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Orange Box, The xbox360 Game Reviews
Orange Box, The
Critic Score
Metascore: 96 Metascore out of 100
User Score  
8.9 out of 10
based on 54 reviews
Read critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
based on 337 votes
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Rate this game

Games included in The Orange Box compilation: The original Half-Life 2 - The player again picks up the crowbar of research scientist Gordon Freeman, who finds himself on an alien-infested Earth being picked to the bone, its resources depleted, its populace dwindling. Freeman is thrust into the unenviable role of rescuing the world from the wrong he unleashed back at Black Mesa. And a lot of people - people he cares about - are counting on him. Half-Life 2: Episode One - The player reprises his role of Dr. Freeman, who must immediately face the repercussions of his actions in City 17 and the Citadel. Freeman reconnects with Alyx Vance and her robot, Dog, as they continue their support of the resistance's battle against the Combine forces. Half-Life 2: Episode Two -- the second installment in Valve's episodic trilogy advances the award-winning story, leading the player to new locations outside of City 17. Portal - a pioneering type of single player action game that rewrites the rules for how players approach and manipulate their environment – much like how Half-Life 2's Gravity Gun reinvented the way gamers interact with objects in the game. Team Fortress 2 - an all-new version of the legendary title that spawned team based multiplayer action games. The game's daring new art style features the most advanced graphics of any Source-based game released to date. [Valve Software]

PUBLISHER: Electronic Arts / Valve Software
DEVELOPER: Valve Software
GENRE(S): First-Person Shooter, Action, Compilation
PLAYERS: 16
ESRB RATING: M (Mature)
RELEASE DATE: October 9, 2007

What The Critics Said

All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...

