The American battle starts with Private Martin, a recently enrolled individual from the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, finishing essential preparing at Camp Toccoa in Georgia, United States, on August 9, 1942. A short time later, the activity movements to June 6, 1944, with Martin compelled to embrace a performance mission to set up an arrival zone for officers partaking in Operation Overlord. Under overwhelming flame, the paratroopers are scattered, leaving Martin in a blended unit shaped from different organizations. The mission closes with Martin and his partners grabbing an adjacent town from German strengths. In the second mission, Martin and his unit are sent to drive out the rest of the Germans from Sainte-Mère-Église and handicap a few Flakpanzers (hostile to flying machine tanks) as the occasions of June 6 start (D-Day). A paratrooper is seen swinging from the town church (see Private John Steele). The third mission happens later that morning, with U.S. strengths battling off a German counterattack. The fourth mission has Martin, Pvt. Senior and Sgt. Grumpy driving from Sainte-Mère-Église to Sainte-Marie-du-Mont along parkway N13 to convey an essential message, while fighting off German attacks. The fifth mission, the Brécourt Manor Assault, happens on the night of June 6, with Martin's unit wrecking German big guns positions assaulting the arrival compel at Utah Beach. After the mission, Martin discovers that he has been alloted to a few mystery missions because of his experience and administration capacities. The main happens in the 6th mission, with Martin directing an assault on a mystery German jail in the storm cellar of an Austrian estate to safeguard two British officers, Captain Price and Major Ingram. He then gains from Price that Ingram had as of now been moved to a more secure POW camp for cross examination. Hence, the seventh mission has Martin, joined by Price, invading the camp and protecting Ingram in less than ten minutes before the landing of German fortifications.
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