This first-person shooter is a little like a B-movie version of Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2, but instead of opposing a Russian invasion of America, you must battle against an even more unlikely occupation, where a reunified Korea has attacked the US. Barring its less polished graphics, Homefront apes the Call of Duty look and feel with reasonable skill. Firefights in the suburbs and abandoned superstores are punctuated with big cinematic moments, while the storyline, which has been penned by the writer/director of Red Dawn, the cult 1980s film in which a group of US teenagers repel a Russian invasion of their home town, is gripping. Homefront is no epic, but it compensates for a short running time with an online mode that includes some great large-scale battles.