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Free Half-Life overhaul makes Valve's FPS feel like a modern shooter

A new Half-Life overhaul is here, aiming to be spiritually in keeping with Valve's 1998 FPS game, while improving and changing some core mechanics to feel closer to a modern, 2023 shooter. Called Half-Life Mmod, it might look awfully similar at a glance, but subtle tweaks to the visuals, gunplay, AI, and SFX make this arguably the definitive way to play.


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Ageing FPS Half-Life gets free overhaul, but not from Valve

Half-Life has better writing than Half-Life 2, for one simple reason

New Half-Life 'campaign' pieced together following huge Valve leak

Ageing FPS Half-Life gets free overhaul, but not from Valve

A revolutionary product of its time, the first Half-Life game from Valve doesn't need a touch-up, but what if it got one that was incredibly in keeping with the FPS game's original release on Steam, and what if it was coming out very soon? Well, lucky for you I can answer both those questions, as Half-Life does have an overhaul mod coming to Steam for free and, would you look at that, it's coming very soon too.


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RELATED LINKS:

Half-Life has better writing than Half-Life 2, for one simple reason

New Half-Life 'campaign' pieced together following huge Valve leak

Half-Life Blue Shift gets Black Mesa treatment in Valve FPS remake

Half-Life's raytracing mod is great because it makes the game look old in a new way

A new Half-Life mod adds raytracing to Valve's venerable first-person shooter, a shiny slap of 2023 lighting technology in a 1998 game. I normally think such anachronistic upgrades look awful but this one works for me. Rather than just slam fancy modern tech into an old game, the mod wants to change the whole look. And it succeeds in a surprising way: by making the rest of Half-Life look older.


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Ray traced Half-Life mod is finally here and looks incredible




It's a momentous day, my friends, because we can finally answer the most controversial question in videogaming: Does Gordon Freeman wear a helmet? It's all thanks to a fan-made ray tracing mod for the original Half-Life that increases the game's moody lighting quotient by a factor of ten, and finally, finally lets you get a look in those bathroom mirrors. It comes from a creator called sultim_t, who's been teasing this project for a while, and you can download it for free over at their GitHub page...
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Half-Life has better writing than Half-Life 2, for one simple reason

There is a fantastic moment in Half-Life 2, during the 'Water Hazard' section of Valve's FPS game, when you first arrive at one of the resistance outposts, Station 12. Previously, you - or, if you prefer, Gordon Freeman - have been told that communications with Station 12 have mysteriously ceased. Overlooking City 17's irradiated river, the Station is supported on stilts. Immediately, you know that something is wrong. The river is silent. No-one exits the Station to greet you. A large wooden container dangles ominously from a pulley - the grand piano over Buster Keaton's head; some stark realisation just waiting to drop.


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RELATED LINKS:

New Half-Life 'campaign' pieced together following huge Valve leak

Half-Life Blue Shift gets Black Mesa treatment in Valve FPS remake

Half-Life mod offers new ending if you constantly hold a cardboard box