0
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z


Cheats
Guides


PC - Windows : Half-Life 2: Collector's Edition Reviews

Below are user reviews of Half-Life 2: Collector's Edition and on the right are links to professionally written reviews. The summary of review scores shows the distribution of scores given by the professional reviewers for Half-Life 2: Collector's Edition. Column height indicates the number of reviews with a score within the range shown at the bottom of the column. Higher scores (columns further towards the right) are better.







User Reviews (141 - 151 of 476)

Show these reviews first:

Highest Rated
Lowest Rated
Newest
Oldest
Most Helpful
Least Helpful



Don't review til you've seen it, baby... and I have.

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 9 / 19
Date: October 28, 2004
Author: Amazon User

I have the beta copy of this game. It is more fun to play the incomplete beta than it was to play Doom 3. The Half-life 2 beta I have is over a year old, yet its graphics are on par with Doom 3. I can also run it on my Radeon 9000 Pro with high settings... Doom 3 needed low settings and 640x480x16 (I play my beta at 1024x768x32) to run playably.

This game is Half-life 2, the sequel to what is referred to by the general PC gaming community as the Best Game of All Time. It will own, if for nothing but the unprecedented graphics that I have seen it render on my own machine. I know it will own, however, because of the depth of plot that is already hinted at in the beta, as well as the massive open-endedness of the original.

I'm saving up for the full Gold edition now.

Great game although steam is F****** Bull S***

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 3 / 3
Date: March 16, 2005
Author: Amazon User

First of all I had not played hl1. I was very impresed with eveything the physics, graphics, gameplay, npc's, story. I thought the campaign was kinda short butt maybe that is because i played it for endless hours, when I was so sucked in that I forgot time existed. However the steam system was completely pointless, what does it do that is good. It is just a way to try to advertise some crappy company. It doesn't make the game any more un-pirateable. I know of working pirated versions, so what does steam do but take up bandwidth, make you use useless crappy updates that literally take hours. Also steam only provides hl2 downloads, that's all. Who the f*** would use it if it weren't for this game, why was it made. come on Valve you've created a monster, you've hurt me deep. If I did not enjoy the game this much I would never buy another product of yours.

This game is revolutionary

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 3 / 3
Date: November 26, 2004
Author: Amazon User

I was skeptic to how good this game was really going to be, after sooo much hype, and much delay. And i must say, it really delivered, a phenomenal game i must say. After installing the game, it took me a full hour to get to playing it. even on DSL, the whole, Stream Activation, and file decrypting... lame, I hate steam, with a passion. But that's beside the point, the game its self is great. Looks great, Plays great, wonderful variety of environment, and puzzles, and its just great, and totally not a normal shooter, much much better than doom 3. The physics are wonderful, the interactivity with the world. The world is just so convincing and its just great. Haven't noticed any truly wonderful AI though... Im already half way threw the game, and I've had it for about a day... sadly it maybe short, especially when you play it for hours and hours constant because your having so much fun driving around taking down gunships with your RPG. Its just sooo cool.. nothing i can say can describe how much i truly like this game.. Well worth the 50 bucks i paid.

3 Complaints, and they are minor

One. *The big one!* I HATE STEAM!!! you have to run steam to play the game, always, its like, steam runs the game for you... i just dont like it.. i like being able to clickt he hl2.exe and playing but no.. you must steam and steam is like a steaming pile of poo... yes poo...

Two. You cant kill any civilians, which i always loved about the first.

Three. And you cant shoot when zoomed... whats with that?

Over all.... AMAZING GAME!!!!

Having trouble.. helpfull hint! THINK PHYSICAL!!!! its great!

STEAMED UP!!!

1 Rating: 1, Useful: 5 / 8
Date: March 08, 2006
Author: Amazon User

I know that this game is magnificent but I agree with one of the reviewers. "Steam" keeps popping up and kept telling me that my game was pre-installed and not ready to be played offline. I don't know what to do anymore because my sister bought it for me and mailed it to me abroad. There goes my refund.

The long awaited sequel was worth the wait...barely.

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 5 / 8
Date: July 30, 2006
Author: Amazon User

So, I'm here a bit late, but another review can't hurt since a lot of people might buy this game in wake of the new, decent, expansion.

