
Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon is set in Eastern Europe in 2008, as war erupts along the borders of Russia and the fate of the world hangs in the balance. That's when the call goes out for the Ghosts, an elite handful of specially trained Green Berets equipped with the latest technology and drilled to wield the deadliest weapons available.
Their mission is to spearhead the way for a NATO peacekeeping force and keep the escalating conflict contained before it spirals out of control, quite literally, into something far more catastrophic. The stakes are enormous, and the Ghosts must operate at the sharp edge of a crisis that threatens to engulf the region and beyond.
As a tactical action title on PC, Ghost Recon places the emphasis on this small, highly capable unit and the pressure of holding the line in hostile territory. Rather than throwing overwhelming force at the problem, it asks you to lead a compact team of specialists whose training, technology, and precision are all that stand between a manageable conflict and a wider war. The tension of that responsibility drives the experience, casting you as the tip of the spear in a fight to prevent disaster before it detonates.