

It was the group's first video game, although it had previously released fifteen software products and maintained twenty websites about the conflict. Special Force was conceived immediately after the South Lebanon conflict ended in 2000, and the idea was greenlit by top Hezbollah officials. The game is playable in Arabic, English, French, and Farsi. Upon completing the game, the player is virtually awarded a medal and a certificate from Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, as well as presented with some Hezbollah fighters, described as martyrs, that were killed during the conflict. In the training mode, the player practices shooting at posters of prominent Israeli political and military figures (including the prime minister Ariel Sharon, defence minister Shaul Mofaz, and former prime minister Ehud Barak) to obtain points.

In combat, the player uses a knife, a pistol, Kalashnikov rifles, and hand grenades against Israeli soldiers and their Merkava tanks and Boeing AH-64 Apache helicopters. There are three missions, consisting mostly of street clashes. At the start of each mission, the narrative is furthered through a text briefing. The player takes the role of a Hezbollah fighter. The game recreates several Hezbollah operations that occurred during the conflict, including their geographic locations, land mines, number of Israeli soldiers, and weather conditions. Special Force is a first-person shooter set during the South Lebanon conflict fought between Israel and Hezbollah, a Lebanese militant group recognised by some countries as a terrorist organisation. Gameplay The game's training mission has the player shoot posters of Israeli officials like Shaul Mofaz. Special Force 2: Tale of the Truthful Pledge, a sequel based on the 2006 Lebanon War between the same sides, was released in August 2007 to limited success.

Regarded as propaganda and a recruitment tool, it was condemned by Jewish organisations and Israeli officials. It was released in February 2003 in several Arab countries and sold 18,000 copies by September. Special Force was conceived immediately after the conflict ended in 2000 and developed over more than two years by the company Hadeel in cooperation with Hezbollah. The game recreates battles from the South Lebanon conflict between Hezbollah and Israel, with the player assuming the role of a Hezbollah fighter tasked with defeating Israeli soldiers. Special Force is a 2003 first-person shooter produced by the Central Internet Bureau of Hezbollah, a Lebanese militant group.
