I agreeXeno قال:الصور جيدة وأنا متأكد اللعبة بتكون من أروع ألعاب السنة.
ترى هذي بريكفت دارك .. هذي الي الناس انتظروها سنين ,, تطلع بهذا المستوى ؟ لو لعبة ثانيه ما كان قلنا شي.
..فعلا تاجلت من الاكس بوكس الحالي واخذت فتره طويله مافيه معلومات عنها ..
Ben's E3 2001 Report
GameCritics.com Staff Analyzes the Best & Worst of the Tradeshow
FIVE MOST DISAPPOINTING GAMES AT E3 2001
1. Halo (Xbox)
By far the biggest joke of the show for me was Bungie's long-awaited Xbox title, Halo. Basically, it's another first-person shooter—nothing more, nothing less. Halo lead designer, John Howard, did a presentation on the game and failed to say anything to convince the audience otherwise. During his walkthrough of Halo's first level, he couldn't stop talking about different ways to "kick ass." Is that all Bungie could come up with after three years of development—finding new ways to kick ass? Howard's presentation was further marred when he praised the game's graphics. Not only did Halo's frame rate grind to a halt when the action got heavy, but Howard had the gall to point out how amazing the lens flare looked when you stare at the game's sun. Wow, lens flare—we haven't seen that before in games have we?
I thought maybe my opinion of Halo would change upon actually playing the game, which I did when took part in a four-on-four round of "capture the flag." However, playing the game only reinforced my negative reaction to this really ordinary experience. Not only is the control scheme awkward, but the split-screen mode looks like a Nintendo 64 game. The frame rate routinely froze during the action, and it sputtered along the rest of the time. I also wondered how the split-screen mode would look on a normal TV. The high-definition, wide-screen set-up used at E3 left a lot of room to divide the screen four ways, but how many gamers out there own a wide-screen TV? A normal TV display will squeeze the partitioned screen layout into the typical, condensed split-screen we've seen in other console first-person shooters. Kick ass? I just don't see it.
The only difference between Halo and other first-person shooters lies in the graphics design and plot. The hype surrounding this game is totally unfounded. Halo left no more of an impression on me than the other boring first-person shooters showcased at E3, like Red Faction and Tribes 2.