
The artistic take on the grim reality of the Second World War also extends into some of the 18 sizable single-player missions that make up Blazing Angels’ main content. Most are also fitted with semi-fictitious WWII weaponry, such as homing missiles, which clearly weren’t in everyday use in the famous dogfights of WWII. Perhaps in response to this, one of the most noteworthy additions to the second release in the series is the option to unlock, upgrade and fly a fairly substantial list of prototype aircraft loosely themed on unrealised designs of the era, with super-responsive handling and agility. In opting to focuses on military technology that was cutting edge sometime before rock ‘n’ roll hit the charts, the first Blazing Angels felt a little sluggish and unwieldy. The game’s predecessor was a fairly mediocre release, which was dogged by its own choice of theme. Before the genre-leading beast that is Ace Combat arrives on the Xbox 360 later this year, another aeronautical sequel has landed in the form of Blazing Angels 2: Secret Missions of World War II.
