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Halo: Combat Evolved

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Halo: Combat Evolved
Developer(s)Bungie Studios, PC port by Gearbox Software, Mac port by MacSoft Games.
Publisher(s)Microsoft Game Studios
Platform(s)Xbox, Windows PC, Apple Macintosh
ReleaseXbox:
NA November 15, 2001[1]
PAL March 14, 2002[2]
JPN April 24, 2002[2]
AUS March 10, 2003[2]
PC and Mac:
NA September 30, 2003[3]
NA December 3, 2003[4]
Genre(s)First-person shooter
Mode(s)Single player, multiplayer

Halo: Combat Evolved, or simply Halo, is a science fiction first-person shooter video game developed by Bungie Studios. It was released on November 15, 2001 as a launch title for the Xbox gaming system,[1] and is considered that platform's "killer application".[5] With more than six million copies sold worldwide,[6] Halo is second only to its sequel, Halo 2, in sales for the Xbox video game console.[6] The game was later ported to Windows and Mac OS.

The titular Halo is an enormous, ring-shaped artificial space habitat, and, according to Bungie Studios, has a diameter of either ten thousand kilometers or miles.[7] Halo sits at a lagrange point between a planet and its moon; this arrangement gives the station rotational gravity.[8] In the game, the player assumes the role of the Master Chief, a cyborg "super-soldier" with battle armor. The Master Chief is accompanied by Cortana, an artificial intelligence who occupies the neural implant between the battle armor and the Master Chief's brain. Players battle various types of aliens on foot or in vehicles as they attempt to uncover the secrets of the Halo. The game has been called "easy to learn,"[9] and has been praised for its "engaging story".[10]

Widely considered to be one of the best, and most influential, first-person shooters of all time, Halo's acclaim rivals that of GoldenEye 007 and Half-Life. For example, Edge gave Halo a full score of ten out of ten, only the fourth such designation in the magazine's 12-year history.[11] Nevertheless, Halo has its critics. The game was tenth on GameSpy's "Top 25 Most Overrated Games of All Time"; one reviewer stated that the game "recycl[ed] the same areas over and over until you were bored to tears."[12]

The game's popularity has led to labels such as "Halo clone"[13] and "Halo killer", applied to games either similar to, or anticipated to be better than, Halo.[14] In addition, the game inspired and was used in the creation of the Red vs. Blue video series, which is credited as the "first big success" of machinima[15] — the art of using real-time 3-D engines, often from computer and video games, to create animated films.

Gameplay

As a first-person shooter, Halo's gameplay is fundamentally similar to that of its peers, thus focusing on combat almost entirely in the first-person perspective. The player can move around and look up, down, or to either side.[16] Halo is credited with presenting one of the first successful sets of controls for a first-person shooter on a video game console.[17] The game features vehicles, ranging from technicals and hovercraft to giant tanks and aircraft, several of whom can be controlled by the player; the game switches to the third-person perspective during vehicle use.[18]

The player character is equipped with a damage-absorbing energy shield, a substitute for hit points. Its charge appears as a blue bar in the upper-right corner of the game's heads-up display. When the shield is fully depleted, the player is highly vulnerable, and further damage reduces the character's health level.[10] However, the shield will recharge if no further damage is sustained for a brief period of time.[19]

The Master Chief fires his Assault Rifle upon a group of Grunts.

Halo's arsenal consists of weapons from science fiction. The game has been praised for giving each a unique purpose, thus making them useful in different scenarios.[20] For example, plasma weapons need time to cool if fired too rapidly, but require no reloading. Instead, players are forced to discard them after depleting their batteries.[19] In contrast, human weapons cannot overheat, but require reloading and ammunition.[19] All weapons may be used to bludgeon opponents,[19] allowing players to kill enemies stealthily without alerting their allies.[21] Players may carry only two weapons at once, thus requiring strategy in using and selecting firearms.[22]

The player can carry up to eight grenades at one time: four fragmentation and plasma grenades each.[2] Like the game's other weapons, the two types of grenades differ; the fragmentation grenade bounces and detonates quickly,[23] whereas the plasma grenade adheres to targets and takes longer to detonate.[24] A button dedicated for grenades obviates the need to holster firearms before throwing.[19]

