Halo: Combat Evolved

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Halo: Combat Evolved
Halobox.jpg
Developer(s) Bungie
(Xbox and Games on Demand)
Gearbox Software
(Microsoft Windows)
Westlake Interactive
(Mac OS X)
Publisher(s) Microsoft Game Studios
MacSoft (Mac OS X)
Composer(s) Martin O'Donnell
Michael Salvatori
Series Halo
Platform(s) Xbox[1]
Windows[2]
Mac OS X[3]
Xbox 360
Release date(s)
Genre(s) First-person shooter
Mode(s) Single-player, multiplayer, cooperative
Media/distribution Optical disc

Halo: Combat Evolved, also referred to as Halo: CE, Halo 1, or simply Halo, is a first-person shooter video game developed by Bungie and published by Microsoft Game Studios. The first game of the Halo franchise, it was released on November 15, 2001 as an exclusive launch title for the Xbox gaming system,[1] and is considered the platform's "killer app".[7] With more than five million copies sold worldwide as of November 9, 2005,[8] Microsoft released versions of the game for Microsoft Windows (ported by Gearbox Software) and Mac OS X in 2003, and the surrounding storyline was adapted and elaborated into a series of novels, comic books, and live action web shorts. The game was later released as an Xbox Original for download onto an Xbox 360 HDD.

Halo is set in the twenty-sixth century, with the player assuming the role of the Master Chief, a cybernetically enhanced supersoldier. The player is accompanied by Cortana, an artificial intelligence who occupies the Master Chief's neural interface. Players battle various aliens as they attempt to uncover the secrets of the eponymous Halo, a ring-shaped artificial world. The game has been praised for elements such as its story, the variety of strategies players can employ, and its multiplayer mode;[9][10][11] however, the repetition of its level design was frequently criticized by reviewers.[9][12]

Many game magazines have praised Halo as one of the best and most important games of all time.[13][14] The game's popularity has led to labels such as "Halo clone" and "Halo killer," applied respectively to games either similar to or anticipated to be better than it.[15][16][17] In addition, the game inspired and was used in the fan-created Red vs. Blue video series, which is credited as the "first big success" of machinima (the technique of using real-time 3D engines, often from video games, to create animated films).[18] A high-definition remake, Halo: Combat Evolved Anniversary, was released on the 10th anniversary of the original game's release.

Contents

Gameplay[edit]

The Master Chief fires his Assault Rifle at a pack of Grunts on the level "Halo." Ammunition, health, and motion sensor displays are visible in the corners of the screen.

As a first-person shooter, the gameplay of Halo: Combat Evolved is fundamentally similar to that of its peers, focusing on combat in a 3D environment that is viewed almost entirely from a character's eye view. The player can move around and look up, down, left, or right.[19] The game features vehicles, ranging from armored jeeps and tanks to alien hovercraft and aircraft, many of which can be controlled by the player. The game switches to a third-person perspective during vehicle use for pilots and mounted gun operators; passengers maintain a first-person view.[10] The game's heads-up display includes a "motion tracker" that registers moving allies, moving or firing enemies, and vehicles, in a certain radius of the player.[20]

The player character is equipped with an energy shield which nullifies damage from weapons fire and forceful impacts. The shield's charge appears as a blue bar in the corner of the game's heads-up display, and it automatically recharges if no damage is sustained for a brief period.[20] When the shield is fully depleted, the player is highly vulnerable, and further damage reduces the hit points of a secondary health meter.[9] When this health meter reaches zero, the character dies and the game reloads from a saved checkpoint. Health can be replenished through the collection of health packs scattered around the game's levels,[20] but the game's introduction of a regenerating shield mechanic represented a departure from FPS games of the time.

Halo's arsenal consists of weapons from science fiction. The game has been praised for giving each weapon a unique purpose, thus making each useful in different scenarios.[21] For example, plasma weapons need time to cool if fired too rapidly, but cannot be reloaded and must be discarded upon depletion of their batteries, whereas conventional firearms cannot overheat, but require reloading and ammunition. In contrast to the large weapon inventories of contemporary FPS games, Halo players may carry only two weapons at once, calling for strategy when managing firearms.[11]

Halo departs from traditional FPS conventions by not forcing the player character to holster its firearm before deploying grenades or melee-range blunt instruments; instead, both attacks can be utilized while a gun is still equipped, supplanting or supplementing small-arms fire.[20] All weapons may be used to bludgeon enemies,[20] which allows the Master Chief to silently kill opponents without alerting other nearby enemies.[22] The Chief can also carry up to eight grenades at a time: up to four fragmentation and four plasma grenades each.[23] Like the game's other weapons, the two types of grenades differ; the fragmentation grenade bounces and detonates quickly,[24] whereas the plasma grenade adheres to targets before exploding, sometimes with blackly comic results.[25]

Combatants[edit]

The game's main enemy force is the Covenant, a group of alien species allied by belief in a common religion. Their forces include Elites, fierce warriors protected by recharging energy shields much like the player's own; Grunts, which are short, comically cowardly creatures, usually led by Elites, and who often flee in terror instead of fighting in the absence of a leading Elite; Jackals, who wear a highly durable energy shield on one arm; and Hunters, large, powerful creatures with thick armor plates that cover the majority of their bodies.[26]

A secondary enemy is the Flood, a parasitic alien life form that appears in three main variants.[27] Infection Forms, the true form of the Flood, are fragile and do little damage individually, but often travel in swarms of several dozen. Combat Forms result from humans and Covenant Elites who have succumbed to the Infection Forms, and have hideously deformed bodies. Bloated Carrier Forms are the result of an aged or unused Combat Form and serve as incubators for new Infection Forms; when wounded or near a potential victim, they explode to damage other nearby life-forms and to release their spores, thus perpetuating the Flood life cycle. Battling the Flood, Covenant, and human forces are the Sentinels: robotic drones designed by an extinct race called the Forerunners. Sentinels lack durability, but use powerful beam weapons and are immune to infection by the Flood.[27]

