
The most aggravating is you're forced to play through long stretches until the game decides that you've played enough for it to auto-save. It's a console game ported over to the PC, and as such, you are stuck with some of the usual console design quirks. The problem is that Fire Warrior really isn't a computer game at all.

However, Fire Warrior, THQ's Warhammer 40K first-person shooter, is one of the weakest Warhammer computer games to date. From fantasy games like Dark Omen and Shadow of the Horned Rat, to sci-fi titles such as Space Hulk, Chaos Gate, and Rites of War, the license has been put to fair use over the years. Several games have used Games Workshop's popular Warhammer universe as its setting. Warhammer 40,000 takes place during a single day of Kais' life, so time is important and players will have to muster their resources carefully to succeed. Kais can choose from 15 different weapons, and he'll need them all for the deadly enemies he encounters. Players take control of Kais, a young Tau warrior who must battle against war machines, artillery, starships, and other agencies of the Imperium.

Warhammer 40,000: Fire Warrior presents the 41st century, a dark age dominated by the sinister forces of the Imperium.
