A Little Positivity

I see a little too much negativity on these boards.
Halo 4 is a great game.
Not that many games have the loyal faithful like the Halo fan base.
Please post some of the best Halo 4 experiences you have had.


Ragnarok - BTIS

About mid-way through, with our team up a nice chunk, we take the top-center hill.
We are facing the open water, in the middle, raining down bullets.

I see on the left of the their base, a full Rocket-Hog going around back.
They fire at the last moment before going behind their base, heading to my right.

I do a quick look over to the right, de-scope, and look back left to where I thought the rockets might be.

Three rockets fly overhead RIGHT in front of my face.

It had to be one of the best sounds I have heard in this game thus far.
‘WHOOOMPH-WHOOMPH-WHOOMPH!!’

A great moment of many in Halo 4, scared the $#!^ out of me, and got my blood seriously pumping.

> I see a little too much negativity on these boards.
> Halo 4 is a great game.
> <mark>Not that many games have the loyal faithful like the Halo fan base.</mark>
> Please post some of the best Halo 4 experiences you have had.

Mario, Zelda, Team Fortress, Half-Life, Call of Duty, Sonic, Metroid and many others all say hi.

But I’ll humor your request.

The best experience I’ve ever had in Halo was watching the development of Chief and Cortana’s relationship unfold during the Campaign. Really touching stuff, though I didn’t tear up when Cortana died. I knew it was coming years ago.

Brain was stressed to conjure up a memory, but here is what first popped up.

When the hunter smacked the grunt out of the way in spartan ops.

Ah right, when Cortana went crazy in the command room aboard the Infinity.

“I…Will…not… let… you leave this… PLANET!!!”

It sent chills down my spine.lol.

My favorite moment in Halo 4 was on the Ivanoff Station, where Cortana says;

“Insert me in to the defence grid.”

The way she says it, with a bit of a sarcastic laugh during the very serious Covenant attack was quite creepy almost.

When I was in Action Sack, I’ve walked in a straight line and I’ve seen 4 Railgun shots in a complete row fly by my face. “Is their aim REALLY that bad?” was the first thing that popped in mind. XD

I still think that a well placed grenade inside the Didact’s armour would kill him…but…

Whowever, Jonh´s sacrifice was too much to handle…I layed down the remote and stayed in “awwwww…sh#$…”-mode untill Cortana disapeared.
Then I cried. A little.

My favourite moment in halo 4 was on either…

Ragnarok CTF where I got an overkill with the flag (two of the kills where opponents in a Warthog)

Or on Vortex where I got a killamanjaro or killtrocity (cant remember which) with the wraith due to splattering loads of people because I couldn’t shoot them all in time if I wasn’t to be hijacked

But in campaign my favourite moment would have to be where the cryptum opens and the Didact makes his awesome quote. =]

What did I like about Halo 4? The Chief-Didact relationship, even though the Didact hates humans you see him grow to respect Chief by mission 7, then we see how willing Chief is to sacrifice himself against a much more stronger enemy

> Mario, Zelda, Team Fortress, Half-Life, Call of Duty, Sonic, Metroid and many others all say hi.

The Elder Scrolls, StarCraft, WarCraft, Gears of War, Tetris, Final Fantasy…

In the big picture of things, there are a ton of games, but not that many with a great following.

Just showing Halo some love!

That reminded me…

For personal reasons, Halo 3 , 5 years ago, was my first game online.
(I’ v been palying CE and Halo 2 in the old XBOX for ages, but no net attached ;).)
But I treasure the day we ( me & my crazy wife) got the 360 and a copy of Halo 3.
To put things in perpective, I skipped school for two days.

And I was the teacher.

So now you know… XD

> Halo 4 is a great game.

Why do you think this? If they brought back map control it would improve the game a bit and if they removed the loudouts that be great!

Me and 2 friends playing BTIS on ragnarok, pinned in our base down 3 players and loosing by 8 with the enemy team 3 kills from winning. i jump in a mantis just as an enemy is getting to it to take it, curbstomp him, then my 2 friends get a couple kills and one of them dies as 3 enemies run out of the cave to the right of the water base and i get a double kill to take the lead, and my last friend snipes an enemy with a laser on mid hill for the win. The game timer was at 2 seconds when the game cuts away to the victory screen. It was a nail biting turnaround in 2 ways.

