Battlestations: Midway/Defence of the Phillipines

This mission acquaints you further with controls of a PT boat. Unfortunately you don't have any real warships in this mission - fortunately for you, the enemy doesn't either. All you have to do is shoot down enemy aircraft, sink the enemy LCPs, and torpedo the enemy troop ships. The Japanese invasion fleet doesn't stand a chance against you - unfortunately, your boat's engine refuses to start. Primary Objectives
 * Leave the Harbour
 * Sink the first wave of Daihatsu LCPs
 * Sink the enemy transport ships and LSTs
 * No more than 5 enemy landing craft may enter the harbour
 * PT-108 must survive

Secondary Objectives
 * Completely destroy the first wave of Daihatsus

Hidden Objectives
 * Sink the Kasumi
 * Down five G4M Betties

Leave the Harbour
All attempts to get your boat's engine to start have failed. You're a sitting duck in the water. Unable to leave the port before the first attack squad arrives, all you have to do is shoot down as many enemy aircraft as possible. Fortunately for you, the Japanese don't consider your PT boat much of a threat, and they are more than content to bomb the living daylights out of the base instead; therefore, ignore the Kates and Vals. Focus instead on the Betty level bombers approaching from in between the two mountain ranges on your right.

Betties always come in pairs, so all you have to do is count the number of squadrons of Betties you shoot down. Three squadrons is more than enough to fulfill the requirement.

Soon your crew announces "We've got juice!", and your engines come online. If you haven't downed your quota of Betties yet, stick around and wait for more to arrive. Regardless, get moving and make yourself a not-so-easy target - Vals will begin strafing you now, so be on guard. A new Japanese unit appears here as well - the Ki-43 Oscar, a fighter. It as well is more than content to strafe you, so leave the harbour as soon as you've downed five G4M Betties.

You have a single, rather famous ally in this mission - PT-109, led by John F. Kennedy. Fortunately for him, his PT boat is invincible. Unfortunately, he is of limited use in this mission.

The First Wave
Once you're out of the port, a cutscene will appear showing you the enemy fleet. It consists of three transport ships, two LSTs, and a single Minekaze-class destroyer, the Kasumi, as well as an infinite number of Daihatsu LCPs. You don't have torpedoes yet, so start on the Daihatsus. As soon as you come in firing range, pull the trigger on your guns and sink them. They don't have a lot of armour, and simply follow the gold objective markers to completely eliminate the first wave of Daihatsus.

Your PT boat is quick, but if a Daihatsu is given a head-start it can easily enter the lagoon, so make sure you don't miss any.

Once the first wave is destroyed, you gain the ability to deploy torpedoes. PT-109 announces they're going to make a torpedo run on a transport (why didn't he just torpedo the transport earlier, since you were shooting the LCPs?) so focus on the nearest transport and simply lodge a pair of torpedoes in it to send it to the bottom. Once PT-109 sinks the transport, Kennedy announces "We're returning to defend the lagoon", leaving you on your own for the rest of the mission. Don't forget about the armoured LSTs though. They're much quicker than the transport ships and attempt to enter the harbour, so torpedo them as soon as you can. All it takes is a single torpedo to send the LSTs down.

Once the LSTs and two of the three transports are down, mop up some of the Daihatsus before making a run on the Kasumi. The Kasumi (which coincidentally shares the Japanese name of a famous Pokémon character) is more than content to shell the land installations protecting the bay and its anti-aircraft defences often focus on PT-109, so you should have no problem closing in and lodging a pair of torpedoes into her hull. Two torps is more than enough to sink the Kasumi, fulfilling a secret objective.

Now all that's left is to mop up the final transport ship and the mission is a success.