The artificial intelligence in Halo has been favorably received.[28] Enemies take cover and use suppressive fire and grenades.[21] Some enemies retreat when their superiors are killed.[29] The player is often aided by United Nations Space Command (UNSC) Marines, who offer ground support, such as manning gun turrets or riding shotgun while the player is driving a vehicle.[21]

Multiplayer[edit]

A split screen mode allows two players to co-operatively play through Halo's campaign.[19] The game also includes five customizable competitive multiplayer modes for between two and 16 players; up to four players may play split-screen on one Xbox, and further players can join using a "System Link" feature that allows up to four Xbox consoles to be connected together into a local area network.[19] Halo lacks artificially intelligent game bots, and was released before the launch of the Xbox Live online multiplayer service; therefore LAN parties are needed to reach the game's 16-player limit,[30] a setup that was a first for a console game, but was often deemed impractical by critics.[21][22] Aside from this limitation, Halo's multiplayer components were generally well received by critics, and it is widely considered one of the best multiplayer games of all time.[10][11][31]

Although the Xbox version of Halo lacks official support for online multiplayer play, XLink Kai, GameSpy and XBConnect's packet tunnelling software provide unofficial ways around this limitation.[32] The Windows and Macintosh ports of Halo support online matches involving up to 16 players and include multiplayer maps not in the original Xbox release.[33] However, co-operative play was removed from the ports because it would have required large amounts of recoding to implement.[34] On March 15, 2004, Gearbox Software released Halo: Custom Edition for Windows, which enabled players to use custom-made maps and game modifications via the Halo Editing Kit developed by Bungie.[35] Halo: Custom Edition is multiplayer only and requires an original copy of Halo for PC to install.[35]

Synopsis[edit]

Setting[edit]

Halo: Combat Evolved takes place in a science fiction universe created by Bungie Studios specifically for the game. According to the story, the overpopulation of Earth and the realization of faster-than-light travel have caused the human race to colonize other planets. A keystone of these efforts is the planet Reach, an interstellar naval yard and a hub of scientific and military activity.[20] A secret military endeavor, dubbed the SPARTAN Project, was established on Reach to create an army of biologically engineered, cyborg "supersoldiers." Twenty-seven years before the beginning of the game, a technologically advanced collective of alien races, the Covenant, began to attack human settlements, declaring humanity an affront to their gods. The United Nations Space Command experienced a series of crushing defeats, and, although the supersoldiers of the SPARTAN-II Project fought effectively against the Covenant, they were too few in numbers to turn the tides of war.[20]

To prepare for a mission to discover the location of the Covenant's homeworld, SPARTAN-II soldiers were recalled to Reach for armor upgrades. Two days before the mission was to begin, Covenant forces attacked Reach and destroyed the colony.[20] A starship, the Pillar of Autumn, survived the onslaught with the lead SPARTAN-II, Master Chief, on board. The ship initiated a random jump to slipspace (similar to hyperspace),[36] hoping to lead the enemy away from Earth.[37] The game starts with the Pillar of Autumn encountering Halo.[20]

The titular Halo is an enormous, ring-shaped artificial space station/planet, which (according to Bungie Studios) has a diameter of ten thousand kilometers.[38] Halo sits at a Lagrange point between a planet and its moon. Centrifugal force created by the rotation of the station provides the ring's gravity.[39]

Characters[edit]

The player character is Master Chief Petty Officer John-117,[40] one of the few (see Halo: The Fall of Reach and its sequels for more information) surviving supersoldiers of the SPARTAN-II project, and the main character of the story. Accompanying the Master Chief is the Pillar of Autumn's feminine artificial intelligence construct, Cortana, who resides in a neural implant connected to his battle armor, codenamed MJOLNIR Mark V. The Pillar of Autumn's captain, Jacob Keyes, is also a major character, with Staff Sergeant Avery Junior Johnson as a supporting character. Playing a mainly antagonistic role in the game's events is 343 Guilty Spark, an eccentric artificial intelligence responsible for monitoring and maintaining Halo's systems.

Plot[edit]

The game opens as the Pillar of Autumn exits slipspace near a mysterious ring-shaped space station, called "Halo" by the enemy of the game, the Covenant.[41] A Covenant fleet attacks and heavily damages the Pillar of Autumn. Captain Keyes initiates "The Cole Protocol,"[42] a procedure designed to prevent the Covenant from learning the location of Earth. While Keyes prepares to land the ship on Halo, the Master Chief and Cortana escape via an escape pod, which crash lands on the ring. Cortana and the Chief are the only ones who survive the impact of the escape pod crash.

Keyes survives the Pillar of Autumn's crash landing, but is captured by the Covenant.[43] In the second and third levels of the game, the Master Chief and Cortana gather human survivors and rescue Captain Keyes, who is imprisoned aboard the Covenant ship Truth and Reconciliation. Once rescued, Keyes orders the Master Chief to beat the Covenant to Halo's control center and to discover its purpose.[44] The Master Chief and Cortana travel to a map room called the Silent Cartographer, which leads them to the control room.[45] There, Cortana enters the systems and, discovering something urgent, suddenly sends the Master Chief to find Captain Keyes while she stays behind.[46] While searching for his commander, the Master Chief learns that the Covenant have accidentally released the Flood, a parasitic alien race capable of spreading itself by overwhelming and infesting other sentient life-forms. Keyes falls victim to them while looking for a cache of weapons. The release of the Flood prompts Halo's AI monitor, 343 Guilty Spark, to recruit the Master Chief in retrieving the Index, a device that will activate Halo and prevent the Flood from spreading beyond the facility.