> > Halo 4 is a great game.
>
> Why do you think this? If they brought back map control it would improve the game a bit and if they removed the loudouts that be great!

I’m pretty sure the OP said to post positive things, not negative things…

Anyways, my best moment in Halo 4 would have to be when I got my first Unfrigginbelievable.

> > Halo 4 is a great game.
>
> Why do you think this? If they brought back map control it would improve the game a bit and if they removed the loudouts that be great!

Loadouts are perfectly fine if they remove the PP, BS and stickies

Really? Some people actually like that watered-down “relationship” between Cortana and the Chief? Or her childish outbursts?
Well, to each his own, I guess, I just found it silly. Seen something like that often before, and much better. People who actually cried or were creeped or stuff need to play more adult games or watch serious drama movies or read earnest books, etc… Don’t reward those lousy script writers just because it’s the Chief and Cortana!

Now, that that’s over with, the only memorable part of H4 is the very last campaign part. Realizing you probably won’t fix Cortana, fighting against all odds against the Didact, defending Earth and hearing the only music track that actually is something. That definitely woke up the old Halo feel.
H5 should be like that.

> Really? Some people actually like that watered-down “relationship” between Cortana and the Chief? Or her childish outbursts?
> Well, to each his own, I guess, I just found it silly. Seen something like that often before, and much better. People who actually cried or were creeped or stuff need to play more adult games or watch serious drama movies or read earnest books, etc… Don’t reward those lousy script writers just because it’s the Chief and Cortana!

I’ve criticized nearly every other aspect of the Halo 4 story besides this one because it is actually good. First off, consider the ways Cortana and Chief have interacted in the past and what that says about their relationship. In the first two games, Cortana relays information to Chief and delivers friendly banter. Chief doesn’t say much outside of his one liners, but still manages to show that the two do have something of a relationship. I think we all remember the friendly back and forth the two had in Halo: CE when Cortana asked how well Chief slept or when she reacted angrily to Chief almost firing the Halo in ignorance. Heck, her “Don’t make a girl a promise” line in Halo 2 is still pretty powerful. The books delve much deeper into this relationship between man and machine with Chief struggling to decide if he could really sacrifice Cortana is the moment every occurred and noticing when she was performing poorly. Likewise, Cortana constantly worried about protecting Chief and grew mad at herself if she felt like she was performing poorly. The short story, “Human Weakness”, even showed that Chief was a soft spot for her when the Gravemind refered to him as John. Halo 3 came closest to showing their book-based relationships, especially when both Cortana and Chief were reunited on the Flood-infested ruins of High Charity.

Halo 4 matches the book-based relationship and exceeds it. With rampancy swiftly descending on Cortana, we see her performance begin to degrade. Her manner of behavior is that of denial. Early on she does have hope that she can be saved when she supports the notion that Dr. Halsey can fix her, but then she becomes more depressed as the story goes on and becomes prone to intense anger and irrationality. Finally, at the conclusion of the story she accepts her fate and does what she can to save the one she was made to protect, John. She uses the last of her power to save him and then fades away asking for John to come out of his shell of a machine and be human.

On the other end of the relationship is Chief and how he struggles to overcome Cortana’s death. He is the first one to believe Halsey can fix Cortana and uses that as his guiding light. Each time Cortana starts to act up, he does his best to comfort her. Chief is completely out of his element in this instance, Cortana is not some piece of military hardware like a gun that can be fixed by a throughout cleaning, she is an artificial construct with deeply human emotions. Emotion, however, is something Chief has struggled to grasp. Yet for all of his comforting and hope, Chief fails to save Cortana. Losing is not a concept he is used to and losing those close to him has always taken a huge toll on his psyche. Even behind that helmet of his, I knew he was reaching a breaking point and Cortana’s demise snapped it.

Thankfully, 343 Industries did not use this relationship for cheap emotional hits. We got to see them grow and develop since the beginning of the franchise and come to an emotional crescendo. Everything that occurred between Chief and Cortana had a purpose, a hopefully lasting purpose for the rest of the series. In a way, Cortana has always been more human than Chief and it is with her demise and sacrifice that Chief can become human himself. A human Chief is precisely the kind of character I think Halo needs moving forward. Does that mean Cortana is gone forever? Maybe not. That said, I hope she is gone long enough for Chief to be less of a machine and solider and more of a human being. I like to think the ending with his armor being taken off and his helmet removed symbolizes that.

