If you want to avoid the ISO hassle entirely:
Title: A Gritty, Flawed Bridge Between Eras – Medal of Honor (2010) PC Review
Platform: PC (ISO / Disc-based version) Developer: Danger Close (Single-player) / DICE (Multiplayer) Score: 6.5/10 Medal Of Honor 2010 Pc Iso
Introduction After years of WWII shooters, the Medal of Honor franchise desperately needed a facelift. The 2010 reboot ditches the Nazi-occupied beaches for the dusty mountains of Afghanistan. The question for anyone downloading the PC ISO today isn’t just “is it fun?” but “does it hold up as a tactical shooter?” The answer is mixed: the single-player campaign is a surprisingly raw, grounded experience, but the technical quirks of this era are impossible to ignore.
The Good: Tier 1 Authenticity Forget run-and-gun heroics. This Medal of Honor wants you to feel like a ghost. Playing as "Preacher" and "Dusty" (voice acted by a pre-fame Chris Hemsworth), the missions focus on stealth, long-range kills, and calling in airstrikes. The "Hind Killer" mission, where you battle a Mi-24 helicopter using a laser designator, is still a standout set-piece. The sound design is brutal—bullet cracks sound genuinely dangerous, and the echo of a sniper shot across a valley is immersive. If you want to avoid the ISO hassle entirely:
The Bad: A Short, Scripted Sprint The campaign clocks in at roughly 4–5 hours. Just when you get used to the weight of the M4, the credits roll. While the "Rangers" missions feel like a generic Call of Duty clone (complete with endlessly respawning enemies until you move past a magic invisible line), the "Tier 1" missions are the highlight. You’ll wish the whole game was just those.
The Ugly: PC ISO Technical Hiccups This is where the "ISO" part gets tricky. If you are installing from an old disc or a cracked ISO today, be prepared for a fight: Title: A Gritty, Flawed Bridge Between Eras –
Verdict Medal of Honor (2010) is the "cult classic" of military shooters—not because it is perfect, but because it tried to be different. It is slower, sadder, and ends on a somber note (a photo of real fallen soldiers) rather than a fireworks display.
Should you hunt down the PC ISO? Only if you are a franchise completionist or you want a short, hard-hitting weekend campaign. Do not pay more than $5, and be ready to tinker with .ini files to get it running on a modern PC. It is the black sheep of the family, but it has heart.
Final Verdict: A flawed time capsule worth visiting, but not staying in.
The ISO contains the multiplayer files, but the official EA/GameSpy servers are dead. However, a community revival project called “MOH 2010: Reloaded” (search GitHub) has reverse-engineered the master server.