Link
I'd recommend it, it's a more fun "what-if" war, but I can understand why some people won't like this game too.
Anyway, if you don't know it yet, give it a look.
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Ha haha. Unless I'm incredibly mistaken and the past three years of my life have been lies, both L4Ds use the Source engine (Albeit an updated version) and unless they specifically tweaked Day of Defeat's engine to look identical to L4D(2?)'s engine, it uses that as well.Marth8880 wrote:It's using the Source engine from Day of Defeat: Source, not Left 4 Dead; if I am correct, which I am almost positive I am, Left 4 Dead doesn't use the Source engine.

Marth8880 wrote:if I am correct, which I am almost positive I am, Left 4 Dead doesn't use the Source engine.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Source_engineLeft 4 Dead uses the latest version of Valve's Source engine
Source is a 3D game engine developed by Valve Corporation. It debuted in June 2004 with Counter-Strike: Source and shortly thereafter Half-Life 2. Other notable games using the engine include first-person shooters Day of Defeat: Source, Left 4 Dead and Team Fortress 2, the physics sandbox Garry's Mod, first-person action RPG games Vampire: The Masquerade - Bloodlines and Dark Messiah of Might and Magic and Dino D-Day, the first-person puzzle games Portal & Portal 2, first-person beat-em-up Zeno Clash and the MMORPG Vindictus developed by NEXON.

