Login

Vi har tekniska problem. Din formulär har inte varit framgångsrik. Vi ber om ursäkt och försök igen senare.

Register

Vi har tekniska problem. Din formulär har inte varit framgångsrik. Vi ber om ursäkt och försök igen senare.

Thank you for registering

An email to complete your account has been sent to

Return to the website

get direct access

Fill in your details below and get direct access to content on this page

Text error notification

Text error notification

Checkbox error notification

Checkbox error notification

Vi har tekniska problem. Din formulär har inte varit framgångsrik. Vi ber om ursäkt och försök igen senare.

Thank you for your interest

You now have access to Mjukvara

A confirmation email has been sent to

Continue to page

Please or get direct access to download this document

Battle | Los Angeles Psn

Battle: Los Angeles arrived on the PlayStation Network (PSN) in March 2011 as a digital-only tie-in for the sci-fi action film. Developed by Saber Interactive and published by Konami, it aimed to let players live out the movie's intense urban warfare from a first-person perspective.

The game puts you in the boots of Corporal Lee Imlay, fighting alongside the film's protagonist, Staff Sergeant Michael Nantz. You navigate through a devastated Los Angeles, using a standard military arsenal to repel an invading force of biomechanical extraterrestrials. The gameplay is a straightforward, linear shooter experience, focusing on set-piece battles that mirror key moments from the big screen. Battle Los Angeles PSN

Despite its Hollywood pedigree, the PSN release was notably brief, with many players finishing the entire campaign in under an hour. It featured high-quality destruction physics for the time—utilizing the Saber3D engine—but lacked multiplayer modes or significant replay value. Today, the game serves as a nostalgic snapshot of the "movie-game" era, though it is no longer available for new purchases on the modern PlayStation Store. Battle: Los Angeles arrived on the PlayStation Network