Developers outta keep quiet about release dates. Premature talk breeds media floods. And media floods pigeonhole developers into making deadlines. Deadlines are meant to be broken. When the bomb was dropped that a lot of the Source code was stolen, Valve pussyfooted around the subject of Half-Life 2's release and used the theft as an excuse to delay the game. Fair enough, Valve taught the hackers and us a lesson, but with all the preloading of Half-Life 2, and the free Half-Life 2 giveaways with video cards, Valve was really doing the gamers a disservice by creating hype. Hype tends to equal bad, especially for a sequel.

The good news is Half-Life 2 rocks. Half-Life 2 rocks like Half-Life, and a lot of the great FPS games that have come out over the past few years. Amazingly, Half-Life 2 doesn't do too much in terms of changing the formula from Half-Life. In fact, Half-Life 2 has a scarily similar formula and story to Half-Life. But that's no deal breaker: Half-Life has been the best first person shooter to grace this planet (in my opinion, anyway), and it still holds up today with the exception of its graphics. Very few titles managed to push the envelope and expand upon the style that Half-Life created (No One Lives Forever is definitely one of the games that should get mentioned). Half-Life was a linear game, and Half-Life 2 is also linear. In that respect, there have been titles that have changed the genre, but very few linear FPS give a bump like Half-Life.

You know the story; you're Gordon Freeman, scientist, middle-aged guy, general bad-arse. You have a cool protective suit, a crowbar, and a few nifty weapons at your disposal. Half-Life 2 plays out a lot like Half-Life 1, though I won't ruin any of the story. A little bit into the game, you pick what has to be the most entertaining piece of First Person Shooter history, the Gravity Gun. This bad boy allows you to pick up, move, and propel objects at your enemies. It's a great replacement for shotguns and pistols, and it's tons of fun. All of a sudden, useless stuff that acts as level detail in other FPS games become deadly projectiles. It's pretty much the most awesome thing ever. The Source engine has some of the best physics you will see in the genre. Objects break, crumble and move. It's satisfying when you tear stuff apart, and there's never that cold dull feeling you get in some of the levels in other games like Doom 3 and F.E.A.R.. The enemy A.I. is okay, not great. Years of Counter-Strike has, apparently, made me pretty good at killing the Combine. And if you go from playing F.E.A.R. to Half-Life 2 you may find the A.I. a bit disappointing. Still, the A.I. will give you a run for your money if you crank the game up to the hardest difficulty, and I recommend you do just that so you can take more time to immerse yourself in the wonderful world that is Half-Life 2.

Half-Life 2 hasn't been all that revolutionary, or groundbreaking, or life changing. It plays out so much like Half-Life that it's easy to accuse it of being unoriginal and uninspired. But the truth is, why fix something that isn't broken? Valve has added a lot of new things that make Half-Life 2 worth playing, and fans of FPS owe themselves to check this title out. As far as linear FPS go, Half-Life 2 continues to raise the bar. For what it's worth, to me, Half-Life is a more fun game, because when I played Half-Life 2 there were a few moments of, been there, done that. But, Half-Life is getting graphically old, and the gameplay is starting to show its simplicity. And Half-Life 2 rocks anyway. So, do yourself a favor, and check this game out.

However...

I passionately dislike steam, although it does have one or two perks for its 20 flaws. In case you are wondering, Steam is Valve's handy tool to help you organize and play all of your Valve games.

If you have a broadband connection and credit card, I recommend downloading steam and just buying the game through steam. Non-broadband users should get the game from the store, because they can install most of it off the CDs or DVD.

The pros of buying the game from steam include, being able to just buy Half-Life 2, not Counter-Strike: source, and saving a trip to the store. The cons are you need (well, you don't NEED, but you should unless you don't mind waiting for a long long time) broadband.

For non-broadband users, the pros of buying the game are that you avoid the hassle of downloading it. In fact, it's pretty much impossible to get the game on a 56k connection, without aging a lot. The cons are that you have to buy the game...which comes with CS: Source, so you end up spending more money. Also, the game doesn't come with any linear information or booklets, just the CDs/DVD and CD-key. The biggest con is that you STILL NEED STEAM to activate and play the game. And in order to play it, STEAM will put you through the painful process of downloading patches, something that will still take a long long time.

For what it's worth, STEAM has become a marketing tool. Steam will alert you when new games are out; be sure to have a credit card at hand, most of the new games are only 20 dollars. Steam also will ask if you'd like to participate in surveys, and steam will occasionally crash. Steam also does weekly updates...which make me question A) the integrity of Valve's product, or B) the integrity of the updates themselves.

