Well maybe not colourful, but wacky and fun definitely played an important part of Ra1. If EA wants to attract people with sexy girls then they should create a civilian character (such as reporter like in the ending scene of C&C TD).įrom the original consept was supposed to be as wacky and colourful and fun as possibleyes, red alert 1 was all about this now wasn't it? As a long time C&C fan, I hate to see my militaristic strategy game turned into such thing. Do you ever see any female officer wearing a miniskirt that seems almost she was wearing an underwear or as if she is clad with no bra uniform? EA is making this particular war game into a celebrity show to attract more people and it's insane. They want them to be sexy and not disciplined, thus loosing realistic trait to the series. Now, RA3 has brought girls together with unrealistic costumes (for military officer). RA2 has lost a bit of realistic trait when come to Tanya (I don't mind to have pretty girl casting as Tanya but at least she should be make up to look more like she'd been through dirty warfare and her costume should seem more armor-liked). RA1 seems the most realistic war time trait. The ACT had four more cases.So far, Red Alert 3 costumes and casting have turned a war game into a celebrity show. Victoria recorded 1179 additional cases and six more deaths. Meanwhile, three people have been caught in the Northern Territory accused of breaking out of the Howard Springs quarantine facility early on Wednesday. NSW has increased fines for people who fail to comply with quarantine and testing requirements from $1000 to $5000. The state on Wednesday reported 251 new infections. It is likely a man who returned to Sydney from Africa has the Omicron variant, which would take NSW's tally to six. Returning Australians from southern African countries need to quarantine for two weeks while non-citizens from that part of the world are banned.
"Whatever the medical advice tells us we need to do to keep Australians safe, we should do." In the meantime, international arrivals into NSW, Victoria and the ACT must quarantine for 72 hours. People are so tired of the lockdowns and the restrictions," she told ABC radio. "We need to do everything we can as a country to avoid that sort of social and economic hit. Wear your mask when you are shopping." Labor frontbencher Tanya Plibersek said no one wanted to see a return to widespread lockdowns. You don't want to get sick over the holidays. "I would advise that you just be highly cautious. "We don't know, of course, whether it gets around things like vaccine efficacy and let's hope it doesn't. "We should be on high alert because there are many things we still don't know about this particular mutation," she told the Nine Network. UNSW epidemiologist Mary-Louise McLaws urged caution over the next fortnight while more information emerged. "We must hold our nerve and cool heads must prevail," he said. Treasurer Josh Frydenberg said Omicron was not the first and would likely not be the last mutation. There was insufficient evidence showing vaccines and treatments were less effective against Omicron. "If that proves to be true, that's a major game change in the pandemic more broadly," Mr Morrison told reporters on Wednesday. But early indications show the new strain causes a milder form of illness. Omicron appears to be more transmissible than the Delta variant. A two-week delay of Australia's reopening to international students and visa holders will be used to gather more information about the variant and vaccine efficacy. No immediate changes to domestic rules are on the cards following an urgent meeting of national cabinet with Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Tuesday. States and territories are taking a wait and see approach to domestic COVID-19 restrictions until more is known about vaccine protection against the Omicron mutation.