《MGS0》登陆X360
《温柔杀手》最新游戏画面cangying发表于 2008-6-22 16:51
故事背景为二战时期,有一名外表柔弱但杀人如麻的同盟国女杀手活跃在敌后。
她既得不到增援也无官方背景,英国政府从来不承认她,
她只能靠自己的一腔热血和矫健的身手在一系列渗透和刺杀行动中全身而退。
该作预计于今年秋季登陆PC及Xbox 360平台。
http://news.mydrivers.com/img/20080621/08470983.jpg
http://news.mydrivers.com/img/20080621/08492485.jpg
http://news.mydrivers.com/img/20080621/08572954.jpg
http://news.mydrivers.com/img/20080621/08480750.jpg
The Boss? The Boss才没这么受:awkward: 其实是meryl的祖先 怎么有个诡异的女忍者?
有调教吗?
从后面看面型很挫 :awkward: 怎么看都像大妈..... 天鹅绒刺客。
根据真事改编。
女主角最后被处刑了。
游戏采用倒叙的方法。 有没有PC版…… 原帖由 skydci 于 2008-6-22 21:26 发表 http://221.130.184.30/images/common/back.gif
天鹅绒刺客。
根据真事改编。
女主角最后被处刑了。
游戏采用倒叙的方法。
处的什么刑?
..
恩,感兴趣了:D..
http://image.com.com/gamespot/images/2008/162/942963_20080611_screen003.jpg:awkward:
more: http://www.gamefaqs.com/console/xbox360/image/942963.html 原帖由 Kuzuryuusen 于 2008-6-22 22:18 发表 http://bbs.saraba1st.com/images/common/back.gif
http://image.com.com/gamespot/images/2008/162/942963_20080611_screen003.jpg
:awkward:
more: http://www.gamefaqs.com/console/xbox360/image/942963.html
邪神再现 看到女主角的正面,对游戏的兴趣顿时少了一大半..... :awkward: 连春哥都不如
看起来FFB的女主人公人设还是成功的 Violette Szabo
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Violette Szabo
June 26, 1921(1921-06-26) – February 5, 1945
Nickname Louise (also: La P\'tite Anglaise)
Place of birth Paris
Place of death Ravensbrück concentration camp, Germany
Allegiance United Kingdom, France
Service/branch Special Operations Executive, FANY
Years of service 1941-1945
Rank Field agent (Courier)
Commands held Salesman
Awards George Cross, MBE, Croix de Guerre
Violette Reine Elizabeth Bushell Szabo, GC (June 26, 1921 – c.February 5, 1945) was a World War II Allied secret agent.
Contents
1 Early life and marriage
2 Training and first mission
3 Second mission
4 Interrogation, torture and execution
5 Awards and honours
6 Book and film of her exploits
7 Violette Szabo museum
8 Videogame
9 References
9.1 Notes
9.2 Bibliography
9.3 See also
9.4 External links
Early life and marriage
Born Violette Bushell in Paris, France to a French mother and an English taxi-driver father, the family moved to London and she attended school in Brixton until the age of 14. At the start of World War II, she was working in Bon Marché department store on the perfume counter.
Violette met Etienne Szabo, a French officer of Hungarian descent, at the Bastille Day parade in London in 1940. They married after a whirlwind 42 day romance. Violette was 19, Etienne was 31. Shortly after the birth of their only child, Tania, Etienne was killed, suffering chest wounds at the Battle of El Alamein in October 1942. Etienne had never seen his daughter. It was Etienne\'s death that made Violette, having already joined the Auxiliary Territorial Service in 1941, decide to offer her services to the Special Operations Executive (SOE).
Training and first mission
After an assessment of her fluency in French and a series of interviews, she was inducted into SOE. She received intensive training in night and daylight navigation, escape and evasion, both Allied and German weapons, unarmed combat, demolitions, explosives, communications and cryptography. A minor accident during parachute training delayed her deployment into the field until 5 April 1944, when she was parachuted into German-occupied France, near Cherbourg.
Code-named \"Louise\", she reorganized a French resistance network that had been smashed by the Germans. She led the new group in sabotaging road and rail bridges. Her wireless reports to SOE headquarters on the local factories producing war materials for the Germans were extremely important in establishing Allied bombing targets. She returned to England by Lysander on 30 April 1944 after an intense but successful first mission.
Second mission
She was sent back to Limoges in France on 7 June 1944, where she coordinated the local Maquis, led by Jacques Dufour, in sabotaging German communication lines.