After the Master Chief retrieves and prepares to use the Index, Cortana re-appears and warns him against the activation. She has discovered that Halo's defense system is a weapon designed to kill all sentient life in the galaxy, which the Flood requires to spread,[47] a revelation which Guilty Spark confirms.[48]

Faced with this information, the Master Chief and Cortana decide to destroy Halo to prevent its activation. While fighting the Flood, the Covenant, and Guilty Spark's Sentinels, Cortana discovers that the best way to accomplish this is to cause the crashed Pillar of Autumn to self-destruct.[49] However, Captain Keyes' authorization is required to destroy the Autumn,[50] forcing the Chief and Cortana to return to the now-Flood-infested Truth and Reconciliation to search for him. By the time that they reach Keyes, however, he has been infected beyond the point of no return by the Flood. The Master Chief retrieves Keyes' neural implants directly from his brain and retreats to the Autumn, where Cortana activates the ship's self-destruct sequence. However, 343 Guilty Spark reappears and deactivates the countdown, discovering the record of human history in the process.[51] The Master Chief manually destabilizes the Pillar of Autumn's fusion reactors, and he and Cortana narrowly escape the destruction of the ring via a fighter jet.

Voice cast[edit]

Development[edit]

Minimum system requirements[52]
Requirements
Windows
Operating system Windows 98
CPU 733 MHz processor
Memory 128 MB
Hard drive space 1.2 GB of free space
Graphics hardware 32 MB GPU with hardware T&L
Network Internet connection required for activation and multiplayer
The first official screenshot of Halo.

On July 21, 1999, during the Macworld Conference & Expo, Steve Jobs announced that Halo would be released for Mac OS and Windows simultaneously.[53] Before this public announcement, game industry journalists under a non-disclosure agreement had previewed the game in a private showing during E3 1999,[54] and were reportedly amazed.[53][54] Bungie Studios later stated an even earlier development build of the game centered on real-time strategy and was "basically Myth in a sci-fi universe."[55]

At E3 2000, the first trailer of Halo was well received.[56] The version shown there differed greatly from the one exhibited previously, marking the first major overhaul in the game's development.[57] At this point, Halo was a third-person action game, in which a transport starship crashlands on a mysterious ring world that orbits a star. Early versions of Covenant aliens appear in great numbers and loot what they can, and war erupts between them and the humans. Unable to match the technologically advanced alien race, the humans on the ring world resort to guerrilla warfare.[58] This version of the game featured Halo-specific fauna, which were later dropped because of design difficulties and the creatures' "detract[ion] from the surprise, drama and impact of the Flood."[59]

As rumors had predicted,[60] Microsoft announced on June 19, 2000 that it had acquired Bungie Studios.[61] Halo became an exclusive game for Microsoft's Xbox video game console, and Bungie Studios rewrote the game's engine, heavily altering its presentation and turning it into a first-person shooter.[62] Originally a key element, the game's online multiplayer component was dropped because Xbox Live would be unfinished at the time of Halo's release. While a playable demonstration of the game at Gamestock 2001 was well-received,[63] critics had mixed reactions to its exhibition at E3 2001.[64][65][66] The game was released in North America simultaneously with the Xbox, on November 15, 2001;[1] the "Combat Evolved" subtitle was an addition by marketers at Microsoft, who felt that Halo alone was not a descriptive enough title to compete with other military-themed games.[67]

On July 12, 2002, a Halo port for Windows was announced to be under development by Gearbox Software.[68] Its showing at E3 2003 was positively received by some critics,[69][70] with skepticism by others.[71] It was released on September 30, 2003,[2] and included support for online multiplayer play and featured sharper graphics, but had compatibility issues that caused poor performance.[33][72] Halo was later released for Mac OS X on December 11, 2003.[3] On December 4, 2007, the game became available for the Xbox 360 via download from the Xbox Live Marketplace for 1200 Microsoft Points.[73]

Audio[edit]

Halo's soundtrack was created by Bungie Studios' audio director, Martin O'Donnell, and received enthusiastic praise from many critics.[9][10][21][74] O'Donnell has stated that his goal was to provide "a feeling of importance, weight, and sense of the 'ancient'."[75] He designed the music so that it "could be dissembled and remixed in such a way that would give [him] multiple, interchangeable loops that could be randomly recombined in order to keep the piece interesting as well as a variable length." Development involved the creation of "alternative middle sections that could be transitioned to if the game called for such a change (i.e. less or more intense)."[76]

O'Donnell has remarked that he "sat with the level designers and 'spotted' the level as though it was a movie, with the knowledge that the music would have to be malleable rather than static.... [T]he level designer would tell me what he hoped a player would feel at certain points or after accomplishing certain tasks." Based on this information, O'Donnell would "go back and develop appropriate music cues, then have the designer script the cues into the level, and then we'd play through it to see if it worked as desired."[76] He explained that the use of music in Halo is sparse because he believes that "[music] is best used in a game to quicken the emotional state of the player and it works best when used least," and that "[if] music is constantly playing it tends to become sonic wallpaper and loses its impact when it is needed to truly enhance some dramatic component of game play."[77]

Reception[edit]

Critical reception[edit]

 Reception
Aggregate scores
Aggregator Score
GameRankings (Xbox) 95.54%[78]
(PC) 85.93%[79]
Metacritic (Xbox) 97/100[1]
(PC) 83/100[2]
Review scores
Publication Score
Edge 10/10[11]
Eurogamer 8/10[12]
Famitsu 33/40[80]
Game Informer 9.5/10[81]
GameSpot 9.7/10[21] (Editor's Choice)
GameSpy 85/100[9]
IGN 9.7/10[10] (Editor's Choice & Game of the Year 2001)
Awards
2002 Game Developers Choice Awards: Excellence in Audio
5th Annual Interactive Achievement Awards: Console and Overall Game of the Year,
Console Action / Adventure, Visual Engineering
2000 Game Critics Awards: Best Action Game

On its release Halo broke sales records; by April 8, 2002, a little under five months after its release, one million units had been sold: this pace was faster than that of any previous sixth-generation console game.[82] During the two months following Halo's release, the game sold alongside more than fifty percent of Xbox consoles.[83] Halo's retail price remained at US$49.99 until November 30, 2003.[84] By July 14, 2003, the game had sold three million copies worldwide,[85] and by January 28, 2004, it had reached four million copies.[86] As of November 9, 2005, Halo has sold over five million copies worldwide.[8]