100
Yahoo! Games
The Orange Box can't stop giving. It's a sci-fi masterpiece, a clever puzzler and a multiplayer monster wrapped into one, making this a landmark achievement in gaming value and one of the easiest buying decisions you'll make all year. Color us impressed.
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100
Eurogamer
The Orange Box offers everything any fan of first-person shooters could possibly want: some of the best single-player gaming ever in the shape of Half-Life 2 and Episodes One and Two; wonderful innovation from Portal, and the most refined, downright fun team-based online FPS currently available in Team Fortress 2. If that doesn't warrant a 10 out of 10, nothing does.
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100
GameTap
After playing through both the old and new stuff, I realized that there is one word that perfectly summarizes Valve: craft. Never mind that ballyhoo about whether games are capital-A art or not. Instead, put someone in front of a Valve game, and watch that person experience sheer craftsmanship. It seems that Valve just can't make a bad game.
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100
GameDaily
Gaming bliss, the essential collection for gamers the world over and one of 2007's best deals.
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100
GameSpy
Even though The Orange Box deserves accolades regarding the amount of "bang for your buck," it's really about quality here, not quantity. Aside from the fact that you're receiving five games on one disc, the craftsmanship that has gone into each of these titles rears its head with every Antlion you shoot, every high-velocity portal transfer you make, and every sentry gun you assemble.
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100
1UP
The Orange Box is the greatest quantity of quality gaming ever.
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100
GamePro
For first-person shooter fans, it doesn't get much better than this. What's even better is that each individual game runs amazingly well on the Xbox 360. The graphics are amazing as is the presentation. The interface that Valve created for navigating through the content is also wonderful.
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100
G4 TV
It’s hard to think of a game on the shelves that provides more bang for the buck than The Orange Box. For $60, you get one of the best games ever made along with its episodic sequels, a top-tier multiplayer game, and a brilliant little puzzler with some of the best writing in the medium. There’s really no reason not to own it.
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100
X360 Magazine UK
The Orange Box offers more value for money than any RPG package in history. Valve and EA could have charged through the nose, but wisely kep it honest. It's the best ₤50 you'll ever spend. [Issue#25, p.39]
100
GamerNode
The best deal in terms of bang-for-the-buck since "Mario All Stars."
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100
Edge Magazine
As a whole it is almost overwhelming in its depth, irresistible in value and certainly, unreservedly, brilliant. [Dec 2007, p.82]
100
Gaming Age
You get 5 outstanding games that give you a little bit of everything, action, story, puzzles, multiplayer, and just flat out addictive content. If you own a decent PC, a 360 or a PS3...you would be doing yourself, gamers, and the wonderful developers a great injustice by not buying The Orange Box. Not only is it possibly the best bargain in gaming history, but arguably the best FPS experience of all time.
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100
Armchair Empire
Succulent and juicy sweet gaming goodness – The Orange Box is waiting to be unpeeled.
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100
AceGamez
So there you have it; for the price of one game, you're getting three incredible chapters of arguably the best single player first person shooter ever created, the unique and sublime first person shooter puzzler hybrid that is Portal, and an incredible multiplayer game that is incredibly addictive and totally distinctive, simply unlike any other online shooter on the market.
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100
GameShark
Valve has put together an impressive package that demands your attention. Now you just need to clear your schedule until late March to fully enjoy it all.
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100
WHAM! Gaming
At the end of the day, however, you just can't beat the value being offered here and though it's not perfect, the sum of "The Orange Box" is greater than its parts.
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100
Maxi Consolas (Portugal)
Even if you forget the fact that you have five games in one box, it’s the quality here that’s impressive. One of the best FPS ever, a little slice of pure genius and a multiplayer classic renewed. [Nov 2007]
100
GotNext
It varies from amazing to simply good, but it'd be worth the money at twice the price if you haven't already experienced any of it before.
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98
Electronic Gaming Monthly
The Orange Box is the greatest quantity of quality gaming ever...Even at $60, this box is value-priced to the point of philanthropy. [Dec 2007, p.124]
98
Gamer 2.0
Really, The Orange Box is a must-have game. There are few games that even begin to approach the value and quality that can be found here.
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98
Game Informer
For those who have played both, don’t worry – there is still $60 worth of new content in this package, so you too should go ahead and re-read that headline, because you shouldn’t have to read this whole review to understand why The Orange Box is probably the best videogame deal ever.
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97
Talk Xbox
No matter how one looks at it, The Orange Box is an astonishing deal that should be considered a mandatory purchase for any real fan of the genre.
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97
Planet Xbox 360
There is something on this disc for everyone in the family and if you are a fan of the Half Life brand it should be a no-brainer purchase, I cannot recommend The Orange Box enough.
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97
Xbox World 360 Magazine UK
Five of the very best games you will ever, ever play - all in a forty quid box. [Christmas 2007, p.64]
97
Gaming Target
The Orange Box is the best collection of video games ever to grace a console, and since you bothered to read this review, you know exactly why.
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97
Worth Playing
Each component of the package has moderate to minor flaws, but as a whole of historical significance and truly unique, entirely innovative contemporary game design, The Orange Box is pretty damn close to perfect, barring the rare, almost accidental miracle title.
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96
Game Positive
This collection is an astounding value, and crams so much refined gameplay into one package that anyone who doesn't experience it is missing out on one of the best releases in recent memory.
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96