She was a passenger in a car that raised the suspicions of German troops at an unexpected roadblock. A brief gun battle ensued. Her Maquis minders escaped unscathed in the confusion. Szabo was captured when her ammunition ran out, around mid-day on 10 June 1944, near Salon-la-Tour. Her captors were most likely from the 1st Battalion of the Deutschland Regiment. In R.J. Minney\'s biography, she is described as putting up fierce resistance with her Sten gun, a close range infantry weapon. German documents of the incident record no injuries or casualties to German soldiers.
Interrogation, torture and execution
She was transferred to the custody of the SD in Limoges, where she was interrogated under torture, enduring rape and brutal assaults. She was moved eight times to different locations, including Fresnes prison in Paris, Limoges prison and then in late August 1944, to Ravensbrück concentration camp, where over 92,000 women died. An SOE rescue mission to break her out of the lightly guarded Limoges prison was planned but a mere two hours before the attempt, she was moved to Ravensbruck. There she was forced into hard labour and suffered from malnutrition and exhaustion. She also endured three months at Konigsburg on the Russian Front.
Violette Szabo was executed on or about February 5, 1945 and her body disposed of in the crematorium. She was just 23 years old.
Three other women members of the SOE were also executed at Ravensbrück: Denise Bloch, Cecily Lefort, and Lilian Rolfe. Of the SOE\'s 55 women agents, 13 were to be killed in action or die in the camps.
Awards and honours
Szabo was the second woman to be awarded the George Cross, awarded posthumously on December 17, 1946. The citation was published in the London Gazette and read:
St. James\'s Palace, S.W.1. 17th December, 1946
The KING has been graciously pleased to award the GEORGE CROSS to: —
Violette, Madame SZABO (deceased), Women\'s Transport Service (First Aid Nursing Yeomanry).
Madame Szabo volunteered to undertake a particularly dangerous mission in France. She was parachuted into France in April, 1944, and undertook the task with enthusiasm. In her execution of the delicate researches entailed she showed great presence of mind and astuteness. She was twice arrested by the German security authorities but each time managed to get away. Eventually, however, with other members of her group, she was surrounded by the Gestapo in a house in the south west of France. Resistance appeared hopeless but Madame Szabo, seizing a Sten-gun and as much ammunition as she could carry, barricaded herself in part of the house and, exchanging shot for shot with the enemy, killed or wounded several of them. By constant movement, she avoided being cornered and fought until she dropped exhausted. She was arrested and had to undergo solitary confinement. She was then continuously and atrociously tortured but never by word or deed gave away any of her acquaintances or told the enemy anything of any value. She was ultimately executed. Madame Szabo gave a magnificent example of courage and steadfastness.
The Croix de Guerre was awarded by the French government in 1947 and the Médaille de la Résistance in 1973. As one of the SOE agents who died for the liberation of France, Sub-Lieutenant Szabo is listed on the \"Roll of Honor\" on the Valençay SOE Memorial in the town of Valençay, in the Indre département.
Book and film of her exploits
Her daughter, Tania Szabo, wrote an exhaustive and careful reconstruction of her two missions in 1944 into the then most dangerous areas in France with flashbacks to her growing up. Author Jack Higgins wrote the foreword and US-French radio-operator, Jean-Claude Guiet, who had accompanied her on the mission in the Limousin, wrote the introduction. On November 15, 2007, at the launch of the book, Young Brave and Beautiful, (see Bibliography below) at The Jersey War Tunnels, the Lieutenant Governor of Jersey said of her, \"She\'s an inspiration to those young people today doing the same work with the risk of the same dangers\". Odette Churchill GC said, \"She was the bravest of us all.\"
Her wartime activities in German Occupied France were also dramatised in the film Carve Her Name with Pride, starring Virginia McKenna and based on the 1956 book of the same name by R.J. Minney. During her time as an agent in the SOE, she met Leo Marks, who may have given her what is now thought of as the definitive World War II code-poem The Life That I Have.
Violette Szabo museum
The Violette Szabo GC museum is in a quiet cottage in rural south Herefordshire at \"Cartref\", Tump Lane, Wormelow Tump, Herefordshire, HR2 8HN, England. Tania Szabo attended the museum\'s opening in 2000, as did Virginia McKenna. Leo Marks, various members of SOE, including some who had been involved in Violette\'s missions, and many other representatives of special forces units also attended to pay their respects. It is here that Violette used to visit her English cousins before the war, enjoying walks in the surrounding hills. She also visited the farm while she was recuperating from her ankle injury and between her two missions to France.
The Royal College of Music offers an annual award called Violette Szabo GC Memoriam Prize for pianists who accompany singers. The current holder is James Southall.
Videogame
Publisher Gamecock Media and developer Replay Studios announced that their upcoming videogame Velvet Assassin is based on the exploits of Szabo. Tania Szabo has not been given a copy of the game for review. It has been reported to her that the game is not representative of her mother nor her activities in occupied France. 长的好有正义感... 画面就是渣系列
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