Halo was critically acclaimed and on Metacritic it received an aggregated score of 97 out of 100 based on reviews from 68 professional critics.[1] Ste Curran's review for Edge[87] praised the game as "the most important launch game for any console, ever" and commented, "GoldenEye was the standard for multiplayer console combat. It has been surpassed."[11] GameSpot claimed that "Halo's single-player game is worth picking up an Xbox for alone," concluding, "Not only is this easily the best of the Xbox launch games, but it's easily one of the best shooters ever, on any platform."[21] IGN remarked similarly, calling Halo a "can't miss, no-brainer, sure thing, five star, triple A game."[10] Among the specific aspects that reviewers praised were the balance of weapons, the role of drivable vehicles,[3][10] and the artificial intelligence of enemies.[3][11]

The game received numerous Game of the Year awards, including those of the Academy of Interactive Arts & Sciences,[88] Electronic Gaming Monthly, Edge, and IGN.[89] The British Academy of Film and Television Arts awarded Halo "Best Console Game," and Rolling Stone presented it with their "Best Original Soundtrack" award. According to Xbox.com, the game received a total of 48 awards.[89]

Although Halo's overall reception was largely positive, the game received criticism for its level design. GameSpy commented, "you'll trudge through countless hallways and control rooms that all look exactly the same, fighting identical-looking groups of enemies over and over and over...it is simply frustrating to see a game with such groundbreaking sequences too often degenerate [into] this kind of mindless, repetitive action."[9] Similarly, an article on Game Studies.org remarked, "In the latter part of the game, the scenarios rely on repetition and quantity rather than innovativeness and quality."[90] Eurogamer concluded, "Halo is very much a game of two halves. The first half is fast, exciting, beautifully designed and constantly full of surprises. The second half is festooned with gobsmacking plot twists and great cinematics but let down by repetitive paint by numbers level design."[12] Halo was released prior to the launch of Xbox Live, and the lack of both online multiplayer and bots to simulate human players was criticised by GameSpy;[9] in 2003 GameSpy included Halo in a list of "Top 25 Most Overrated Games of All Time."[32]

Halo's PC port garnered mixed reactions and received a score of 83% on Metacritic.[2] GameSpot stated that it was "still an incredible action game ... [and] a true classic," awarding it 9.0 out of 10.[72] It received a score of 8.2 out of 10 from IGN, who stated, "If you've played the game on the Xbox, there's not much for you here."[33] Eurogamer called the game "a missed opportunity," but stated that the online multiplayer component was "a massive draw ... for Halo veterans."[34]

Legacy[edit]

According to Gamespot, Halo's "numerous subtle innovations have been borrowed by countless other games since."[91] The game is often cited as the main reason for the Xbox's success,[92] and it began what is commonly regarded as the system's flagship franchise.[93] Game designer Vox Day credited the game with using science-fiction environments to follow Half-Life in eschewing static levels and a similarity to dungeon crawls, which the FPS genre inherited from Akalabeth. Day further wrote that Halo spurred a sustained trend of many other FPS console games.[94] In July 2006, Next-Gen.biz published an article estimating Halo as the second-highest revenue-generating twenty-first century console video game in the United States, behind Grand Theft Auto: Vice City.[95] The game's popularity sparked the usage of terms like "Halo clone"[96][97][98] and "Halo killer."[16] The Halo engine has been used for the game Stubbs the Zombie in Rebel Without a Pulse.[99]

Halo has been featured at both Major League Gaming and the World Cyber Games.[100][101] In machinima, the game was used as the basis for the popular web series Red vs. Blue. The game's sequel, Halo 2, made US$125 million with unit sales of 2.38 million on the first day of its release,[102] earning it the distinction of the fastest-selling United States media product in history.[103] Three years later, Halo 3 shattered that record with the biggest opening day in entertainment history, taking in US$170 million in its first 24 hours.[104]

Adaptations[edit]

The story surrounding Halo: Combat Evolved has been adapted into novels, the first of which was Halo: The Fall of Reach, a prequel. Published in October 2001, this novel was written by Eric Nylund, who reportedly completed it in seven weeks.[105] The novel became a Publishers Weekly bestseller with almost two hundred thousand copies sold.[106] The following novel, entitled Halo: The Flood, is a tie-in to Halo: Combat Evolved, describing not only the experiences of the Master Chief, but also those of other characters on Installation 04. Written by William C. Dietz, this novel appeared on the Publishers Weekly bestsellers list during May 2003.[107] Nylund returned to write the third novel, Halo: First Strike, which takes place between the events of Halo: Combat Evolved and those of Halo 2. Written in 16 weeks,[106] it was published in December 2003.[108] Later novels, Halo: Ghosts of Onyx (written by Nylund and released on October 31, 2006)[109] and Halo: Contact Harvest by Joseph Staten further extended the Halo storyline. More recently, a collection of new stories in Halo: Evolutions and Greg Bear's first book of his Forerunner series Halo: Cryptum was released continuing to flesh out the stories. Two additional books: Karen Traviss's Halo: Glasslands, the first in a new Post-Halo 3 series and Greg Bear's Book 2 of his Forerunner series entitled Halo: Primordium will be released in the near future.

Another adaptation is The Halo Graphic Novel, a collection of four short stories released by Marvel Comics in July 2006.[110] It was written and illustrated by Lee Hammock, Jay Faerber, Tsutomu Nihei, Brett Lewis, Simon Bisley, Ed Lee and Jean Giraud. Bungie Studios regards Halo's adaptations as canon.[111] Marvel subsequently released the four-issue miniseries Halo: Uprising, which was written by Brian Michael Bendis and illustrated by Alex Maleev, which premiered in August 2007. Halo Wars: Genesis, a supplemental graphic novel featuring art by Graeme Devine and Eric Nylund, was included with Halo Wars: Limited Edition in March 2009. Marvel then published Halo: Helljumper, a five-issue miniseries written by Peter David and illustrated by Eric Nguyen, which premiered in July 2009. Additionally Halo: Blood Line and Halo: Fall of Reach were released, the latter being a comic retelling of the novel Halo: The Fall of Reach premiered in 2010 and 2011 respectively.

