Advance Wars 1+2: Re-Boot Camp is a faithful remake of the originals, with some healthy modern tweaks. While the game ostensibly controls, feels, and sounds like the original in many ways, it has provided some much-needed adjustments to how the game is played. One such change is in how you obtain unlockables in Advance Wars 1+2: Re-Boot Camp as opposed to the Game Boy Advance originals. But it’s still potentially unclear for newcomers to the series.
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Much like in the original, you mostly need to complete all Campaign missions in Advance Wars 1+2 in order to get the corresponding unlockables you can buy at Hachi’s Shop. To purchase them, you use the funds you get from winning battles, with prices typically ranging from 100-300 for most things like bonus maps and music, to 900+ for Commanding Officers (COs) to use in the game.
CO | Conditions to Unlock in Hachi’s Shop |
---|---|
Grit | Complete Mission 10 (Advance Wars 1) |
Kanbei | Complete Mission 14 (AW1) |
Sonja | Complete Mission 17 (AW1) |
Eagle | Complete Mission 20 (AW1) |
Drake | Complete Mission 21 (AW1) |
Clone Andy | Complete Mission 24 (AW1) |
Nell | Complete AW1 with 100% Completion |
Flak | Complete Mission 8 in Advance Wars 2 |
Colin | Complete Mission 14 (AW2) |
Lash | Complete Mission 16 (AW2) |
Sensei | Complete Mission 23 (AW2) |
Adder | Complete Mission 24 (AW2) |
Jess | Complete Mission 31 (AW2) |
Hawke | Complete Mission 32 (AW2) |
Sturm | Complete Mission 34 (AW2) |
Hachi | Complete AW2 with 100% Completion |
Additionally, while completing the campaign of both games with 100% gets you these COs, you’ll get a plethora of added features such as maps, gallery art, and alternate colors for your characters. The game essentially incentivizes you with playable rewards forThis allows you to play as your favorite COs and command their awesome CO powers, as long as you stop by Hachi’s Shop to unlock them after completing the game.
One of the most notable unlockables for Advance Wars 1+2: Re-Boot Camp is the Challenge Campaign unlockable when you complete the game’s campaigns, which are actually entirely separate campaigns to play through. While it costs a paltry fee in the game, Hachi jokes about its low price and that it’s actually on the house, complimentary for beating the game.
Essentially, if you beat the game and everything it has to offer, it rewards you with more content. For players of the original, this might be a familiar sensation, before the time of live service games or DLC, so it feels like an actual complete game from the old days, just saying. It was well worth the extra time we had to wait.
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