CTF… oh man when you sneak up in the enemy base. Red dots covering your radar. The moment you decide to sprint and take the flag yelling for some backup and amist the raining bullets ans shrapnel a loyal teammate revs alongside you in a smoking mongoose and you ride for you ride for your life with no sheilds barreling into the comfort on your teams side of the map

Best moment for me?

Spamming the trigger on that Carbine and being awarded for it.

> > Really? Some people actually like that watered-down “relationship” between Cortana and the Chief? Or her childish outbursts?
> > Well, to each his own, I guess, I just found it silly. Seen something like that often before, and much better. People who actually cried or were creeped or stuff need to play more adult games or watch serious drama movies or read earnest books, etc… Don’t reward those lousy script writers just because it’s the Chief and Cortana!
>
> I’ve criticized nearly every other aspect of the Halo 4 story besides this one because it is actually good. First off, consider the ways Cortana and Chief have interacted in the past and what that says about their relationship. In the first two games, Cortana relays information to Chief and delivers friendly banter. Chief doesn’t say much outside of his one liners, but still manages to show that the two do have something of a relationship. I think we all remember the friendly back and forth the two had in Halo: CE when Cortana asked how well Chief slept or when she reacted angrily to Chief almost firing the Halo in ignorance. Heck, her “Don’t make a girl a promise” line in Halo 2 is still pretty powerful. The books delve much deeper into this relationship between man and machine with Chief struggling to decide if he could really sacrifice Cortana is the moment every occurred and noticing when she was performing poorly. Likewise, Cortana constantly worried about protecting Chief and grew mad at herself if she felt like she was performing poorly. The short story, “Human Weakness”, even showed that Chief was a soft spot for her when the Gravemind refered to him as John. Halo 3 came closest to showing their book-based relationships, especially when both Cortana and Chief were reunited on the Flood-infested ruins of High Charity.
>
> Halo 4 matches the book-based relationship and exceeds it. With rampancy swiftly descending on Cortana, we see her performance begin to degrade. Her manner of behavior is that of denial. Early on she does have hope that she can be saved when she supports the notion that Dr. Halsey can fix her, but then she becomes more depressed as the story goes on and becomes prone to intense anger and irrationality. Finally, at the conclusion of the story she accepts her fate and does what she can to save the one she was made to protect, John. She uses the last of her power to save him and then fades away asking for John to come out of his shell of a machine and be human.
>
> On the other end of the relationship is Chief and how he struggles to overcome Cortana’s death. He is the first one to believe Halsey can fix Cortana and uses that as his guiding light. Each time Cortana starts to act up, he does his best to comfort her. Chief is completely out of his element in this instance, Cortana is not some piece of military hardware like a gun that can be fixed by a throughout cleaning, she is an artificial construct with deeply human emotions. Emotion, however, is something Chief has struggled to grasp. Yet for all of his comforting and hope, Chief fails to save Cortana. Losing is not a concept he is used to and losing those close to him has always taken a huge toll on his psyche. Even behind that helmet of his, I knew he was reaching a breaking point and Cortana’s demise snapped it.
>
> Thankfully, 343 Industries did not use this relationship for cheap emotional hits. We got to see them grow and develop since the beginning of the franchise and come to an emotional crescendo. Everything that occurred between Chief and Cortana had a purpose, a hopefully lasting purpose for the rest of the series. In a way, Cortana has always been more human than Chief and it is with her demise and sacrifice that Chief can become human himself. A human Chief is precisely the kind of character I think Halo needs moving forward. Does that mean Cortana is gone forever? Maybe not. That said, I hope she is gone long enough for Chief to be less of a machine and solider and more of a human being. I like to think the ending with his armor being taken off and his helmet removed symbolizes that.

Nice!

I wasn’t too thrilled with the campaign this time around but the cut scenes have definitely grown on me.

Especially the Ancient Human ones – their spaceships, battle armor, etc. Seeing Forthencho after reading about him in the Greg Bear novels was awesome!