Remake[edit]

During the Microsoft press conference at the 2011 E3 Expo, it was revealed that Halo: Combat Evolved would be remade by 343 Industries with an in-house game engine and would include achievements, Terminals, and Skulls. It was released for the Xbox 360 on November 15, 2011. The release date marks the 10th anniversary of the original game's release.[112] The remastered version of the original game includes online multiplayer and cooperative play functionality.[113] The remake is also the first Halo game to include Kinect support.[114] The game is a mix of two game engines - the original Halo engine created by Bungie which provides gameplay and a new engine created by 343 and Saber which is responsible for improved graphics - and the player is able to switch between the improved and classic modes of the game at any time.[115] The game is also the first in the series to support 3D televisions; however, this is only available for the improved mode within the game.[116]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Halo: Combat Evolved for Xbox". Metacritic. Retrieved June 22, 2011. 
  2. ^ a b c d e "Halo: Combat Evolved for PC". Metacritic. Retrieved August 22, 2006. 
  3. ^ a b c d e "Halo: Combat Evolved Macintosh". Gamespot. Retrieved August 22, 2006. 
  4. ^ "Xbox Goes Global With European and Australian Launches". Microsoft. March 14, 2002. Retrieved October 7, 2007. 
  5. ^ "Halo: Combat Evolved Release Information for PC". GameFAQs. Retrieved September 17, 2010. 
  6. ^ "Halo: Combat Evolved - Xbox 360". IGN. Retrieved September 17, 2010. 
  7. ^ McLaughlin, Rus (July 10, 2012). "IGN Presents: The History of Halo". IGN. Retrieved July 25, 2012. "The Xbox hit stores on November 15, 2001, side-by-side with its killer app." 
  8. ^ a b O'Connor, Frank (November 9, 2005). "Halo 2: One Year Later". Bungie. Retrieved December 3, 2007. 
  9. ^ a b c d e f g Accardo, Sal (November 15, 2001). "Gamespy: Halo". GameSpy. Retrieved July 25, 2012. 
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Boulding, Aaron (November 9, 2001). "Halo Review - Xbox Review". IGN. Retrieved August 31, 2006. 
  11. ^ a b c d e f "Halo: Combat Evolved". Edge (Future Publishing) (105). 29 November 2001. 
  12. ^ a b c "Halo Review". Eurogamer. 13 March 2002. Retrieved 2011-12-03. 
  13. ^ "Edge's Top 100 games of all time". Edge. Future Publishing. July 2, 2007. Retrieved September 28, 2012. 
  14. ^ "The 52 Most Important Video Games of All Time". GamePro. April 25, 2007. Archived from the original on 2007-05-20. Retrieved September 3, 2007. 
  15. ^ Ransom-Wiley, James (January 23, 2006). "Joystiq Interview: Peter Moore @ CES". Joystiq. Retrieved September 7, 2006. 
  16. ^ a b Sparks, Ryan (February 25, 2005). "Making a Halo Killer". Advanced Media Network. Retrieved September 7, 2006. [dead link]
  17. ^ Tuttle, Will (November 2, 2004). "Gamespy: Killzone". Gamespy. Retrieved October 14, 2007. "Will Tuttle: "So it was with great disappointment that I finished my review copy of Sony's Killzone, a game that was at one time unfairly labeled a "Halo killer" by some members of the gaming press." 
  18. ^ Tavares, José Pedro; Gil, Rui; Roque, Licino (April 15, 2005). Player as Author: conjecturing online game creation modalities and infrastructure (DOC). Retrieved August 3, 2006. [dead link]
  19. ^ a b c "Frequently Asked Questions about Halo: Gameplay". Halo.Bungie.Org. Archived from the original on August 3, 2002. Retrieved September 6, 2006. 
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i Bungie, ed. (2001). Halo: Combat Evolved Instruction Manual. Microsoft Game Studios. 
  21. ^ a b c d e f g Fielder, Joe (November 9, 2001). "Halo: Combat Evolved Xbox Review". GameSpot. Retrieved August 2, 2006. 
  22. ^ a b Laidlaw, Mike (November 22, 2001). "Halo Xbox review". The Adrenaline Vault. Retrieved September 2, 2006. 
  23. ^ "Halo (Xbox)". Neoseeker. Retrieved August 22, 2006. 
  24. ^ "Human Weapons Intro". Bungie. Archived from the original on October 28, 2004. Retrieved September 8, 2006. 
  25. ^ "Covenant Weapons Intro". Bungie. Archived from the original on October 28, 2004. Retrieved September 8, 2006. 
  26. ^ "Halo Game Guide - The Covenant". GameSpot. October 17, 2003. p. 34. Retrieved September 8, 2006. 
  27. ^ a b "Halo Game Guide - The Flood". GameSpot. October 17, 2003. p. 36. Retrieved September 8, 2006. 
  28. ^ Soboleski, Brent (November 9, 2001). "Halo Review (Xbox)". TeamXbox. Retrieved September 2, 2006. 
  29. ^ "Halo: Combat Evolved Xbox Review". TalkXbox. October 13, 2003. Archived from the original on December 12, 2004. Retrieved September 6, 2006. 
  30. ^ "Halo : FAQInfo : FAQs". Bungie. Archived from the original on April 27, 2006. Retrieved September 7, 2006. 
  31. ^ Sanders, Shawn (November 1, 2001). "Halo: Combat Evolved review for the XBOX". Game Revolution. Retrieved September 2, 2006. 
  32. ^ a b "Top 25 Most Overrated Games of All Time". GameSpy. September 15, 2003. Retrieved June 26, 2006. [dead link]
  33. ^ a b c Butts, Steve (September 27, 2003). "Halo: Combat Evolved Review - PC Review". IGN. Retrieved September 7, 2006. 
  34. ^ a b Reed, Kristan (October 10, 2003). "Halo: Combat Evolved Review - PC". Eurogamer. Retrieved September 7, 2006. 
  35. ^ a b "Halo: Custom Edition - PC". IGN. Retrieved September 2, 2006. 
