Reach out, it’s an anniversary!
Who doesn’t get sentimental when they hear the word "anniversary"? To many people, it’s a time of reflection and looking back on all those great years that have passed. For some, it’s a chance to show off all the weight they’ve lost and talk about how amazing their new job at
ImARichBastardNYoureNot is. But for the video game world, it’s an opportunity to dust off some old classics and watch them sell like hotcakes. (What is a “hotcake” anyway? What about cupcakes?
Everyone likes those. Forget it, forget it, I digress.)
As I was saying, anniversaries are oh-so awesome, especially when it’s
Halo! That’s right, ladies and dudes,
Halo: Combat Evolved Anniversary is here to be the best first-person shooter around. Way better than Call of that whatever
Modern Warfare, I'll keep my extra 20 bucks, thank you very much. I know what you’re thinking; I must be on some kind of ridiculous hallucinogen.
Hear me out. Ten years ago when Microsoft Studios first released
Halo, they started a bit of a wave. The option to play games online against other people was a glorious spectacle. Online gaming had been around but wasn’t quite as popular as it would come to be
because of
Halo. Through game maps, different types of multiplayer matches, the ranking system, and much more, people ate it up. We couldn’t get enough. And that was on the
first Xbox, a machine that looked like a prop from a
Terminator movie.
Over the years, video game systems have changed and
Halo games with them. After
Halo 2 transformed and upgraded the franchise on the Xbox, the magical white-colored Xbox 360 came out and
Halo 3 broke just about every parent's pocket.
Halo 3 still remains one of the highest-selling games for the Xbox 360. So what did they do after that? Hooked us all up with
Halo 3: ODST and
Halo: Reach, the latest and greatest edition of the series. So if you have been living with the Geico Neanderthal somewhere in a cave, you are now all caught up.
And here we are
—Halo: Combat Evolved Anniversary brings back all the joy we had when we first laid eyes on Master Chief’s Mark V combat suit. The story mode, AI, and maps from the first release ten years ago remain largely untouched. The major difference is that the graphics have been upgraded to full HD rendering. But the cool part about it all is that at any point, at the push of the select button, you may travel back through time, zipping back to a land that seems like the ice-age of gaming and play through campaign, original graphics and all.
Halo has always been a fairly simple game and nothing has changed in that regard. Additions to
Combat Evolved Anniversary are minimal. The major bolstering is the connection between this
Halo and
Halo: Reach. Online mode has seen the most significant changes, with redeem codes that you can use to play
Combat Evolved maps on the
Reach disc, with
Reach team objectives and classic
Combat Evolved controls.
I don’t quite remember everything from the first
Halo, but this anniversary edition does remind me of the amazing times had way back when
—the turn of the 21st century, the Ravens winning the Super Bowl,
Harry Potter and
Lord of the Rings movies debuting...
But more to the point, I don’t remember just how annoyed I could get playing the original
Halo. The game is still excellent and fun to play, but the loading times are ridiculous. Oh, the horror! The level layout midway through is nuts. At times you find yourself breezing through a level, then BAM!, you’re stuck. “Is it this way? No. Maybe go back and try the other way? Nope." There's a weird déjà vu situation that will drive you mad. (Aren't you supposed to know this game is supposed to go?) And how about those long ass levels? Don’t you dare think about playing through one unless you have plenty of time on your hands. Because if you turn the system off before you reached the end, guess what? Oh yeah, right back to the beginning. (A "save and quit" system does exist in the game, but I experienced a glitch three times where it just sent me back to the beginning of a level.)
Through it all,
Halo: Combat Evolved Anniversary lives up to the series’ great reputation. It's not perfect, nor is it flawed in that regard apart from being a tad outdated. Even though it is largely a remake, there is still plenty of fun to be had playing this title all over again. I bet ol’ Bill Gates is secretly sitting in his office right now on a pile of cash playing
Halo, thinking to himself how awesome his company is. Make it rain, Billy!
Review copy provided by the publisher.
sandineyes
Joined: May 2008
TheJx4
Joined: Jun 2011
The campaign is XBL enabled though.
SlimFoley87
Joined: Nov 2005
TheJx4
Joined: Jun 2011
SlimFoley87
Joined: Nov 2005
daverabbit
Joined: Oct 2008
TheJx4
Joined: Jun 2011
Saving is available. and wow, it's not CE's multiplayer. Get your facts right.
Can we get someone else to review this?
Nick_Tan
Joined: Jul 2006
TheJx4
Joined: Jun 2011
MootCoffee
Joined: Jan 2007
NecroWolf
Joined: Oct 2005
Nick_Tan
Joined: Jul 2006
BigTruckSeries
Joined: May 2006
I feel the same way about the progression of CoDMW and Gears of War. The original games were awesome but the sequels sucked.
At least CRYSIS/ CRYSIS 2 didn't dissapoint me this year. Nor did Mortal Kombat.
UghRochester
Joined: Jun 2006