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The game, like its predecessors, is mostly a third-person shooter and has players fight various types of AI enemies in both single-player and multiplayer modes. Unlike its predecessors, Dark of the Moon features a single linear campaign rather than one for each faction, with players changing between the Autobots' and the Decepticons' perspective between levels.
Ironhide may refer to: Ironhide, a fictional character from the Transformers science fiction robot media franchise; see List of The Transformers (TV series) characters; The Transformers: Ironhide, a comic book published by IDW from the Transformers science fiction robot media franchise; Ironhide Game Studio, a videogame studio software company
Old Ways Artist: Don Figeuroa In the aftermath of the battle with the Decepticons, Ironhide and Optimus Prime reflect on their long, rocky relationship: in the early days of the war, Ironhide voices his feelings on the inexperienced Autobot soldiers and Prime's own inexperience as a military leader, and Optimus asks him how to be a better leader rather than disciplining him.
This category lists video games developed by Ironhide Game Studio. Pages in category "Ironhide Game Studio games" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total.
Ironhide 1980 Nissan Vanette: More Than Meets the Eye (Part 1) The Transformers: The Movie (Killed by Megatron offscreen with a point-blank blast to the head from his fusion cannon) Peter Cullen Dead "Go chew on a microchip," is Ironhide's slogan. Prefers action to words. Oldest, toughest, [12] most battle-tested Autobot. Bodyguard to Optimus ...
Transformers: Rise of the Dark Spark is a video game based on the Transformers franchise, developed by Edge of Reality and WayForward, and published by Activision.It is the third and final entry in the Cybertron series, following War for Cybertron and Fall of Cybertron, and acts as a spin-off and crossover with the live-action Transformers films. [1]
Like the console version, the central focus of the two DS games is a linear campaign of missions, following basically the same story, split in two parts. Additionally, there is an Arena mode with five "arenas", each with six missions available, four bonus levels from the opposing game, and seven multiplayer levels.
All versions of the game were published by Activision, and released on June 23, 2009 in the United States. Australia received the games one day later, and Europe on June 26. A sequel, Transformers: Dark of the Moon, was released in June 2011, based on the film on the same name.