Several sites, including current one-Wu-wonder HBO, pointed out an article on Halo 2 in Entertainment Weekly. Some of those sites also pointed out some things which, while not outright inaccuracies, certainly seem to skew their perception of the game through a film industry lens.
For instance, from reading this article you'd think Halo 2 was entirely Joe Staten's project-- there's no mention of any other staffer, and Staten is referred to as the "philosophical ringleader of Bungie Studios" (Editor's Note: We thought that was Jones' gig. So sue us. Without diminishing Staten's contribution to the project one bit, we do suspect other people were involved.)
However, there are still several revealing bits of information here.
But the biggest step forward is that Staten's story about an invasion of Earth is now told from the perspective of both the humans and the Covenant aliens.
We're not quite sure what that means, although it might be the reason why some new Covenant species, like Prophets, speak English-- so that parts of the game showing events from the Covenant perspective will be intelligible without resorting to subtitles.
Staten also admits to political, as well as religious, themes in the story:
"You could look at [the story] as a damning condemnation of the Bush administration's adventure in the Middle East."
In fact, the story also cites that Microsoft's legal team forced a change in one alien name due to "Muslim overtones".
The article also tries to place Halo within the context of religious beliefs, something hinted at in Halo 1, but never fully explained:
Since Master Chief was already well established, Staten and his father, a professor of theology, developed a set of religious beliefs that could explain the Covenant's actions in the sequel. They zeroed in on the idea of the Halos — 10,000-kilometer-wide ring worlds — as utopias, safe havens in a universe filled with terror.
Which makes one wonder exactly what it is about being crawling with hostile adaptive lifeforms like the Flood makes a piece of cosmic real estate into a Utopia. I guess there's no accounting for taste.
To top it all off, we get a hint of what might be next from Bungie:
To that end, he's busy at work on several projects, including the possible resurrection of Phoenix, a non-sci-fi project that Bungie spent two years on before putting it aside to finish Halo 2.
Quite a lot of revealing information, even if it is from a source that doesn't usually follow games; so take it with a few grains of salt.
Comments
Rampant AI (not verified)
Two Sides to every Story
The other perspective should not be difficult to decipher. An CENSORED....