Allies and enemies

The game's main enemy force is the Covenant, an alliance of alien species. Their forces include Grunts, which are short, cowardly creatures who often flee in terror instead of fighting; Jackals, which have highly durable energy shields attached to their arms; Elites, fierce warriors protected by recharging energy shields; and Hunters, large, powerful creatures with thick armor plates that cover the majority of their bodies.[25]

A secondary enemy is The Flood, a parasitic alien life form that appears in three main variants.[26] Infection Forms, the true form of the Flood, are fragile, but often travel in swarms. Combat Forms result from humans and Covenant Elites who are infested by Infection Forms, and have hideously deformed bodies. Bloated Carrier Forms that serve as incubators for new Infection Forms. When wounded or near a potential victim, they explode suicidally to damage other nearby life forms and to release their spores. Battling both the Flood and the player are the Sentinels, robotic drones designed by a race called the Forerunners. Sentinels lack durability, but use powerful beam weapons and are immune to infection by the Flood.[26]

The artificial intelligence in Halo has been favorably received.[27] Enemies take cover and use suppressive fire and grenades.[20] Some enemies retreat when their superiors are killed.[28] The player is often aided by United Nations Space Command (UNSC) Marines, who offer ground support, such as manning gun turrets or riding shotgun with the player in technicals.[20]

Synopsis

Template:Spoiler

Setting

Halo 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 superluminal travel have caused the human race to colonize other planets.[19] A keystone of these efforts is the planet Reach, an interstellar naval yard responsible for building starships, and a hub of scientific and military activity.[19] A secret military endeavor, dubbed the SPARTAN-II Project, was established on Reach to create an army of biologically-engineered, cyborg "super-soldiers". Thirty-two years before the beginning of the game, a technologically advanced collective of alien races, the Covenant, began to attack human settlements.[19] Declaring humanity an affront to their gods, the Covenant launched a holy war against the human race.[19] The United Nations Space Command experienced a series of crushing defeats, and, although the super-soldiers of the SPARTAN-II Project fought impressively against the Covenant, they were too few in number to turn the tides of war.[19]

To prepare for a mission to discover the location of the Covenant homeworld by boarding one of its starships, SPARTAN-II soldiers were recalled to Reach for further augmentation.[19] Two days before the mission was to begin, Covenant forces attacked Reach and destroyed the colony.[19] A single starship, the Pillar of Autumn, survived the onslaught and initiated a random jump to light speed,[29] hoping to lead the enemy away from Earth.[30]

Characters

The player character is "Master Chief John-117",[31] the last known (see Halo: The Fall of Reach and its sequels for more information) surviving super-soldier 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. The Pillar of Autumn's captain, Jacob Keyes, is a minor character. Playing an antagonistic role in the game's events is 343 Guilty Spark, an eccentric artificial intelligence responsible for monitoring and maintaining Halo's systems.

Plot

The story is presented through an instruction manual, scripted events and conversations during the game, and in-game cut scenes. The game begins as the Pillar of Autumn exits light speed near a mysterious ring-shaped space station, called "Halo" by the Covenant.[32] A Covenant fleet attacks and heavily damages the Pillar of Autumn. Jacob Keyes initiates "The Cole Protocol",[33] a procedure designed to prevent the Covenant from learning about 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.

Captain Keyes survives the Autumn's crash landing, but is captured by the Covenant.[34] In the second and third levels of the game, the Master Chief and Cortana gather human survivors and rescue Captain Keyes, who then orders Master Chief to beat the Covenant to Halo's control center and to discover its purpose.[35] The Master Chief and Cortana travel to a map room called the Silent Cartographer, which leads them to the control room.[36] There, Cortana enters the systems and, discovering something urgent, suddenly sends the Master Chief to find Captain Keyes, while she stays behind.[37] While searching for his commander, the Master Chief learns that the Covenant has accidentally released the Flood, a parasitic alien race capable of spreading itself by overwhelming and infesting other sentient lifeforms. Keyes falls victim to them while looking for a cache of weapons. The release of the Flood prompts 343 Guilty Spark to ask the Master Chief to help him to prevent the Flood from leaving Halo by retrieving of the Index, a key that activates Halo and prevents the Flood from spreading.

File:Halo master chief 343 guilty spark screenshot.jpg
The Master Chief (left) converses with 343 Guilty Spark (right).

