Template:Archived Page History/Half-Life/en: Difference between revisions
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[[File:C1a0 testmachine.jpg|thumb|The [[Anti-Mass Spectrometer]]. This is the place where the player, [[Dr. Gordon Freeman]], causes the [[Black Mesa Research Facility|Black Mesa]] incident.]] | [[File:C1a0 testmachine.jpg|thumb|The [[Anti-Mass Spectrometer]]. This is the place where the player, [[Dr. Gordon Freeman]], causes the [[Black Mesa Research Facility|Black Mesa]] incident.]] | ||
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''Half-Life'' is also the debut of the {{gldsrc|4}} engine. Its successor is {{hl2|4}}. | ''Half-Life'' is also the debut of the {{gldsrc|4}} engine. Its successor is {{hl2|4}}. | ||
==Content== | == Content == | ||
* Half-Life maps (<code>hl1</code>) | * Half-Life maps (<code>hl1</code>) | ||
* GoldSrc shared (<code>hl1</code>) | * GoldSrc shared (<code>hl1</code>) | ||
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* {{Wiki|Half-Life}} on Wikipedia | * {{Wiki|Half-Life}} on Wikipedia | ||
* {{moddb|1}}<!-- profile (broken, somebody find the right one)--> | * {{moddb|1}}<!-- profile (broken, somebody find the right one)--> | ||
Revision as of 11:49, 12 April 2023

The Anti-Mass Spectrometer. This is the place where the player, Dr. Gordon Freeman, causes the Black Mesa incident.
Half-Life, Valve's debut title, blends action and adventure with award-winning technology to create a frighteningly realistic world where players must think to survive. Named Game of the Year by over 50 publications, it also includes an exciting multiplayer mode that allows you to play against friends and enemies around the world.
Half-Life is also the debut of the GoldSrc engine. Its successor is
Half-Life 2.
Content
- Half-Life maps (
hl1
) - GoldSrc shared (
hl1
) - GoldSrc code
Chapters
- Black Mesa Inbound (c0a0)
- Anomalous Materials (c1a0)
- Unforeseen Consequences (c1a1)
- Office Complex (c1a2)
- "We've Got Hostiles!" (c1a3)
- Blast Pit (c1a4)
- Power Up (c2a1)
- On a Rail (c2a2)
- Apprehension (c2a3)
- Residue Processing (c2a4)
- Questionable Ethics (c2a4d)
- Surface Tension (c2a5)
- "Forget About Freeman!" (c3a1)
- Lambda Core (c3a2)
- Xen (c4a1)
- Gonarch's Lair (c4a2)
- Interloper (c4a1a)
- Nihilanth (c4a3)
- Endgame (c5a1)
Credits
Main article: Half-Life Credits
These are the official credits for "Half-Life", as released in November of 1998:
- Ted Backman
- TK Backman
- Kelly Bailey
- Yahn Bernier
- Ken Birdwell
- Steve Bond
- Dario Casali
- John Cook
- Greg Coomer
- Wes Cumberland
- John Guthrie
- Mona Lisa Guthrie
- Mike Harrington
- Monica Harrington
- Brett Johnson
- Chuck Jones
- Marc Laidlaw
- Karen Laur
- Randy Lundeen
- Yatsze Mark
- Lisa Mennet
- Gabe Newell
- Dave Riller
- Aaron Stackpole
- Jay Stelly
- Harry Teasley
- Steve Theodore
- Bill Van Buren
- Robin Walker
- Douglas R. Wood
Uncredited Voice work:
- Mike Shapiro: Black Mesa Security Guards, Soldiers, the G Man
- Harry S Robins: Black Mesa Scientists, Soldiers
- Kathy Levin: Hologram Trainer, Black Mesa Train Announcer
See Also
External links
- Website
Half-Life on Wikipedia
ModDB page