XboxAddict
An engaging single player adventure broken out into several episodes, a brilliantly balanced and class based multiplayer shoot-fest, and an original game that will bend your mind.
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96
Kombo
Every component of the Orange Box stands as a unique triumph in modern game design and serves as powerful representation of what's possible when you have one of the most talented and dedicated developers in the industry working at the top of their game.
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96
Team Xbox
While there might be longer games ("Oblivion," for example) or games that pack more titles onto a single disc (any of the “classic” compilations), this is a near-perfect blend of varied games.
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95
GameSpot
With three amazing new games and two classics all in one package, it's impossible to go wrong with The Orange Box.
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95
ZTGameDomain
You will be hard pressed to find a better deal this holiday season and to those who think gaming was better back in the glory days, enjoy your 8-bit sprites while I continue to indulge life as a Freeman!
Read Full Review
95
Official Xbox Magazine
The Orange Box packs so much quality content into one $60 title that it sets an almost dangerous precedent for all other developers and publishers. [Dec 2007, p.58]
Read Full Review
95
IGN
That so much great content is offered at the standard single-game price is astonishing.
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95
Play Magazine
There are many reasons to praise Half-Life 2 that reach well beyond the surface of its gameplay and into the expression of its complete world of fantasy. [Nov 2007, p.66]
95
Game Over Online
As has already been pointed out in many other places by many other people, The Orange Box may be the single greatest value in gaming history.
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95
Console Monster
It may not be as long as some games, or contain as many games as other compilations but it's the best deal with a load of quality games all stuck into one fantastic box.
Read Full Review
95
Hardcore Gamer Magazine
Finally, console owners get to experience the entire "Half-Life 2" saga without having to load games off of several discs or tweak their PC just to get a decent framerate. [Dec 2007, p.58]
94
Play.tm
And don't forget: The blend of near-faultless quality and originality associated with the amassed content threatening to burst free of Valve's collection can be secured for the price of a single Xbox 360 title, which near demands that The Orange Box finds its way onto your disc tray at the earliest possible opportunity.
Read Full Review
94
GameZone
Finding another collection that matches the quality of The Orange Box is next to impossible.
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94
Games Master UK
With the fantastic "Team Fortress 2" supplying the multiplayer action, this is a formidable complilation. What more could you want? That box of chocolates? Would've been nice. [Dec 2007, p.60]
94
Pelit (Finland)
Contains some of the best moments ever seen in first person shooters. Half-Life 2 is a true classic and would be worth getting for Xbox 360 or PC even without the additional features of The Orange Box. Team Fortress may be old but is streamlined to perfection, and Portal is damn fun, with one of the best endings ever. [Nov 2007]
94
Cheat Code Central
One of the best deals in gaming. All five games that are offered are a blast to play, and if Portal and Team Fortress 2 were fleshed out a little more, they could easily stand on their own. However, most gamers will not be angry at Valve for packaging all of the games together, giving a nearly complete Half Life 2 experience.
Read Full Review
93
GameTrailers
When you consider that you have what many coined a perfect game in Half-Life 2, two incredible mini-chapters, one of the most innovative puzzle games you’ll ever play, and addictive online multiplayer all for just 60 bones, you can’t go wrong. Do not hesitate. Man’s freedom awaits.
Read Full Review
92
PGNx Media
In the end, The Orange Box is worth more than your $60. The Half-Life 2 games alone could comfortably sell at that price, but the addition of the surprisingly fun Portal and the incredibly deep Team Fortress 2 make this a must-have game.
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91
Game Revolution
The Orange Box is more content on one disc than just about any other 360 game on the market...Though each game has its own drawbacks and limitations, and some games you might wish were on their own with a ton more content, The Orange Box is a fantastic deal and a worthy addition to any 360 library.
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90
Deeko
Quite simply, if you own a 360 and love shooters; then The Orange Box is a must buy.
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90
PTGamers
A collection of very diverse games, including one interesting multiplayer, a fabulous puzzle game, and, of course, one of the most interesting stories in videogames.
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90
Thunderbolt
If you haven't experienced the trials of Gordon Freeman at the hands of the Combine before, The Orange Box is an absolute must buy.
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90
Total Video Games
Half Life 2: Orange Box is undoubtedly the best value videogame around. Admittedly it may not have the sheer numbers of the dodgy '200-in-1' packs found in car-boot sales across the country during the 90's, but you'll rarely find something of this quality and diversity wrapped in one box.
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90
Official Xbox Magazine UK
With Half-life you've got a remarkable, near-perfect single-player experience, while Team Fortress 2 provides endless replay value and Portal provides a unique innovative sideways look at the physics of video games. And don't think it ends here, because Valve is a past master of the art of Downloadable Content. An essential purchase.
Read Full Review
90
360 Gamer Magazine UK
The Orange Box is a fantastic package and the best deal you’ll find for a long, long time. We’d happily pay full-whack just to play Half-Life 2 on next gen, so to get another two Episodes, albeit shorter ones, plus another two full games and The Orange Box becomes the kind of gift usually reserved for sick kids on TV Christmas specials. If you’ve ever liked a single shoot-’em-up, you absolutely have to put this on your most wanted list.
90
VideoGamer
If you love FPS gaming you owe it to yourself to get The Orange Box. Hell, if you love gaming, you owe it to yourself to get it.
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88
The New York Times
The Orange Box reminds me of those knife sets sold on late-night TV, where if you act now you get a vegetable chopper and a cutting board. Besides Episode 2, Portal and Team Fortress 2, the package includes the original Half-Life 2 and Half-Life 2: Episode 1. But no cake. If someone tells you the Orange Box comes with cake, remember that whatever else you choose to believe, the cake is most definitely a lie.
Read Full Review

