This article's documentation is for the "GoldSrc" engine. Click here for more information.
This article relates to the game "Half-Life: Opposing Force". Click here for more information.
This article relates to the game "Half-Life". Click here for more information.

Half-Life: Opposing Force

From Valve Developer Community
Jump to navigation Jump to search
English (en)中文 (zh)中文(臺灣) (zh-tw)Translate (Translate)

Half-Life Opposing Force - Background.jpg
Half-Life: Opposing Force
Software Cover - Half-Life Opposing Force.jpg
Developer(s)
Release date(s)
November 19, 1999 
Windows:
November 19, 1999
macOS, Linux:
February 14, 2013
Platform(s)
Engine
Steam AppID
Written in
Mod support
System requirements
For details, see below
Steam Deck compatbility
Distribution
Retail, Steam
Links
Previous game

Half-Life: Opposing Force Half-Life: Opposing Force is the first official expansion pack for Half-Life Half-Life. It puts the player into the role of Cpl. Adrian Shephard, one of the military specialists of the Hazardous Environment Combat Unit sent in by the government to contain and silence the Black Mesa Research Facility. Shephard travels through new and familiar areas of the Black Mesa facility, encountering new weapons and NPCs.

Like Half-Life, Opposing Force's name holds a scientific value. Although it means literally the "opposing force" to Freeman and Xen, the name also links to Isaac Newton's Third Law of Motion. The game itself is often abbreviated to OpFor and Op4.

History

Opposing Force was developed by the external and acclaimed company Gearbox Software. Gearbox aimed to further the story of the Black Mesa incident and show exactly how the situation was ultimately resolved. Opposing Force was originally released in 1999, and had since been named 'Game of the Year' by the Academy of Interactive Arts and Sciences.

Content

As Opposing Force returns the player to Black Mesa as a soldier, Opposing Force's content differs from Half-Life's to maximize the role of the HECU, giving it a stronger presence and a more realistic feel. As such, Opposing Force introduces different types of soldiers: in addition to the shotgun and automatic-wielding troops of the original game, Opposing Force includes soldiers armed with light machine guns as well as engineers capable of cutting through sealed doors and medics who can heal both the player and friendly NPC's.

Gearbox also expanded the number of participants in the incident. Now included with the Black Mesa personnel, HECU forces, and Xen invaders are two new groups. One of these is the mysterious Black Operations, who are specialist human forces that are faster and more agile than HECU troops. Only encountered twice in Half-Life - female assassins attempting to kill Gordon Freeman - the Black Operations are now in the facility in force, targeting anything that is still alive, including the player and fellow HECU members. The female assassins from the original game return, working in conjunction with new male soldiers and snipers.

The other one of these groups is a completely new hostile force known as Race-X. These creatures are not part of the Xen forces and will attack Vortigaunt troops as well as human ones.

A number of new weapons and models have been introduced to further better the game. These include the M-249 SAW light machine gun and M-40A1 sniper rifle referred to above, as well as a Desert Eagle (which is used in place of the .357 Magnum in single-player, but the two separate weapons are available in multiplayer) and a host of alien and experimental Black Mesa weapons. New NPC models include redesigned HECU soldiers to accommodate the new features, Black Operations soldiers, the new Race-X species, and several new NPCs made specially for the Boot Camp, Opposing Force's version of Half-Life's Hazard Course.

Gearbox composed the soundtrack for Opposing Force, which was later used again in Half-Life: Blue Shift Half-Life: Blue Shift. Yet for unknown reasons, this soundtrack did not originally migrate with the rest of the game to Steam.

Chapters

Half-Life: Opposing Force Half-Life: Opposing Force has 13 chapters (14 with Boot Camp). Players can also travel to Xen (displays as C4A1TITLE) in We Are Not Alone, but this will quickly result in player falling into a void.


System Requirements

Windows (Retail/WON version):

Windows (Steam version):

  • Windows 7 or later
  • 800 MHz CPU
  • 512 MB RAM
  • 4 GB disk space
  • 32 MB VRAM video card
Note.pngNote:The Steam version is no longer compatible with XP and Vista[confirm] since the 25th anniversary update.
User using these OS can downgrade to previous version of the game by using the steam_legacy beta branch instead.

OS X:

Linux:

  • Ubuntu 12.04, SteamOS 1.0
  • 2.8 GHz Dual Core processor
  • 1 GB RAM
  • 4 GB disk space
  • Nvidia Geforce 8600/9600 GT or ATI (AMD) Radeon HD 2600/3600 video card
  • OpenGL 2.1 or above
  • For Nvidia: 310 driver version
  • For ATI (AMD): 12.11 driver version
  • OpenAL-compatible audio

Related mods

See also