After the Master Chief retrieves and begins 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, thus effectively starving the Flood.[38] When confronted with this information, 343 Guilty Spark states that the installation technically only has a maximum radius of twenty-five thousand light years, but that its pulse would trigger other similar installations as well, killing all sentient life in the galaxy.[39]

With Cortana's help, and while fighting the Flood, the Covenant, and Guilty Spark's Sentinels, the Master Chief attempts to destroy Halo before 343 Guilty Spark activates it. Cortana discovers that the best way to destroy Halo is to cause the crashed Pillar of Autumn to self-destruct.[40] However, Captain Keyes' authorization is required to destroy the ship.[41] By the time that they reach Keyes, he has been infested and turned into a Brain Flood. The Master Chief retrieves Keyes' neural implants directly from his brain, and Cortana activates the Autumn's self-destruct sequence. However, 343 Guilty Spark reappears and deactivates the countdown, discovering the record of human history in the process.[42] The Master Chief manually causes the Pillar of Autumn's fusion reactors to begin to melt down, giving him and Cortana only fifteen minutes to escape.[43] The Master Chief and Cortana flee in a small starship before Halo explodes. The ending reveals that 343 Guilty Spark survives the explosion of Halo, and the story is continued in Halo 2.

Template:Endspoiler

Multiplayer

Because Halo was released before Xbox Live, online multiplayer games were not officially supported.[44] The game instead uses a network hub system that could link a maximum of sixteen players. This setup was revolutionary for a console game, but was often deemed impractical.[21] Because Halo lacks artificially intelligent game bots, LAN parties are needed to reach the game's sixteen-player limit.[16] In addition to competitive multiplayer modes, two players may co-operatively play through the game's campaign.[16] Halo's multiplayer components were generally well-received by critics.[45][11][18]

Although the Xbox version of Halo lacks official support for online multiplayer play, GameSpy's Xbox Connect packet tunnelling software provides an unofficial means around this limitation.[12] The PC port of Halo supports online matches involving up to sixteen players and includes multiplayer maps not in the original Xbox release.[46] However, co-operative play was removed because it would have required large amounts of recoding to implement.[47] On March 15, 2004, Gearbox Software released Halo: Custom Edition for the PC, thus enabling players to use custom-made maps and game modifications.[48]

Audio

Halo's soundtrack was created by Bungie Studios' audio director, Martin O'Donnell, and received enthusiastic praise from many critics.[18][17][20][22][10] O'Donnell has stated that his goal was to provide "a feeling of importance, weight, and sense of the 'ancient'."[49] 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)."[50]

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."[50] 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."[51]

Development

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.[52] Before this public announcement, game industry journalists had previewed the game in a private showing during E3 1999, and were reportedly amazed.[52] 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."[53]

At E3 2000, the first trailer of Halo was well-received.[54] The version shown there differed greatly from the one exhibited previously, marking the first major overhaul in the game's development.[55] 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.[56] Early versions of Covenant aliens appear in great numbers and loot what they can, and war erupts between them and the humans.[56] Unable to match the technologically advanced alien race, the humans on the ring world resort to guerrilla warfare.[56] 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."[57]

In accordance with rumors,[58] Microsoft announced on June 19, 2000 that it had acquired Bungie Studios.[59] 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.[60] Originally a key element, the game's online multiplayer component was dropped because Xbox Live was unfinished at the time of Halo's release. While a playable demonstration of the game at Gamestock 2001 was well-received,[61] critics had mixed reactions to its exhibition at E3 2001.[62][63] The game was released in North America simultaneously with the Xbox, on November 15, 2001.[1]

A Halo port for Windows was announced to be under development by Gearbox Software on July 12, 2002.[64] Its showing at E3 2003 was positively received by GameSpy and GameSpot,[65][66] with skepticism from IGN.[67] It released on September 30, 2003,[3] including support for online multiplayer play and featuring sharper graphics, but possessing compatibility issues that caused poor performance.[68][46] Halo was later released for Mac OS X on December 11, 2003.[4]

Reception

Halo broke sales records; by April 8, 2002, one million units had been sold; this pace was faster than that of any previous sixth-generation console game.[69] Halo's retail price remained at US$49.99 until November 30, 2003.[70] By July 14, 2003, the game had sold three million copies worldwide,[71] and by January 28, 2004, it had reached four million copies.[72] Since its release on November 15, 2001, Halo has sold over six million copies worldwide,[6] with nearly five million sales in North America.[73]

