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Retro Review: Half Life DC (Dreamcast)

by Graham on December 15th, 2006

Half Life DC

Note: All images seen here are from the Dreamcast version. They may not look very clear, that is due to them all being taken with a digital camera- in front of my TV. Sorry.

Half Life, who hasn’t heard of it? One of the most famous games ever made, released on the PC way back in 1997/’98- it was considered groundbreaking and winner of 50 awards, including ‘best game of the year’. You should already know the basic story- but Ill tell for those that have been living in a small cave in Afghanistan.

You are Dr. Gordon Freeman a research scientist working at the Black Mesa Federal Research Facility, a decommissioned missile base. You have been assigned to assist in an experiment involving a new substance, a crystalline specimen. It’s meant to be a routine experiment. But surprise, surprise, something goes wrong. Now you are the only hope (plus a few remaining scientists and security guards) to save all survivors and find out what actually happened.

Half Life DC

Blue Shift:

Blue Shift, no doubt you’ve heard of it, but not so many people have played it or own it.This time you go back to the setting of the original Half Life game, when it all happened. But you take on the role of B. Calhoun one of the many Security Guards working at the Black Mesa Federal Research Facility. You start the day as normal, check in, and pick up your equipment. You go to the Armoury and pick up your trusty handgun, fire off a few shots at the targets in the range, then report in for duty. It seems that some scientists have managed to get an elevator stuck, yet another malfunction in the facility’s system, and you’ll need to go and see to it.

Another day on the job, until, you are invaded by aliens and have to try and save the day.

Half Life DC

The PC version of the game was revolutionary with state-of-the art graphics and gameplay- winning an award for ‘near perfection’. The Dreamcast version of the game is very similar to the PC version- the graphics have not really been updated, apart from the character modelling. When I first started playing the game, I realised that the characters that you meet looked different, but I wasn’t sure what it was. So I turned on my friend’s copy of the original Half Life to compare the two.

The scientists you meet in the original game are quite wooden, they look good, but their movement is lacking and the detail on their faces wasn’t particularly smooth. The Dreamcast version, however, has smoother faces, slightly different textures and mapping used. The really noticeable thing is that the scientist’s clothes move. Their ties, lab coats, body armour and jackets move freely, as if independent from their bodies, its nothing major but it is a nice little update to the starch tight bodies in the original where the jackets and ties were just drawn onto the characters.

The scenery is basically the same as the PC, good solid graphics, but nothing amazing. There are few different light effects incorporated into the game, but overall they did not use any of the Dreamcast’s power in updating the game.

If you’ve played the PC version, you will know what to expect. Smooth movement from Gordon and Calhoun, easy controls etc…

Half Life DC

I do remember some original previews of the game (when they were going to release it) and the magazines complained that the game was jerky in areas with long loading times between areas. This, to some extent is true. But, it’s no different to the PC version. Occasionally the game will have a very sudden pause, for a split second- barely noticeable in some circumstances. This too happens on the PC version, my PC is more than capable of running the game (2Ghz Duron Processor, 384Mb RAM, 64Mb Geforce 2 MX graphics card) and the game still jerks most of the time, even with settings down low. And yes there is loading between areas, but the same as the PC version.

It would have been much better if they did sort out these problems, but its not a bad conversion, the game is the same as the original (so far) and runs well on the Dreamcast.

The presentation of the game is as good as was originally, some screens are different, but overall very similar. The sound is good- they have implemented new music and effects to the game. For example when you first put on your bio suit, instead of the normal speaking that you hear and sound effects, a decent ‘pumping’ tune kicks in (for no real reason) and you find that game becomes instantly more livelier because of it.

You probably won’t find yourself replaying it much. The game takes a fairly long time to complete and has no real bonuses, though PC games rarely do.

Half Life DC

What made Half Life on the PC so popular were all the mods that you can get with it. Counter-Strike, Opposing Force, Firearms etc… The multiplayer was extraordinary, unlike anything in any game-literally millions of players connecting online to face opponents from across the globe. Unfortunately the Dreamcast version has no such multiplayer, which is a shame, because it would have been very good if they made one it. Whether Valve wanted to include a multiplayer in the final version is unknown, it is possible that they did (and rumours are some people unlocked the coding for the DC), but because of the Dreamcast’s imminent production closure they decided not to.

The game is quite hard to get hold of. But because you cannot buy an official copy (unless you can pick up one of the few preview discs around) it is very cheap. I bought mine for £4.95 on Ebay. But it is possible to download the game and special software, so that you can burn it to disc using your PC. I would say that it is worth buying, for the price I paid, but I would not spend £30 on the game unless it were official.

If you own it on the PC then it is really not an essential buy, but it is worth it for the Blue Shift, if you don’t own it, its very good fun- I actually prefer it, to the main game.

Half Life DC HalfLife_DC Controller Half Life

Summary:

Not a bad conversion, I have played cnversions that are worse- (DOOM on the Saturn)

It would have been good if little bits and pieces were ironed out, or if they hadn’t canned the game at the last minute.

Overall: 8

~G~

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POSTED IN: Retro, Review

5 opinions for Retro Review: Half Life DC (Dreamcast)

  • Gill Figno
    Dec 15, 2006 at 8:14 pm

    I’ve never played the Dreamcast version because, as you said, it never came out. I refuse to put anything burned into my new Dreamcast after what happened too my other two. I used to play SNES and NES roms all the time on my launch Dreamcast, but soon the laser completely wore out. I then bought a replacement, maybe it was just because it was old. Nope, same deal and quicker this time. The CD-R’s were killing it.

    It might just be me, but I’m not going to put another CD-R game into my Dreamcast, even if it wasn’t released. It’s a shame too, Half-Life is a great game on the PC. I guess I’ll have to buy the PS2 version if I ever want to play Half-Life on a console.

  • G
    Dec 15, 2006 at 11:44 pm

    Yeah I hear that happens alot with CD-Rs on the Dreamcast. So far mine has been fine. But I don’t play that many burned discs.

    I own Half Life and Propeller Arena (also unreleased) and a few homebrew titles- but I don’t play them much anymore.

  • Sega Nerds » Blog Archive » This Month in Sega History: Sega sells out
    Jan 4, 2007 at 2:44 pm

    […] That day was Jan. 30, 2001. It’s funny because it really doesn’t seem like it was that long ago that I was still reading the Official Dreamcast Magazine and eagerly awaiting the releases of Black and White and Half-Life. Well unfortunately, ODCM was trashed and Black and White and Half-Life never saw a commercial release. Although Half-Life on DC can still be played through “other” means. […]

  • Jon
    May 21, 2007 at 5:16 pm

    Was Propellor Arena any good? I was gonna buy it, but…

  • G
    May 22, 2007 at 12:05 am

    Re. Properllor Arena:

    Well as the game wasn’t ever finished, it’s not worth buying - unless you get a good price. I’d definitely pay no more than £5-£10 (or $’s) for the game.
    BUT it is a good title. It has some great graphics (especially considering it wasn’t finished) and the flying is frantic and fun. The single player is good, but it shines in the 4 player mode.
    It has two downfalls though, the arenas are too small - compared to other plane based fighters - like Crimson Skies on the Xbox - which has some magnificent levels. And also it has no online play - which it was meant to have originally.
    Otherwise if you can download it or get it cheap - do so, its fun.

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