters 2 Free Download Full Version
go to the games file and go to freedom..the one that says configuration settings as the type..look for resolution and mine worked on 640480..this solution worked for me..i couldnt find the freedom.ini and i thought it was missing a file but its just freedom and it should say config setting on the side
Freedom Fighter 2 is a free windows shooter action game. Freedom fighters 2 free download full version for pc freedom fighter was published and released by EA Electronic arts PC Games. Freedom fighter 2 was developed for multiple platforms for windows, Xbox, Play station the game has two modes you can choose to play from either you can play single player or you can play multi player online with friends or with other players you need a good internet fast connection to play online without any problems Freedom fighters has different objectives in the game you need to play and complete them to reach the next level of the game and clear all the rounds. The game has some very awesome graphics it has a very high resolution support core engine the game has high quality graphic details and motion blur color graphics and has high quality sound effects and day and night sky looks very original in colors effects and sounds and visuals.Freedom Fighters Soldiers of Liberty 2 -New!Freedom Fighter 1Hitman 3 ContractsGameplay and Overview of Freedom Fighters 2Freedom fighter 2 is a very challenging game it challenges the player to complete many different challenges you need to complete you need to take training before you can go in real missions in the game you are also given training to hold a gun shoot with different types of guns and hold how to run with a gun and aim with it you have to pass different objectives after learning all these training's you are now free to go in the busy warfare of the game and fight with other enemy forces to win over your land back and put your flag up again and win the warfare you have also body armor on you that saves your life sometimes in the war but you still need to defend yourself from enemy gun shots and enemy helicopters tanks and enemy vehicles and RPG machine guns there are also famous guns in the game like AK 47 and many different others. All the missions in the game are held in Russia against the Soviet Union the Russian army.System Requirements and Download:CPU: Intel Pentium 4 Or HighRAM:1GBHDD:5GBVGA:128 MB Nvidia, ATIOS: Win XP,7,8, Vista
You have played many action games till now. But, have you ever played a patriotic game? The whole concept turns out to be a very new thing right? To date, we have read about freedom fighters, watched movies on freedom fighters; but this is the time, to play an awesome game based on the freedom fighters. Players who are into adventure and action, Freedom Fighters can twist your experience of gameplay to date. Be excited; because you are going to be part of a patriotic journey and it all starts from the virtual city of New York.
Thank you all very much, and welcome to the White House. I often like to start this sort of an event with a joke or an anecdote, but somehow I don't think that's appropriate today. The issue we're here to discuss is perhaps one of the most serious we'll have to face and make a decision on. As you know, Congress will be voting soon on continued aid to the democratic resistance forces in Nicaragua, the contras, as they call them, or freedom fighters, as I call them. And if aid doesn't pass, those in Congress who oppose aid to the freedom fighters have made it very plain that they will not allow another vote on this issue to come to the floor. We're at a critical juncture: If Congress votes down aid this time, the decision may well be irrevocable. And if that happens, it's my great fear that we will have abandoned all hope for democracy in Nicaragua and peace in Central America.
We welcome the Sandinistas' new promises to abide by the peace plan, and we must hold them to their word. We must make sure that each time the Sandinistas walk through a new door toward democracy we close it behind them -- and keep it closed. Only the freedom fighters can do that, only they can be our insurance policy for democracy in Central America. Some say that the freedom fighters are not necessary to keep the pressure on, that the spotlight of world opinion and the Sandinistas' sworn commitment to the Guatemala accord are enough. Well, perhaps it's worth reviewing the historical record to see just how much faith we can put in Sandinista promises.
As I pointed out in my recent address to the Organization of American States, we already have a negotiated settlement with the Sandinistas -- the settlement of 1979 -- in which the United States, together with the other members of the OAS, took the unprecedented action of withdrawing recognition from a sitting government -- the Somoza government -- and helped bring the Sandinistas to power. As part of that settlement, the Sandinistas promised -- and I'm citing from documents signed by the Sandinistas -- "free elections, a broad-based democratic government, full guarantee of human rights, fundamental liberties, freedom of religion, union rights, a mixed economy, an independent foreign policy of nonalignment, and a minimum permanent military corps.''
The Sandinistas and their supporters say it was the belligerence of the United States that forced them to go back on their promises, just as they now put all of the blame for their shortcomings on the freedom fighters. But again, let's examine the historical record. Only a day after the Sandinistas finished meeting secretly to draft the 72-hour document, President Carter received Daniel Ortega in the White House and offered his new government our friendship and help. But while we sent the Sandinistas over $100 million in aid -- more than any other country -- and arranged for hundreds of millions of dollars of loans, the Sandinistas were busy carrying out their plans to eliminate human rights and impose a Marxist totalitarian regime in Nicaragua.
I could go on to detail the systematic crushing of all human rights, the torture of dissidents, and the swelling population of political prisoners, the tragedy of hundreds of thousands of Nicaraguan refugees flooding into Costa Rica and Honduras nearly -- 1 out of every 10 Nicaraguans is now a refugee. But the record of Sandinista totalitarianism is well known by now. The human destruction of communism on the American mainland is well documented and acknowledged by all sides in this debate. My purpose here is to ask a simple question: How can we expect a regime that has compiled such a history of broken promises, of outright deceit, to abide by the terms of the Guatemala accord unless we keep up the pressure by continuing to aid the freedom fighters?
Now the Sandinistas have made more promises. We welcome their promises to lift the state of siege, meet face-to-face with freedom fighters, hold local elections, and release some political prisoners; and we must hold them to those promises. But these limited steps, which still do not bring them into compliance with the Guatemala accord, were taken with extreme reluctance and only after the Sandinistas had been told by certain U.S. Congressmen that failure to do so would result in renewed aid for the freedom fighters.
Was there ever a better argument for aid? It's only the freedom fighters, and the pressure they've brought to bear on the Sandinistas, that has brought us this far. It's only the freedom fighters that can push the Sandinistas so far down the road to democracy that they never go back. The fact is that even if they carry out the steps they've announced, the Sandinistas are still a long way from compliance with the Guatemala accord.
Those who want to cut off funding for the freedom fighters are going to have to explain how Daniel Ortega doesn't really mean what he says. They're going to have to explain that the Sandinistas don't really mean what they say when they talk of turning all of Central America into one ``revolutionary fire'' and boasting of carrying their fight into Latin America and Mexico. Because right now, what stands between the Sandinistas and their stated intentions, what stands in the way of a Soviet base camp in Central America, are the Nicaraguan freedom fighters. It's clear that it's the freedom fighters, and only the freedom fighters, that have brought the Sandinistas to the negotiating table and have wrung from them the limited reforms they've made. Without the freedom fighters, the hope of democracy in Nicaragua would be lost. The consolidation of totalitarian power would be complete, and the Soviets would have already succeeded in establishing another Cuba -- this time on the American mainland.
The Soviets have made their choice. They and their allies have poured billions of dollars of military aid into Nicaragua, at least 20 times more than the United States Congress has given to the forces of the democratic resistance. Next month the American Congress and the American people will have to make their choice, too. As I said, this is the moment of truth, the make-or-break vote on the freedom fighters. If we abandon them now, if Congress votes down aid, we will be abandoning the only real cause for peace and freedom in Nicaragua. We will be consigning the peace process to an obscure footnote in history and handing the Soviet Union one of its greatest strategic victories since World War II. 2ff7e9595c
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