The surprising part is that Half-Life 2 isn’t as good as you thought it would be -- it’s almost certainly better.
The Pros
- Amazing graphics
- Excellent physics engine, diverse gameplay, supremely convincing world
The Cons
- Nothing, really
After six years, a source code that was stolen by a hacker in Germany, and several delays, the sequel to the game that changed gaming forever has finally landed on the PC. With all the hype and expectations, Half-Life 2 necessarily falls under far more intense scrutiny than just about any other PC release this year. The surprising part is that Half-Life 2 isn’t as good as you thought it would be -- it’s almost certainly better.
The Right Man in the Wrong Place…
Eternally silent hero Gordon Freeman has been sent back into action after a long period of inactivity. The G-Man from the first game plops him down in City 17, an urban residence that resembles a prison more than anything else. A jackbooted alien race of pseudo-Nazis known as The Combine rule humanity now, abusing and subjugating innocents at will. As Gordon soon learns, his friends from the first Half-Life aren’t about to take that lying down, and he becomes entangled in the struggles of the underground rebellion attempting to throw off the shackles of Combine control.
At its core, Half-Life 2 is similar to all the other first-person shooters out there. You point, you shoot, you avoid letting the little health meter fall to zero. Where Half-Life 2 differentiates itself is in presentation, polish, and physics. Environments feel organic and believable, whether in the confines of City 17 or cruising around the post-apocalyptic countryside in a dune buggy. Along with the exquisite character animation and facial expressions, amazing sound design takes full advantage of surround sound. The world of Half-Life 2 fosters a suspension of disbelief rarely seen in gaming.
Physical Challenge
Physics engines are rapidly becoming the “new lens flare” of the current generation of video games. Need a quick dash of splashy tech in your game? Add ragdoll physics. Half-Life 2 does not use its physics engine as a gimmick, it bases a huge chunk of the gameplay on it, and it works almost seamlessly. All objects have believable weight, mass, and interaction with the world, and early on in the game it’s easy to get distracted by all the ways you can play with the things you find lying around. It’s not long before you’ll find that the physics can be used to your advantage in many areas. Sure, you could kill all those ceiling monsters one by one with your pistol, but why not roll an explosive barrel down the slope and blow it up just as one of the beasties pulls it up to roof level?
Valve obviously knows that playing with stuff in the environments is a big draw, as they give the player a tool specifically designed to take advantage of it. The gravity gun picks stuff up and shoots it out like a projectile. Just about anything can be manipulated, from splinters of wood to saw blades to tables, and used as deadly weapons against foes.
The Spice of Half-Life
One of the pitfalls of first-person shooters has always been the fact that once you hit hour 10 of the “shooting stuff in the head” game, it gets old. Half-Life 2 deftly dodges this by periodically changing up the gameplay. Vehicle segments that are actually enjoyable to play break up the on-foot combat and specialized sections like the zombie-infested Ravenholme and the unusual allies you storm the prison stage with keep the game from degenerating into repetition.
By the end of the game, it’s all-out war in the streets, and it’s a testament to the game’s design that it manages to maintain a fever pitch for the duration. Half-Life 2 hits the ground running and never stops, and playing it for long periods of time can actually be exhausting. Just when you think you’ve seen the coolest thing it has to throw at you, the next sequence tops it.
Flawless Victory
Half-Life 2 is the closest thing to a flawless single-player experience we’ve seen in years. Multiplayer is handily covered by the inclusion of CounterStrike: Source, an updated version of the most popular online action game on the planet. If you have the hardware to handle it, don’t hesitate to pick it up. If you don’t have the hardware to handle it, this is the best reason yet to upgrade your rig.






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