Banshee Flare Movie Available
The Banshee Flare movie has been added to our Halo Movies page and is now available for download from the website as well as the Hotline server.
The Banshee Flare movie has been added to our Halo Movies page and is now available for download from the website as well as the Hotline server.
I kid you not. Toalmaster made a tea pot modeled after a Hunter from Halo and has posted several pictures in the Marathon's Story forum. (Thanks HBO)
YAHV (Yet Another Halo Video) has hit the web and calls for your attention. FrogBlast has posted the Banshee Flare video in the HBO forum. It's not nearly as long as the two other popular Halo videos; this one's short and sweet. Click this link and 1.1 MB later you'll see a plasma grenade explode, launching a second plasma grenade up in the air and attach itself to an overhead Banshee. Pure brilliance!
UPDATE: The video is now mirrored on RampancyHL and will be on the website shortly.
There is now a local copy of What Goes Up here on the Rampancy.net website as well as the hotline server.
There's no dispute that the original Warthog Jump video was a success, but now Aikidoka and Halorigin are looking to upstage it with their new clip titled What Goes Up. In the original Warthog Jump, R. Glass used a few grenades and a rocket launcher to give the Warthog its lift. This definitely did the job, but Aikidoka and Halorigin figured that 53 grenades would work a little better.
They were right.
What Goes Up is 35 MB and is over six minutes long. Mirrors are appearing over at HBO and we plan on hosting the video here at Rampancy, too. It's already being hosted on RampancyHL for those of you who just can't wait.
This is just to note that downloads of the now infamous Warthog Jump movie from Rampancy.net have just passed 17,000. And not to worry, we won't be pulling this mirror for any reason as long as there is demand.
Truth & Reconciliation has had a couple updates today, beginning with an interview with Rob McLees. Some may be unfamiliar with his name, but McLees is a veteran Bungie employee who has contributed many art and story elements to the company's fantastic game library. McLees can be thanked for creating the majority of Halo's weapons; check out the interview for loads of information about the process behind this.
As if an interview wasn't enough, the concept art section has had a seventh gallery added that features some of McLees' Flood art.
Lophan pointed out a Bloomberg story over in the HBO forum in which a company called Immersion is claiming that Microsoft and Sony are both infringing on patents it owns on force feedback technology.
While the Bloomberg story was not in evidence on their site this morning, a Reuters item was available on Yahoo; however, it does not mention Halo by name.
What's more, it appears that this suit is perhaps not as frivolous as many other infringement suits filed against major companies by smaller ones; a press release on Immersion's site notes they have reached a settlement in an earlier suit against InterAct accessories over peripherals they make for the PlayStation 2 that include tactile feedback features.
Apparently the suit follows long and unsuccessful negotiations with both companies. The firm representing Immersion against Sony and Microsoft, Irell and Manella, also successfully represented Immersion against InterAct, and was the firm that won a $120 million judgment in the suit against Microsoft filed by Stac Electronics over the illegal integration of compression routines used in their Stacker hard disk doubler software (even though that failed to save the company).
TeamXbox is reporting that the IGDA (International Game Developers Association) has announced the nominees for their 2001 Game Developers Choice Awards, which will be awarded March 19 - 23 in San Jose, CA.
Halo was nominated for Game of the Year as well as for excellence in Audio and Programming categories. Halo was conspicuously absent from the visual arts category.
Another gaming site I had no idea existed before now, Four Fat Chicks, has posted a Halo review by Dan Benge. Here's what Benge has to say in conclusion:
Halo is a classic. It's one of the best games of 2001 and a good shot in the arm for 3D shooters and the Xbox. It's another addition to the latest trend of computer games that let you use your own style. It's replayable, as the AI makes everything almost completely unpredictable each time you play it. To top it all off, the graphics are excellent.
Under the verdict in the review is a smiling star... I have no idea what it is supposed to represent (or if other games receive more than one) but the review itself is glowingly positive. So there you have it... even fat chicks like Halo.
Thanks VoodooExtreme.
By now you've certainly seen Randy Glass' Warthog launch video and may have even attempted to emulate his performance yourself. Without instruction, this may be more difficult than you would expect. Fortunately for us, RaSMG3030 has posted the twenty step guide to performing the Warthog launch in TeamXbox's forums. Some have already reported success, so give it a try and make a Kodak moment of your own.
Bungie has posted No7orius's walkthrough of Pillar Of Autumn on Legendary difficulty at Truth & Reconciliation. No7orius has beaten the level in under eighteen minutes, which is not too shabby by any means, and has written the instructions (complete with pictures) so you can, too.
HBO has finally finished setting up its press scans section, which features scans of forty magazines from all over the world. The press scans basically serve as an archive of older Halo material, such as previews and reviews, so they don't get lost in the void of time.
Randy Glass has put together various clips of him messing around with Halo's physics in the hands-down funniest video on the Internet. I'm at a loss of words, so I'll just provide you with links to the video:
The video requires Apple QuickTime. (Thanks HBO)
Impressive game design or pure coincidence? Xbox.com used NFL Fever 2002 to predict the outcome of Super Bowl XXXVI and the results were nothing short of frightening. TeamXbox writes:
Xbox.com should be rolling in it if they placed any bets based on their NFL Fever 2002 based prediction for the Superbowl. In one of the biggest upsets in Superbowl history, the New England Patriots upset the St. Louis Rams 20-17, as predicted by Xbox.com.The Super Bowl win was the first for the New England Patriots. The loss drops the Rams Super Bowl record to 1-2.
Just goes to show, that games really can reflect and recreate reality. And this is a testament to the programming of NFL Fever 2002 that the stats and attributes of the teams is dead on with the actual teams. Not only did Xbox.com predict the final score, they predicted that the last play of the game would decide the game. Very nice.
Check out the statement at Xbox.com or TeamXbox's story for more details.