Brian
06-01-2006, 09:36 AM
Half-Life 2: Episode One Review (http://www.thetechlounge.com/news/10175/HalfLife+2+Episode+One+Review/)
"When is a sequel not a sequel? When it's Half Life 2: Episode One, the confusingly titled first new episode in a trilogy of releases that picks directly where HL2 left off. So it's part two of Half-Life 2, but episode one of three of part two? Something like that. Even Valve boss Gabe Newell seems exasperated with trying to justify it. "We should have just called it Half Life 3: Episode One, but it's a bit late now," he chuckles. Actually, Aftermath worked pretty well...
Daft naming conventions aside, Episode One very much belongs to the original Half-Life 2 in every sense. Just as the box says, this is "the first new episode for Half-Life 2," and the game's millions of fans will be more than happy with the opportunity to wield the gravity gun again, duff up the Combine forces and hang out with Alyx. Who wouldn't?
But once you play through Episode One it's hardly surprising Valve tied itself up in knots when deciding on a title. The fact that it's the first part of a coherent story-driven trilogy elevates it above expansion pack cash-in fodder, but at the same time it's perhaps too closely associated with its 'parent' game to be thought of as a bona fide sequel. In a sense we're very much in GTA III/Vice City/San Andreas territory: you know exactly what to expect, but love it precisely because it's more of the same."
Read full story here (http://www.eurogamer.net/article.php?article_id=65249)
"When is a sequel not a sequel? When it's Half Life 2: Episode One, the confusingly titled first new episode in a trilogy of releases that picks directly where HL2 left off. So it's part two of Half-Life 2, but episode one of three of part two? Something like that. Even Valve boss Gabe Newell seems exasperated with trying to justify it. "We should have just called it Half Life 3: Episode One, but it's a bit late now," he chuckles. Actually, Aftermath worked pretty well...
Daft naming conventions aside, Episode One very much belongs to the original Half-Life 2 in every sense. Just as the box says, this is "the first new episode for Half-Life 2," and the game's millions of fans will be more than happy with the opportunity to wield the gravity gun again, duff up the Combine forces and hang out with Alyx. Who wouldn't?
But once you play through Episode One it's hardly surprising Valve tied itself up in knots when deciding on a title. The fact that it's the first part of a coherent story-driven trilogy elevates it above expansion pack cash-in fodder, but at the same time it's perhaps too closely associated with its 'parent' game to be thought of as a bona fide sequel. In a sense we're very much in GTA III/Vice City/San Andreas territory: you know exactly what to expect, but love it precisely because it's more of the same."
Read full story here (http://www.eurogamer.net/article.php?article_id=65249)