Shared with you
Revealing mistakes
At the embassy and compound missions, the subtitles refer to U.S. marines as being U.S. soldiers when they are clearly marines from their uniforms and equipment.
When the Sergeant and Price get into the Russian cop car after the St. Petersburg level, a cabin prisoner partition divider appears in the car during the cut-scene that follows that did not appear in-game beforehand.
In the mission to assault a Russian airfield, the Player has the opportunity to use the 30mm chain gun of an AH-64 helicopter. The helicopter is depicted as only having a pilot, but the AH-64 needs both pilot and gunner to be able to engage in combat.
The U.S. Marines are shown using Bradley IFVs and Stryker APCs. They do not use them, rather the U.S. Army does.
During the level where the U.S. Marines assault the hospital, one marine calls out for a "medic" after one of his comrades is injured. The U.S. Marine Corps does not have "medics" (rather the U.S. Army does), but instead uses U.S. Navy corpsmen.
The Player is given the option to use an RPG-7 while inside a van. Firing a weapon of this type at such close quarters is dangerous due to backblast.
It is possible for the Player and NPCs to get killed by exploding cars. While gasoline is indeed flammable, it is not explosive.
Barkov is a general but he wears the rank insignia of a colonel.
At the embassy and compound missions, the subtitles refer to U.S. marines as being U.S. soldiers when they are clearly marines from their uniforms and equipment.
The Russians are shown to be using some Western weapons.
Hitting a double light with one round somehow takes out both lights.
After 2 helicopters are destroyed in Urzikstan, an ambulance appears within seconds as if it had been waiting for it. Ambulances take minutes to respond, not seconds.
In the flashback to 1999, a soft drink can is seen having a calorie count label on the front. These did not appear on the front of soda cans until the 21st century.
AK-47s are shown to be in use with the Russian Armed Forces. The AK-47 was retired from use in the Soviet Union (and by extension Russia) in 1959.
In the flashback to 1999, Russian soldiers are seen wearing a desert EMR camouflage uniform, which did not exist then. They are also using other equipment that wasn't introduced until at least a decade later.
A car at the embassy's garage in Urzikstan has a United Kingdom license plate.
In Urzikstan, soda cans are shown having American FDA calorie labels on the front.
A lot of the automobiles in Russia and Moldova have United Kingdom license plates.
Some of the cars in the UK level have Slovak license plates.
The final mission is supposed to be deniable, yet an M2 Bradley armoured fighting vehicle takes part in it.
During the ambassador's residence siege, someone states that two trucks are moving across the field. There are three trucks, not two.