

Head into combat on foot, drive armored vehicles, or take to the skies in helicopters and jets. From expansive cities to rolling hills, whether steamrolling your tank across the dusty plains, flying a transport helicopter over the dense forests, or waging asymmetric warfare from the rocky hills, the islands of Altis and Stratis are dynamic worlds, which lend themselves to the most varied engagements in gaming. Key Features in Arma 3ĭefeat your enemy on a richly detailed, open-world battlefield – stretching over 290 km² of Mediterranean island terrain. Authentic, diverse, open – Arma 3 sends you to war. Deploying a wide variety of single- and multiplayer content, over 20 vehicles and 40 weapons, and limitless opportunities for content creation, this is the PC’s premier military game.

"We are very intensely working on this matter from all possible angles.”Īn ongoing fan campaign has called for the pair's release.Experience true combat gameplay in a massive military sandbox. “We cannot agree with the statement ," a foreign ministry spokesman said.

The families of the men are now escalating the matter to the Czech president and prime minister after claiming their country's foreign Ministry has not done enough to help. "After the court's decision we only hear from them something that no parent ever wants to hear: Mom, dad, please save us." “Our boys no longer tell us on the phone that it's alright, that they're handling it," one of their mothers' said.

“They're in a cell with over 25 people, they sleep on the ground," Miloslav Buchta, father of Ivan, said. The pair have previously spoken from captivity and said conditions left a lot to be desired. Developer Bohemia Interactive has claimed the pair were simply in the country on holiday. The military shooter ArmA 3 is set on the island where the pair were arrested. The duo have been made to wait weeks longer than normal to hear their appeal verdict due to a strike affecting the Greek legal system.īuchta and Pezlar are accused of spying on Greek military installations. The two men have been refused bail and now must be tried in front of a Greek court, Czech news site Rozhlas reports (thanks, ). Held for 70 days behind bars in a Greek cell, ArmA 3 developers Ivan Buchta and Martin Pezlar have now been denied an appeal against their charges of espionage.