What Our Users Said

Vote Now! The average user rating for this game is 8.9 (out of 10) based on 337 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.

Rowan F gave it a10:
Five impossibly good games, all for fourty pounds. That's realy all you need to know. Half Life Two is made even better with it's list of new acheivments; Episode One delivers some more of that trademark awsome gaming; Episode Two delivers more of the same but with quite a few new additions, luckily just before it started to get samey, and a nice graphical update; Portal's darkly witty storyline and innovative game design make it an absolute classic, and Team Fortress 2's addictive gameplay and radical stlye will make you fall in love with it instantly. All in all, you really can't go wrong here. Perhaps the only bad thing that comes to mind is that a couple of the games are a little short considering their development time but, hey, that's Valve for you.

Alex D gave it a7:
The Half Life episodes and poral are incredibly hard to get passed. I just played the single player games until I couldn't get passed them anymore. I'm still lokking for an Orange Box strategy guide to get passed The Half Life episodes and Portal. What i give the high score for is Grapics, Gameplay, and Story lines.

John P. gave it a10:
This series of games deserves nothing but the best awards. Half Life 2 plus Episodes 1 and 2: absolutely amazing story line and game play. Following and trumping the original HL's success for innovative and dynamic plot, HL2 destroys the competition at the time. Portal: One of the most intriguing and amazing puzzle games ever. This game is comparable to Tetris in taking the Puzzle genre to a whole new level. Team Fortress 2: One word: DAMN!

Pablo K gave it a10:
Half Life 2 is one of the best computer games on the P.C, a long with Team Fortress 2 a very good online multi player shooter, portal, a puzzle game, and Ep1 and Ep2. All these games have high ratings, and are some of the best games on the P.C. The orange box is also one of the best "Gaming Deals in History" There is absolutely nothing that is wrong about this game.

Hagen M gave it a10:
Okay, this package definately warrants the extremelym rare ten out of ten. It has Half-Life 2, which is a ten in itself, Episode 1, Episode 2, Portal, and Team Fortress 2? If you do not own this by now, you need to kill yourself. If you consider yourself a human being and value decency in life, purchase this now for roughly TWELVE DOLLARS.

gary f gave it a10:
Best game ever!!!! if I could, I would give it like a thirty! Half life is brilliant with the story and variaty of guns. Portal is completey original, something i've never seen in my life!! and TF2, that was the game that got me hooked!! brilliant style of graphics, 6 maps that is replayable FOREVER! and distinct classes that really make this a true class based game. when I played this, I sold my halo game and said screw it.