  36. ^ Bungie. Halo: Combat Evolved. (Microsoft Game Studios). Xbox. Level/area: The Pillar of Autumn. (2001) "Keyes: [sigh] We made a blind jump. How did they... / Cortana: Get here first? Covenant ships have always been faster. As for tracking us all the way from Reach, at light speed, my maneuvering options were limited."
  37. ^ Bungie. Halo: Combat Evolved. (Microsoft Game Studios). Xbox. (2001) "Sergeant Johnson: Men, we led those dumb bugs out to the middle of nowhere to keep 'em from gettin' their filthy claws on Earth. But, we stumbled onto somethin' they're so hot for that they're scramblin' over each other to get it! Well, I don't care if it's God's own, personal anti-son-of-a-bitch machine, or a giant hula hoop, we're not gonna let them have it! What we will let them have is a belly full of lead, and a pool of their own blood to drown in! Am I right, Marines?"
  38. ^ Errera, Claude (January 10, 2000). "Interview with Matt Soell". Halo.Bungie.Org. Retrieved August 4, 2006. 
  39. ^ Perry, Douglass (May 11, 2000). "Bungie's ambitious first-person shooter is coming...". IGN. Retrieved September 7, 2006. 
  40. ^ "Halo Story". Planet Halo. GameSpy. Retrieved September 7, 2006. 
  41. ^ Bungie. Halo: Combat Evolved. (Microsoft Game Studios). Xbox. Level/area: The Truth and Reconciliation. (2001) "Keyes: While the Covenant had us locked up in here, I overheard the guards talking about this ring world. They call it... Halo."
  42. ^ Bungie. Halo: Combat Evolved. (Microsoft Game Studios). Xbox. Level/area: The Pillar of Autumn. (2001) "Keyes: All right then, I'm initiating Cole Protocol Article Two. We're abandoning the Autumn. That means you too, Cortana."
  43. ^ Bungie. Halo: Combat Evolved. (Microsoft Game Studios). Xbox. (2001) "Cortana: Warning: I've picked up reports that the Covenant has located and secured the Pillar of Autumn's crash site. Good news is the Captain's still alive. The bad news is that the Covenant have captured all of the surviving men. Let's hurry and find the final lifeboat so we can link up with the rest of the survivors."
  44. ^ Bungie. Halo: Combat Evolved. (Microsoft Game Studios). Xbox. Level/area: The Truth and Reconciliation. (2001) "Cortana: According to the data in their networks, the ring has some kind of deep religious significance. If I'm analyzing this correctly, they believe that Halo is some kind of weapon — one with vast, unimaginable power. / Keyes: And it's true. The Covenant kept saying that whoever controls Halo controls the fate of the universe. / Cortana: Now I see! I have intercepted a number of messages about a Covenant search team scouting for a control room. I thought they were looking for the bridge of a cruiser that I damaged during the battle above the ring, but they must be looking for Halo's control room! / Keyes: That's bad news. If Halo is a weapon, and the Covenant gain control of it, they'll use it against us and wipe out the entire human race. Chief, Cortana, I have a new mission for you. We need to beat the Covenant to Halo's control room. Marines, let's move."
  45. ^ Bungie. Halo: Combat Evolved. (Microsoft Game Studios). Xbox. (2001) "Cortana: The Covenant believe that what they call the "Silent Cartographer" is somewhere under this island. The Cartographer is a map room that will lead us to Halo's control center."
  46. ^ Bungie. Halo: Combat Evolved. (Microsoft Game Studios). Xbox. (2001) "Master Chief: So, what sort of weapon is it? / Cortana: What are you talking about? Master Chief: Let's stay focused. Halo: how do we use it against the Covenant? / Cortana: This ring isn't a cudgel, you barbarian. It's something else. Something much more important. The Covenant were right. This ring, it's Forerunner. Give me a second to access... yes, the Forerunners built this place, what they called a fortress world, in order to—Wait... No, that can't be! Oh, those Covenant fools! They must have known! There must have been signs! / Master Chief: Slow down. You're losing me. / Cortana: The Covenant... found something buried in this ring; something horrible. And now they're afraid. Master Chief: Something buried? Where? / Cortana: The Captain! We've got to stop the Captain! / Master Chief: Keyes? What do we... / Cortana: The weapons cache he's looking for is not really... We can't let him get inside! / Master Chief: I don't understa—/ Cortana: There's no time! Get out of here! Find Keyes. Stop him. Before it's too late!"
  47. ^ Bungie. Halo: Combat Evolved. (Microsoft Game Studios). Xbox. (2001) "Master Chief: The Flood is spreading. If we activate Halo's defenses, we can wipe them out. / Cortana: You have no idea how this ring works, do you? Why the Forerunners built it? Halo doesn't kill Flood; it kills their food. Humans, Covenant, whatever; we're all equally edible. The only way to stop the Flood is to starve them to death, and that's exactly what Halo is designed to do—wipe the galaxy clean of all sentient life. You don't believe me? Ask him!"
  48. ^ Bungie. Halo: Combat Evolved. (Microsoft Game Studios). Xbox. (2001) "Master Chief: Is it true? / 343 Guilty Spark: More or less. Technically, this installation's pulse has a maximum effective radius of twenty-five thousand light years, but once the others follow suit, this galaxy will be quite devoid of life, or at least any life with sufficient biomass to sustain the Flood... but you already knew that. I mean, how couldn't you?"
