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Released in 2004 by 3DO and developed by DC Studios, Turf Wars arrived at a strange time. The GBA was saturated with ports of SNES classics and ambitious 3D experiments that ran at 15 frames per second. But here was a game that knew exactly what it was: an isometric, run-and-gun shooter where the most dangerous thing you could step on wasn't a landmine, but a stray pencil.

Today, Army Men Advance 2: Turf Wars sits in the dusty bargain bin of gaming history. The 3DO company is long gone. The Army Men franchise has been MIA for nearly two decades. But for a kid with a Game Boy Advance SP in the back of a minivan, this game was a pocket-sized sandbox of destruction.

What makes Turf Wars surprisingly tense is the fragility. You are a one-inch-tall toy. A single direct hit from a mortar or a rogue drop of molten plastic from a blown-up lamp will annihilate you. There are no regenerating health bars here. You find a green ration pack (which looks suspiciously like a lump of Play-Doh) and you keep moving.

The titular Turf Wars mechanic is where the game tries to stand out. Unlike a standard linear shooter, each level has "control points." You don’t just need to kill the Tans; you need to stand on their side of the garden gnome long enough to raise your flag. This turns the game into a constant push-pull. You can clear a room of enemies, but if you don’t physically stand in the corner by the discarded AA battery, the Tan forces will respawn and take it back.

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