O.C. gave it a10:
Pros: - 5 great games in one package - Cons: - Graphics could use work on a few of the games - The Bottom Line: With an addictive online multiplayer, an ingenious puzzle game, and one of the best single player FPS games ever made, The Orange Box is a terrific deal. ---- mjhhiv's Full Review: I recently paid $60 for Bomberman: Act Zero. The game is a degenerate mess, and is clearly not worth your money. Half Life 2: The Orange Box was also worth $60 on release day, and with 5 games in one box, you’ll actually feel like you got the most for your money when you buy this incredible package. The Orange Box comes with 5 games in it- Half Life 2, Half-Life 2 episode 1, Half Life 2 episode 2, Portal, and Team Fortress 2, and all of these games are winners. The good people at Valve developed each of these games, and from a graphics and sound perspective, it’s easy to tell (for the most part). The source engine is used on all three Half-Life 2 games, Team Fortress 2, and Portal, but Team Fortress 2 brings a whole new element to the presentation of The Orange Box. Team Fortress 2 would have to be the most graphically significant of the games included in The Orange Box, as everything looks like something straight out of the movie, “The Incredibles”. Everything looks very “cartoonish”, and that fits the game’s personality just fine. Fire and Water textures are the 2 biggest beneficiaries of this unique graphical style. One of the 9 classes you can choose from in the game is the “Pyro”, which, surprisingly enough, runs around with a flame-thrower engulfing other players in fire. If you are set a blaze, you have to seek water if you don’t wish to have a painful death. In my opinion, no other fire texture to date looks quite as good as what’s to be found in Team Fortress 2. This game proves that graphics don’t have to be photo-realistic to look great. Keeping with the cartoony feel, the sound effects seem like they could have also been a part of “The Incredibles”. Every character has the ability to do taunts during the game. It seems the voice acting is pretty well done, considering the game for which it is written. It is cheesy, but then again, the whole game is cheesy and that is perfect for it. Portal looks a lot like Half-Life 2 and its episodes. A lot of the textures look similar to one another, but that is to be expected as both were made by Valve as previously stated. You might expect a game that is based on the idea of walking through portals to get to areas previously unreachable to be plagued with screen-tearing problems, but that is not the case with Portal. I’ve run across absolutely NO screen tearing. The frame-rate is also steady throughout Portal. The graphics here won’t “wow” you, but at least they don’t take away from the overall experience of the game. All three of the Half-Life 2 games that are included run on the same graphics engine. While there are minor improvements throughout the series, the games still aren’t really much better looking from one to another. Half-Life 2 is about 4 years old now, so the graphics are finally beginning to look a little bit dated. There’s nothing wrong with the graphics, but textures just don’t seem as crisp as they once did. Load times are frequent in the game, as there is a very long load in the beginning of the game, then throughout the game as you transition into new environments. Portal’s sound effects have the same feel as the graphics in that they won’t “wow” you, but they get the job done. No explosions are in the game, and for that matter, nothing of real sound importance is. The Portal gun feels right when you use it, and the sounds it makes seem very appropriate. The real fun in the sound department is in the robot GlaDoS. The voice actor for the robot does an outstanding job, and the hilarious bits of dialect that come from her are a welcome bit of humor. The end credits song “Still Alive” is one of the best original songs to come from a video game. I actually enjoyed the song so much I felt compelled to put it on my iPod. Nothing I can say can really describe how good the song actually is in the game, so you’ll just have to beat Portal and find out yourself! The sound used in all of the Half-Life 2 games is simply incredible. For everything the gravity gun can pick up, there is a unique sound effect to go with it. An electronic beat will kick in right when the action heats up, and it really adds a layer of “intenseness” to the game. The voice acting is also at the top of the class in Half-Life 2 and its episodes. Though Gordon will never actually talk, all of the supporting characters do an amazing job, especially the character Alyx Vance, who is obviously portrayed by one of the most talented voice actresses around. What really makes Half Life 2’s presentation stand out from the rest is the character models though. They are the epitome of what every game released should try to do with character models. They look as life-like as you’ll ever see in a game, and for once, the facial animation is actually convincingly life-like. The character models are given the perfect stage to shine because the game has no real cut-scenes. Instead, you’ll just watch the conversations unfold in real-time. I say watch the conversations as Gordon will never