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But although both the squads and Commander added extra depth to a well run server, most public servers are populated by players who have no concept of team work, and just want to randomly run around shooting anything that moves.
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The ability to form squads also took things to another level, as did the appointment of a Commander. It’s fair to say that Battlefield 2 pushed the boundaries of online first person shooter games, and the desire to make it to that next rank, or grab that next medal made gameplay pretty compelling. I loved playing Battlefield 2, but what I didn’t love was constantly being thrown out of servers for no apparent reason, being told that I was running the wrong patch and waiting absolutely ages to get onto a ranked server in the first place. When Battlefield 2 launched on the PC last year it caused quite a stir – partly because it was a truly brilliant multi-player warfare simulation and partly because actually getting it to work could be frustrating, to say the least. ”’Platforms: Xbox 360, Xbox, PS2 – Xbox 360 Version Reviewed.”’
![Modern combat versus mobile controller support](https://cdn1.cdnme.se/5447227/9-3/22_64e61dfde087c31b3e70ff43.png)