Halo was critically acclaimed, earning an overall score of ninety-seven out of one hundred on Metacritic.[1] Electronic Gaming Monthly observed, "This game has me totally mesmerized ... [It] engages your intellect on a whole different level," and awarded the game a perfect score.[5] GameSpot claimed that "Halo's single-player game is worth picking up an Xbox for alone," commenting, "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."[20] IGN remarked similarly, calling Halo a "can't miss, no-brainer, sure thing, five star, triple A game."[18] Edge called it "the most important launch game for any console, ever," awarding it a ten-out-of-ten score.[11] The game received numerous Game of the Year awards, including those of the Academy of Interactive Arts & Sciences,[74] Electronic Gaming Monthly, Edge, and IGN.[75] The British Academy of Film and Television Arts awarded Halo "Best Console Game", and Rolling Stone presented it with their "Best Original Soundtrack" award.[75] According to Xbox.com, the game received a total of forty-eight awards.[75]

Although Halo's overall reception was positive, the game was criticized for its level design. IGN wrote that "the middle third of the game basically has ... the same level over again."[18] GameSpy notably disliked the game, awarding it tenth place on its "Top 25 Most Overrated Games of All Time" list, stating that the levels often "degenerated into recycling the same areas over and over until you were bored to tears," in addition to complaining about the multiplayer's lack of online functionality.[12] Noting the level design as a problem, an article on Game Studies.org stated that the game still "triumphs in understanding the anatomy of the FPS," and is "not so much about 'combat evolved' as the subtitle suggests, but about 'genre evolved'."[76]

Halo's PC rendition was subject to mixed reactions, receiving a score of eighty-three out of one hundred on Metacritic.[3] While GameSpot claimed that it was "still an incredible action game ... [and] a true classic,"[68] it received a score of eight point two-out-of-ten from IGN, remarking "if you've played the game on the Xbox, there's not much for you here."[46] Eurogamer called the game "a missed opportunity," but stated that the online multiplayer component was "a massive draw ... for Halo veterans."[47]

Legacy

Halo's influence has been called "undeniable",[77] and its "numerous subtle innovations have been borrowed by countless other games since."[78] The game is often cited as the main reason for the Xbox's success,[79] and it began what is commonly known as the system's flagship franchise.[80] Through criteria including revenue, average review scores, commentary, spin-offs and other elements, Halo has been estimated as the top second game of the twenty-first century, behind only Grand Theft Auto: Vice City.[81] The game's popularity sparked the usage of terms like "Halo clone"[82][83][84][13] and "Halo killer".[14] Notably, the game Killzone was billed as a "Halo killer".[85][86] The Halo engine has been utilized for the game Stubbs the Zombie in "Rebel Without a Pulse".[87]

Halo has been featured at both Major League Gaming and the World Cyber Games.[88][89] In machinima, the game was used as the basis for the extremely popular Red vs. Blue. The game's sequel, Halo 2, made US$125 million on the first day of its release,[90] earning it the distinction of the fastest-selling United States media product in history.[91] A film based on the Halo series is expected for a 2008 release,[92] with Peter Jackson as the executive producer.[93]

Novelization

The Halo universe has been adapted several times into novel form. The first such adaptation was Halo: The Fall of Reach, a prequel to the events of Halo: Combat Evolved. Published in October 2001, this novel was written by Eric Nylund, who reportedly finished it in seven weeks.[94] The novel eventually became a Publisher's Weekly bestseller with nearly two hundred thousand copies sold.[95] The following novel, entitled Halo: The Flood, is a tie-in of 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 Publisher's Weekly bestsellers list during May 2003.[96] 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 sixteen weeks,[95] it was published in December 2003.[97] Nylund is working on a fourth novel, Halo: Ghosts of Onyx, expected to be published by November 2006.[98]