actually talk in the game, and because this is a FPS, and there aren’t cut-scenes, you won’t see Gordon either. It would be nice to see what Gordon looks like from more than just the box-art, but I suppose being so first-person based does add an extra sense of immersion in that you really feel like you are Gordon. Other games, like Call of Duty, pretend to have these “real-time cut-scenes”, but if the story isn’t good enough, it doesn’t make the slightest difference. Thankfully, Half-Life’s story is terrific. If you’re one of the rare few who hasn’t played Half-Life 2 yet, here is a brief synopsis of what has gone on in Half-Life 2 and Half-Life 2 episode 1. Building upon the original Half Life, a scientist from the Black Mesa top-secret lab (Gordon Freeman) finds himself in a futuristic world complete with aliens controlling the paramilitary society. You have been relocated or imprisoned along with others in city 17 a desolate futuristic environment where the police and government of City 17 have taken over. Episode 1 sees that Gordon makes it out of City 17, but the story is far from resolved. In Half-Life 2 episode 2, the lone new piece of Half-Life 2 content in The Orange Box, you’ll be playing through the outskirts of City 17 still trying to get away from the combine into safety. Half-Life 2 episode 2 sees a lot more get resolved than Episode 1 does, as plans from Half-Life 2 finally get resolved in this new episode, but it still leaves room for another episode, which is exactly what Valve wanted to do. It’s not absolutely mandatory that you play the original Half-Life before you play Half-Life 2 and its episodes, but it really makes the story a lot easier to follow, at least for the beginning stages anyway. After playing Half-Life 2 for a few hours, things begin to make a little more sense, but it still is helpful to have the story of Half-Life 1 in mind when trying to make sense of the mysterious plot. It’s a good thing that you will get so much satisfaction from the story of Half-Life 2, because the other 2 games in The Orange Box don’t really have much of a story to offer. Portal drops you in to a testing facility, with absolutely no explanation why, other than the people at the “Aperture Science Laboratories” felt like testing someone, and that someone is you. Honestly, it’s very hard to tell if you are even playing as a boy or a girl in Portal. You’ll only see glimpses of yourself through portals. This just goes to demonstrate how nondescript the story is. It’s hard to knock the story of Portal, because if there were anything more of the story than what’s to be had, the game would feel overdone, and ultimately, it would just make you dislike the game. Even though there isn’t much of a story in Portal, that’s not to say that it doesn’t have a personality. You’ll be guided through these puzzles by a female robot’s voice, and you’ll hear some of the funniest stuff you’ll ever hear from her. The game feels just right in regards to the story, and I really wouldn’t have changed a thing about it. Team Fortress 2 is strictly an online FPS, so there is no story at all. We’ve seen this before in games like Warhawk, so we know it can work, but still it would have been nice to have a tutorial or something added on. However, like Portal, even though there isn’t a story, the game still has a great personality to it. Each of the 9 classes has a taunt move that they can do, and it just adds to the fun loving nature of the game. A great example of the personality in the game is the “Meet the _____ (Heavy, Sniper, Scout etc..)” trailers. They are hilarious, and provide a little bit of the back-story behind most of the classes. If you’re looking into Team Fortress 2, I strongly recommend watching these videos, as you’ll have a greater understanding of what the game is all about after you have. It would have been hard for Valve to come up with a story for Team Fortress 2, as there are 9 classes, and it’s an FPS so all but one of the classes would have been left out. The game is very heavily focused on these classes. There’s the Scout, Soldier, Pyro, Demoman, Heavy, Engineer, Medic, Sniper, and Spy, and all of these classes are good for certain situations depending on what your team needs to accomplish at the moment. If your team needs to take an offensive role by capturing a control point, or taking the enemies inelegance (flag), then you might want a few Soldiers on the front lines to do some damage with their rocket launchers. To prevent the enemy from taking a control point or your intelligence, you’ll need players taking a defensive approach, like by being the engineer, who can set up turrets that attack enemies that get to close to your intelligence. What I’m trying to get at is that you’ll need to have good class balance between your team in order to be successful. Personal favorites will appear based on your style of play, and it’s fun once you’ve mastered a class. The thing that every reviewer has been griping about is the lack of maps and game options. There are only 6 maps, and the environments do get repetitive, but it’s vital to know every nook and cranny of the map you are playing on, as to get better position on your enemy. The game modes are a bit more frustrating however. Each map was designed specifically