If you can get over the mountain that is Steam, you are in for a real treat. A game that does what it sets out to do, live up to the Half-Life name.

Returned Item

1 Rating: 1, Useful: 5 / 8
Date: March 21, 2005
Author: Amazon User

I never have had such a hard time with a game before. The online game system, somehow managed to change the settings that I set for it to not automatically update. Each time it tried an automatic update it failed around 88%. This of course caused me to lose my progress in the game each time. It would not have been bad if it happened only once. However, it happened four (4!!) times. This was compounded by the fact that no one ever contacted me to help. I sent messages and problem reports. I asked them for help every way possible. I even scoured message boards and followed their advice. I really liked the game, and it was disappointing to me that I could not get the problems worked out. I am not sure about this method of gaming that forces you to login to the internet each time. It really causes a hassle. Half-Life turned out to be 1 of only a few games, that I have ever returned in my 20+ years of gaming.

Crash Prone

1 Rating: 1, Useful: 5 / 8
Date: November 26, 2004
Author: Amazon User

I have had no hardware problems with games that have been recently released until I played this one. All it does is crash and crash and crash and crash. Sometimes I get a "can't read memory" error, other times it crashes so badly it re-boots my PC. I run a 2.53GHZ Pentium with a 512M RAM and a GeForce Ti4200 vie card which should be enough to run the game reasonably well. Unless you have a high-end system, beware.....

Fun, but SCARY

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 5 / 8
Date: February 05, 2005
Author: Amazon User

After hearing many people say how awesome Half Life 2 was, I decided to download the demo. After the one hour download was done (Using DSL) I decided to play it. There was a creepy guy who kept talking about something and I couldn't make him shut up so I just waited for that to end. Then after the guys stopped talking, I began to play. The graphics were dazzling, this is partially because my video/graphics card is partially new. (I have an ATI Radeon x700) After playing the first level, I had been beaten down with a tazer, watched the beginning of a man being tortured, walked into a room with a bucket in it and a pile of blood in the room too next to a chair, and talked to some guy on a funky looking TV. I thought it would be really great. The second level comes....I'm in a creepy place at night and I am surrounded by ugly shacks. There's tall grass everywhere and then out of the blue a really gross and scary looking zombie attacks me. I kill the zombie quickly using a machine gun of some sort. As I continue walking I see a tree with someone's legs dangling from a rope. The legs had the same blue pants as the other humans that I saw walking around in the first level, but they were bloody and you could see the part that was once connected to his/her upper body covered with blood. After that I opened up this door to find the same thing only the legs are on the floor and the upper body is all bones and is covered with blood. After seeing that, I decided that this was too much for me to handle so I quit and deleted it just so I wouldn't be tempted to play it again.

PROS:
AMAZING graphics
Great gameplay
Good story

Cons: there are none unless you're a chicken like me, if so, this game is really scary.

I rated this game 5 stars because it's great if you're not chicken!

Valve has taken a turn for the worse

1 Rating: 1, Useful: 8 / 17
Date: October 22, 2005
Author: Amazon User

I was a huge fan of the original Half-Life when it was first released. When I heard that a sequel was going to be made, I was so exited that I felt like I was going to have a heart attack. I bought the game only to find out that and internet connection is required to play even single player. GUESS WHAT VALVE?! NOT EVERYONE HAS AN INTERNET CONNECTION! My home computer (which is the computer that I play games on) doesn't have an internet connection.

HL2 sucks. Steam sucks. Valve sucks. THE END.

Definately not worth the hype

1 Rating: 1, Useful: 13 / 34
Date: December 09, 2005
Author: Amazon User

I have no idea how this game is getting so much hype!!!! i mean its not even that good.

Pros
-Good graphics but not the best
-Some unique weapons (e.g. gravity gun)
-Midly interesting story

Cons
-STEAM You have to DOWNLOAD AFTER THE LAST CD FOR LIKE AN HOUR! then whenever you play the single player you are linked to the internet. Now this is a problem because it can leave some computers vulnerable.
-Ending was very bad
-WAY TOO LINEAR! I felt like i was being forced to do stuff by a "higher power"
-Whenever i was it felt very unconvincing and i couldnt get into this game at all

Overall this game is bad and defiantely not worth the hype it has gotten from so many people

I would suggest buying Quake 4 (if you have a good enough graphics card for it)


Review Page: Previous 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Next 



Actions