this post was submitted on 19 Jun 2023
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First, some background: I first became aware of PC gaming in 2012 (15yrs after HL1, 7yrs after HL2). I played both games back-to-back and then later replayed both separately.

There's so much to be said about these two games, but I'll sum up my feelings in a few bullet points:

  • HL1 is more thematically unified. It plays true to its Sci-Fi & Die Hard roots up to the point of campiness, but that fits rather well for a game whose protagonist is effectively a nerdy Doom Marine -- more a force-of-nature embodiment of survival than traditional hero.
  • HL2, on the other hand, feels weighed-down by this legacy. It wants to tell a serious story about a charismatic freedom-fighter. That's an aesthetic which clashes terribly with HL1's mute, stoic survivalist.
  • HL1 has a better core gameplay loop. It plays to its strengths: gunplay & level exploration. Exposition & puzzling are almost always delivered through these mediums wherever possible. Those few chapters which depart from this philosophy (On a Rail, Xen) are the weakest in the whole game as a result.
  • HL2, by contrast, seems almost insecure. It only trusts the player to stick with the core gameplay-loop for a few chapters at most before pivoting into yet another gimmick -- almost all of which (barring the gravity gun sequence) feel painfully drawn out:
    • Water Hazard: Boating
    • Highway 17: Driving
    • Sandtraps: Physics "Puzzling" + "Platforming"
    • Nova Prospekt: Wave-Based Point Defense

What do you guys think? There's a lot worth unpacking here which I couldn't quite articulate. What are your takeaways?

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[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Oh yeah, episodic gaming definitely wasn't working for anyone. It's clear why Valve instead leaned into Team Fortress 2 and CounterStrike and DOTA 2 after their failures with episodic gaming. Those kept people engaged, and it's why Valve hired an actual economist[^1] to help them organize their virtual economies, where they could take a small cut of each small transaction, which along with taking a cut from gaming publishers is obviously much more profitable.

[^1]: Sorry for paywalled link. Unable to find free version of link at the moment. Wikipedia article section which references link in question.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I think episodic gaming could have worked if they'd developed a full arc and stuck to it. Probably the right way to go would have been to make at least a base version of all the episodes first, so they could have released on a steady, regular schedule instead of "whenever it's done, then never".

[–] ascagnel 1 points 1 year ago

Episodic gaming would have worked if they’d developed a release schedule and stuck to it.

TV shows that release seasons irregularly tend to fail, unless they have massive marketing budgets to match. Valve promised six months between episodes; it was about 20 months between HL2 and EP1 (Nov 04 to June 06), about 17 months between EP1 and EP2 (Oct 07, and about 15 years (and counting!) between EP2 and EP3.

Telltale made it work by sticking to its schedules and finishing seasons.