  49. ^ Bungie. Halo: Combat Evolved. (Microsoft Game Studios). Xbox. (2001) "Cortana: We can't let the monitor activate Halo! We have to stop him—we have to destroy Halo. According to my analysis of the available data, I believe the best course of action is somewhat risky. An explosion of sufficient size will help destabilize the ring and will cut through a number of primary systems. We need to trigger a detonation on a large scale, however. A starship's fusion reactors going critical would do the job. I'm going to search what's left of the Covenant battle net' and see if I can locate the Pillar of Autumn's crash site. If the ship's fusion reactors are still relatively intact, we can use them to destroy Halo."
  50. ^ Bungie. Halo: Combat Evolved. (Microsoft Game Studios). Xbox. (2001) "Cortana: I've located the Pillar of Autumn. She put down twelve hundred kilometers upspin. Energy readings show her fusion reactors are still powered up. The systems on the Pillar of Autumn have fail-safes even I can't override without authorization from the Captain. We'll need to find him, or his neural implants, to start the fusion core detonation."
  51. ^ Bungie. Halo: Combat Evolved. (Microsoft Game Studios). Xbox. (2001) "Cortana: This won't take long ... There. That should give us enough time to make it to a lifeboat and put some distance between ourselves and Halo before the detonation. / 343 Guilty Spark: I'm afraid that's out of the question, really. / Cortana: Oh, hell! / 343 Guilty Spark: Ridiculous—that you and a warship's AI with such a wealth of knowledge ... Weren't you worried it might be captured, or destroyed? / Cortana: He's in my data arrays—a local tap. / 343 Guilty Spark: You can't imagine how exciting this is to have a record of all our lost time. Human history is it? Fascinating. / 343 Guilty Spark: Oh, how will I enjoy every moment of its categorization. To think that you would destroy this installation, as well as this record. I am shocked. Almost too shocked for words. / Cortana: He stopped the self-destruct sequence!"
  52. ^ "Minimum system requirements for Halo: Combat Evolved". Microsoft. November 14, 2007. Retrieved February 21, 2012. 
  53. ^ a b Lopez, Vincent (July 21, 1999). "Heavenly Halo Announced from Bungie". IGN. Retrieved August 31, 2006. 
  54. ^ a b Morris, Daniel (October 1999). "Your first look at... Halo". PC Gamer: 40. 
  55. ^ "Inside Bungie: History". Bungie. Archived from the original on October 12, 2004. Retrieved June 19, 2006. 
  56. ^ Heaslip, Stephen (June 15, 2000). "Blue's News Best of E3 2000". Blue's News. Retrieved September 5, 2006. 
  57. ^ "Frequently Asked Questions about Halo: Media". Halo.Bungie.Org. Archived from the original on November 9, 2001. Retrieved September 7, 2006. 
  58. ^ Hiatt, Jesse (November 1999). "Games That Will Change Gaming". Computer Gaming World. Retrieved August 31, 2006. 
  59. ^ "One Million Years B.X. (Before Xbox)". Bungie. April 9, 2004. Archived from the original on October 11, 2004. Retrieved September 7, 2006. 
  60. ^ "Rumors, Rumors Everywhere, but None to Drink". IGN. June 15, 2000. Retrieved September 7, 2006. 
  61. ^ "Microsoft to Acquire Bungie Software". Microsoft. June 19, 2000. Retrieved August 22, 2006. 
  62. ^ Weir, Dale (April 14, 2001). "Halo (Xbox) Preview". GameCritics.com. Retrieved September 5, 2006. 
  63. ^ Lopez, Vincent (March 4, 2001). "Playable Halo at GameStock". IGN. Retrieved September 5, 2006. 
  64. ^ Toyama, Kevin (May 2001). "Holy Halo". Next Generation Magazine: 1. 
  65. ^ Wojnarowicz, Jakub; Colayco, Bob (May 18, 2001). "2001 E3 Part 1". FiringSquad. Retrieved September 5, 2006. 
  66. ^ Nihei, Wes (May 1999). "A World Apart". GamePro: 42. 
  67. ^ Mott, Tony, ed. (2010). "2001: A Space Odyssey". Edge (215): 86. "Jaime Griesemer: At the time, Microsoft marketing thought Halo was not a good name for a videogame brand. It wasn't descriptive like all the military games we were competing with. We told them Halo was the name. The compromise was they could add a subtitle. Everyone at Bungie hated it. But it turned out to be a very sticky label and has now entered the gaming lexicon... so I guess in hindsight it was a good compromise. But the real name of the game is just Halo." 
  68. ^ "Halo Officially Official for the PC!". IGN. July 12, 2002. Retrieved September 20, 2006. 
  69. ^ Accardo, Sal (May 13, 2003). "Halo (PC): The Very First Look". GameSpy. Retrieved September 20, 2006. [dead link]
  70. ^ Parker, Sam (May 15, 2003). "Halo PC Hands-On". GameSpot. Retrieved September 20, 2006. 
  71. ^ Sulic, Ivan (May 16, 2003). "E3 2003: Halo Hands-On". IGN. Retrieved September 20, 2006. 
  72. ^ a b Kasavin, Greg (September 29, 2003). "Halo: Combat Evolved PC Review". GameSpot. Retrieved September 7, 2006. 
  73. ^ Purchese, Rob (November 13, 2007). "Autumn 360 update dated". Eurogamer. Retrieved November 15, 2007. 
  74. ^ Mahoney, Thomas (October 16, 2002). "Reviews - Halo". Gameplanet. Retrieved September 6, 2006. [dead link]
  75. ^ "Just the Right Sense of "Ancient"". Xbox.com. Microsoft. Archived from the original on March 1, 2007. Retrieved September 6, 2006. 
  76. ^ a b Marks, Aaron (December 2, 2002). "The Use and Effectiveness of Audio in Halo: Game Music Evolved". Music4Games. Archived from the original on June 19, 2006. Retrieved September 6, 2006. 
