Enemies will also run straight at you, even past you at times, with weapons down, seemingly ignorant of your very existence. Frequently, you’ll be faced with enemy soldiers that are able to blindly fire at you through the boxes, barrels, or walls they are hiding behind. The short-lived missions also suffer from truly atrocious enemy AI, which acts as more of an annoyance than a challenge. But there’s little semblance of a cohesive narrative between the missions, let alone between Declassified and the two console titles. The campaign follows returning Black Ops characters Alex Mason and Frank Woods, and is supposed to bridge the gap between the first game and the recently released sequel, Black Ops II. There are no checkpoints in each of its 10 levels, which isn't particularly a problem, considering each mission only takes two to five minutes to complete.
Call of Duty: Black Ops Declassified’s uninteresting single-player campaign lasts for all of an hour-if that.