for a game mode, so you have to play capture the flag on the same map, every single time you play it. This can get very annoying, and there is no real cure to the annoyance. You’ll just have to grin and bear it. A new map pack or two would have quelled this annoyance temporarily, but no map pack has been released yet. Another disappointing thing about Team Fortress 2 is the lack of offline play. It would have been nice to see something included, for those of us who still enjoy split-screen play, but it’s hard to stay mad about this issue, as all of the maps were clearly designed for big team games. The way I see it, Team Fortress 2 is the 3rd best online multiplayer game that money can buy. Halo 3 and Call of Duty 4 still surpass this, but it sure is a welcome retreat from the seriousness of most other online FPS games today. Team Fortress 2 is the only part of The Orange Box that doesn’t live in the Half-Life 2 world. Even Portal gets a mention in Half-Life 2 episode 2, but even if Portal didn’t have this connection with the Half-Life universe, it would still be one of the most talked about puzzle games in recent memory, because it feel so unique from everything else being put out right now. Portal is shown from a first-person perspective, but it isn’t a FPS, because there isn’t any shooting- other than the Portal gun. The object of Portal is simple- Use the Portal gun to reach places previously unreachable. The gun can shoot 2 Portals, one orange, and one blue, One of these being the entry point, and one being where you will exist. You shoot it at walls that the Portal gun can shoot through, you walk through the entry point, and you’ll come out of the exit point you’ve pre-determined. It sounds like a very confusing concept, but in reality, it makes a lot of sense after you’ve played Portal for an hour or so. Physics are a big part of Portal, because you’ll need to use momentum to get over walls, and get to higher places, and you’ll also have to pick up boxes and such to use them to solve the puzzles you’ve been faced with. For the most part, I found the puzzles to be rather challenging. Maybe it’s because I’m your typical console ‘tard and wasn’t used to a game that required such a great amount of logic to figure out, but I thought I got my money’s worth with Portal. Professional reviewers have clocked the game at around 2-3 hours, but it took me the better part of 4 to finish, and that’s not counting how many times I plan on playing it again. I’ve always found the driving missions in Half-Life 2 to be the worst part of the experience. The vehicles didn’t control well on the consoles, it can be hard to see what you are up against from a first person perspective while trying to drive a car, and most of the driving missions feel way too long. If you are like me, you are in for a rude awakening, because driving takes a center stage in Half-Life 2 episode 2. That said, it seems like the developers recognized the fact that the driving missions just seemed to drag on and on, so they shortened them, but made them more frequent. This actually makes the pacing of the game feel much better that in previous Half-Life 2 games, in that you never really get tired of doing one thing, which solves the only real problem I’d had with the series. With this minor inconvenience fixed, Half-Life 2 is as perfect as Valve could have possibly made it, in terms of gameplay and story. As long as the gravity gun remains in Half-Life, the game will probably be fun to play. Even when you aren’t fighting enemies, it’s actually fun to just pick things up and shoot them. This is because of how ingenious the Havok physics are. Most everything is useable with the gravity gun, and you feel totally powerful slinging them around with this physics engine. Besides the gravity gun, the rest of the weapons in Half-Life 2 and its episodes are pretty standard. You get a sub-machine gun, a pistol, a wrench for close combat, and breaking wood to get past barriers, grenades, a shotgun, etcetera. The gravity gun is just so special and unique that the lack of other unique weapons doesn’t really matter. Puzzles are also still frequent in Half-Life 2 episode 2, and that just adds another layer of depth to the Half-Life world. This isn’t a game like Halo, you have to actually think if you intend to win the game, which is really a wonderful thing. The only FPS recently released that even comes close to how well thinking was integrated is BioShock. The comparisons don’t just end there, though. BioShock and Half-Life 2 are the only games that I’ve played that make you feel like you’re in a wide open City, while being a totally linear game. Because of this, the immersion of these games just set them apart from everything else on the market. As IGN put it, The Orange Box is “The best deal in videogame history”, and it’s hard to argue against that. You get everything you could want out of a videogame purchase. If your looking for a great package that will keep you entertained for months, you can’t go wrong with The Orange Box. Portal- 9.0/10. Team Fortress 2- 8.6/10. Half-Life 2 episode 2- 9.7/10. The Orange Box as a package- 10/10. Alone these games are great, together they are truly something special.

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