  77. ^ O'Donnell, Martin (March 24, 2002). "Producing Audio for Halo". Halo.Bungie.Org. Retrieved September 6, 2006. 
  78. ^ "Halo: Combat Evolved for Xbox". GameRankings. Retrieved March 3, 2011. 
  79. ^ "Halo: Combat Evolved for PC". GameRankings. Retrieved March 3, 2011. 
  80. ^ Xbox - HALO (ヘイロー). Weekly Famitsu. No.915 Pt.2. Pg.105. 30 June 2006.
  81. ^ McNamara, Andy. "Halo: The Xbox Essential". Game Informer. Archived from the original on October 11, 2007. Retrieved September 26, 2006. 
  82. ^ "Halo: Combat Evolved for Xbox Tops 1 Million Mark In Record Time". Microsoft. April 8, 2002. Retrieved September 1, 2006. 
  83. ^ Patrizio, Andy (January 9, 2002). "Xbox Assault Only Starting". Wired. Retrieved September 27, 2006. 
  84. ^ Thorsen, Tor (November 20, 2003). "Halo price nearly halved". GameSpot. Retrieved September 1, 2006. 
  85. ^ Parker, Sam (July 14, 2003). "Halo reaches 3 million". GameSpot. Retrieved September 1, 2006. 
  86. ^ "Halo Sells Over Four Million for Xbox". GamePro. January 28, 2004. Archived from the original on 2008-12-06. Retrieved September 1, 2006. 
  87. ^ Gillen, Kieron (2006). "Planetary Objects in the Rear View Mirror: Our Distorted Preconceptions of Halo". In Yeffeth, Glenn. Halo Effect: An Unauthorized Look at the Most Successful Video Game of All Time. BenBella Books. p. 19. ISBN 978-1-933771-11-9 Check |isbn= value (help). Retrieved 6 June 2012. "Behind the standard byline-less Edge review was Curran..." 
  88. ^ "2002 5th Annual Interactive Achievement Awards". The Academy of Interactive Arts & Sciences. February 28, 2002. Retrieved September 1, 2006. 
  89. ^ a b "Halo: Combat Evolved - Awards". Xbox.com. Microsoft. Archived from the original on December 10, 2006. Retrieved September 1, 2006. 
  90. ^ Järvinen, Aki (July 2002). "Halo and the Anatomy of the FPS". Game Studies 2 (1). Retrieved September 4, 2006. 
  91. ^ "Best Launch Titles". GameSpot. Retrieved September 7, 2006. 
  92. ^ Hill, Jason (November 4, 2004). "Xbox wears a Halo of success". The Age. Retrieved September 19, 2006. 
  93. ^ "Xbox 360 games we can't wait to play". CNET. August 2, 2006. Archived from the original on August 23, 2007. Retrieved September 7, 2006. 
  94. ^ Day, Vox (2006). "Halo and the High Art of Games". In Yeffeth, Glenn (ed.). Halo Effect: An Unauthorized Look at the Most Successful Video Game of All Time. Dallas, Texas: BenBella Books. pp. 160–161. 
  95. ^ Campbell, Colin; Keiser, Joe (July 29, 2006). "The Top 100 Games of the 21st Century". Next-Gen.biz. Future US. p. 11. Retrieved 2011-12-03. 
  96. ^ Howarth, Robert (May 20, 2006). "VE3D Best of E3 2006 Awards". Voodoo Extreme. IGN. Retrieved September 7, 2006. 
  97. ^ Bedigian, Louis (May 28, 2003). "Brute Force - XB - Review". GameZone. Retrieved September 7, 2006. [dead link]
  98. ^ Gibson, Ellie (November 14, 2005). "Rare on Revolution controller". Eurogamer. Retrieved September 7, 2006. 
  99. ^ Van Autrijve, Rainier (October 29, 2004). "Rebel Without a Pulse Announced". GameSpy. Retrieved September 7, 2006. 
  100. ^ Olsen, Jennifer (October 7, 2004). "The pomp before the stomp: The World Cyber Games kicks off". GameSpot. Retrieved September 7, 2006. 
  101. ^ Calvert, Justin (September 10, 2003). "$10,000 in prize money for first MLG event". GameSpot. Retrieved September 7, 2006. [dead link]
  102. ^ "'Halo 2' reports $125 million in first-day sales". MSNBC. November 10, 2004. Retrieved September 7, 2006. 
  103. ^ Fahey, Rob (November 11, 2004). "Halo 2 US sales top $125; UK retail celebrates successful launch". GamesIndustry.biz. Eurogamer. Retrieved September 7, 2006. [dead link]
  104. ^ Snow, Blake (September 26, 2007). "Halo 3 shatters retail record; sells $170M in 24 hrs". GamePro. Archived from the original on 2008-12-06. Retrieved September 27, 2007. 
  105. ^ Longdale, Holly. "Game Worlds in Written Words". Xbox.com. Microsoft. Archived from the original on February 28, 2007. Retrieved September 2, 2006. 
  106. ^ a b Greene, Marty. "First Strike Author Eric Nylund Q&A". Xbox.com. Microsoft. Archived from the original on August 21, 2006. Retrieved September 2, 2006. 
  107. ^ Klepek, Patrick (May 5, 2003). "Halo novel cracks bestseller". Gaming-Age. Retrieved September 2, 2006. [dead link]
  108. ^ "Halo: First Strike by Eric Nylund". Random House. Archived from the original on February 23, 2006. Retrieved September 2, 2006. 
  109. ^ "Amazon.com: Ghosts of Onyx (Halo)". Amazon.com. Retrieved March 26, 2007. 
  110. ^ "Halo Graphic Novel - Comics". IGN. Retrieved September 2, 2006. 
  111. ^ "Joe Staten Interview". Halo.Bungie.Org. October 2004. Retrieved August 6, 2006. 
  112. ^ Davison, Pete (June 6, 2011). "E3: Halo Anniversary Coming November 15". GamePro. Archived from the original on 2011-12-01. Retrieved June 6, 2011. 
  113. ^ Snider, Mike (June 7, 2011). "At E3: Something old, new for 'Halo' gamers". USA Today. Retrieved June 8, 2011. 
  114. ^ Pakinkis, Tom (June 20, 2011). "Halo: CE Anniversary has Kinect support". CVG. Retrieved June 20, 2011. 
  115. ^ Hillier, Brenna (June 10, 2011). "Halo Anniversary to run two engines side by side". VG247. Retrieved August 23, 2011. 
  116. ^ Willington, Ray (August 28, 2011). "Microsoft Bringing 3D Mode To Halo: Combat Evolved Anniversary". HotHardware. Retrieved August 28, 2011. 

External links[edit]