
This is a rampage game where the main characters fight on a battlefield. I would recommend it to any Hotline Miami fan, tho I'm not sure if I can say the same about Half Life fans. Download Half-Life on MediaFire for Free. It only ever crashed once in my entire playthrough on a Win11 machine. Gravity gun is also not a guaranteed one hit kill but it was also how it worked in Half Life so it's fine. My only problem was the reaction time of the enemies, they will instantly flick and shoot without any delay even if they are facing the opposite direction. I also like the idea of the game taking place in a City-17-ish Miami. Unlike its peers at the time, Half-Life used scripted sequences, which ranged from small events, such as an alien ramming down a door, to major plot points. It's already way closer to Hotline Miami than Half Life 2, if we could pick up enemy weapons it would straight up be Hotline Miami with different textures. Half-Life is a first-person shooter that requires the player to perform combat tasks and puzzle solving to advance through the game. The gravity gun is fun to use and I don't think it being the only weapon hurts the gameplay. The gameplay is smooth, the graphics blend the style of both games quite well and the soundtrack is awesome (tho it would be even better if it was a mashup of Half Life and Hotline Miami style instead of just synthwave, or maybe synthwave remixes of the Half Life 2 OST) Steam is available from both the Steam website and the Ubuntu Software Center.I don't understand the hate this game gets. Whether Valve debut their new engine with another Half-Life title or something completely different, their continued investment in Linux bodes well for a new Valve release coming much sooner to our platform than the nine-year lag for the original HL2 or the six years for Portal, TF2, and HL2: Episode Two. Valve head Gabe Newell confirmed the company’s work on the second iteration of the Source engine – the engine currently powering Steam titles for Linux like Team Fortress 2, Portal, and the Half-Life 2 series. Though originally released for the PC back in 2004, Half-Life 2 has lived on with additional “episodes” and a growing collection of mods to tide over the series’ fans whilst Valve take their time on the next title in the series. The Half-Life 2 series’ debut for Linux through Steam comes just after Valve’s release of Portal for Linux last week. Valve’s lauded first-person shooter Half-Life 2 has finally arrived on Linux.