Another adaptation is the Halo Graphic Novel, a collection of four short stories released in July 2006.[99] It was written and illustrated by well-known graphic novelists Lee Hammock, Jay Faerber, Tsutomu Nihei, Brett Lewis, Simon Bisley, Ed Lee and Jean Giraud. Bungie Studios regards Halo's adaptations as canon.[100]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Halo: Combat Evolved on Metacritic".
  2. ^ a b c d "Halo: Combat Evolved at Neoseeker". Retrieved August 22. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  3. ^ a b c "Halo: Combat Evolved PC version on Metacritic". Retrieved August 22. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  4. ^ a b "Halo: Combat Evolved Mac version at GameSpot". Retrieved August 22. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  5. ^ a b Electronic Gaming Monthly issue 150, pg 224
  6. ^ a b c "Videogame Sales Charts". VG Charts.org. Retrieved May 19. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  7. ^ Errera, Claude (January 10, 2000). "Interview with Matt Soell". Bungie.org. Retrieved August 4. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  8. ^ Perry, Douglass (May 11, 2000). "Bungie's ambitious first-person shooter is coming..." IGN. Retrieved September 7. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  9. ^ "Halo: Combat Evolved review at DreamStation.cc". DreamStation. September 13, 2003. Retrieved August 5. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  10. ^ a b c Accardo, Sal (November 15, 2001). "GameSpy's review of Halo: Combat Evolved for the Xbox". GameSpy. Retrieved September 2. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  11. ^ a b c Edge issue 105, pg 1 (review scans)
  12. ^ a b c "Top 25 Most Overrated Games of All Time". GameSpy. September 15, 2003. Retrieved June 26. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  13. ^ a b Wiley, James (January 23, 2006). "Joystiq Interview: Peter Moore @ CES". Joystiq. Retrieved September 7. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  14. ^ a b Sparks, Ryan (February 25, 2005). "Making a Halo Killer". Advanced Media Network. Retrieved September 7. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  15. ^ Tavares, José Pedro, Rui Gil, and Licino Roque (2005). "Player as Author: conjecturing online game creation modalities and infrastructure". Retrieved August 3. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Cite journal requires |journal= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  16. ^ a b c "Frequently Asked Questions about Halo: Gameplay". Halo.Bungie.Org. Retrieved September 6. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  17. ^ a b Dante, Tolen (November 20, 2001). "Halo: Combat Evolved review at The Armchair Empire". The Armchair Empire. Retrieved September 6. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  18. ^ a b c d e Boulding, Aaron (November 9, 2001). "Halo: Combat Evolved review at IGN". IGN. Retrieved August 31. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Halo: Combat Evolved game manual
  20. ^ a b c d e Fielder, Joe (November 9, 2001). "Halo: Combat Evolved review at GameSpot". GameSpot. Retrieved August 2. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  21. ^ a b Laidlaw, Mike (November 22, 2001). "Halo: Combat Evolved review at The Adrenaline Vault". The Adrenaline Vault. Retrieved September 2. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  22. ^ a b "Halo: Combat Evolved review at Gameplanet". Gameplanet. October 16, 2002. Retrieved September 6. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  23. ^ "Human Weapons Intro". Bungie.net. Retrieved September 8. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  24. ^ "Covenant Weapons Intro". Bungie.net. Retrieved September 8. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  25. ^ "The GameSpot Guide to Halo: Combat Evolved -- The Covenant". GameSpot. October 17, 2003. Retrieved September 8. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help) Requires GameSpot registration.
  26. ^ a b "The GameSpot Guide to Halo: Combat Evolved -- The Flood". GameSpot. October 17,2003. Retrieved September 8. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= and |date= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help) Requires GameSpot registration.
  27. ^ Soboleski, Brent (November 9, 2001). "Halo Review (Xbox)". TeamXbox. Retrieved September 2. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  28. ^ "Halo: Combat Evolved review at TalkXbox". TalkXbox. October 13, 2003. Retrieved September 6. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  29. ^ 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.
  30. ^ 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?
  31. ^ "Halo Story". Retrieved September 7. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  32. ^ Keyes: While the Covenant had us locked up in here, I overheard the guards talking about this ring world. They call it... Halo.
  33. ^ Keyes: All right then, I'm initiating Cole Protocol article two. We're abandoning the Autumn. That means you too, Cortana.
  34. ^ 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.
  35. ^ 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 who 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.
  36. ^ 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.
  37. ^ 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!
  38. ^ 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!
  39. ^ 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 any least any life with sufficient biomass to sustain the Flood... but you already knew that. I mean, how couldn't you?
  40. ^ 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.
  41. ^ 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 failsafes 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.
  42. ^ 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!
  43. ^ Cortana: That did it. The engine's gone critical. Based on the current rate of decay, you should have fifteen minutes to get off the ship. We don't have much time. We should move outside and signal for evac. Accessing schematics ... there's a service lift at the top of the engine room. It leads to a Class 7 service corridor that runs along the ship's dorsal structure. Hurry!
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