Special Strike Operations and the door-side wave defense
Special Strike Operations puts you on a fixed firing point where soldiers rush the house entrances, so you have to cover the doors, manage a pistol that reloads often, and keep a ring of defense alive as each wave gets harder.
As a shooter, it is built around quick aim, close-range pressure, and weapon upgrades after every successful raid.
FPS Assault Shooter feels close because both games use fast firefights and weapon swaps to hold a position under pressure.
Rebel forces is another fit, since it also sends enemy squads straight at your line.
Weapons matter from the opening minutes, because the starting pistol only carries you so far before better firepower enters the rotation.
Movement, aim, and reload timing
- WASD moves you around the room so you can shift between doorways and corners.
- LMB fires at targets the moment they appear in range.
- Mouse wheel changes weapons, while R reloads before the next push arrives.
- Space jumps, C crouches, and P pauses the action when you need a break.
Each cleared raid rewards you with stronger gear, so a longer run changes the pace from pistol work to heavier weapon management. Because enemies keep coming through the same entrances, you learn where to hold, when to reload, and when to switch tools before the next push.
Defense is the core of the loop, because the mission is to stop enemies from getting too close and keep your position intact.
Survival comes from clean reloads, steady tracking, and staying alive long enough to unlock stronger weapons after each raid.
You can play it in your browser with no download or signup, so the whole firefight starts fast and fits a quick break.
Platform
Browser Desktop , Mobile and Tablet
Release
12 february 2022
Last Update
12 february 2022