Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION

Hail to the Chief

Supersoldier roars back to life in fourth and finest Halo title

Microsoft's wildly successful foray into console gaming begins with two words: Halo and Bungie.

Halo: Combat Evolved and its sequels have been selling Xboxes since the original machine launched in 2001. But developer Bungie has moved on, leaving the franchise in the hands of Microsoft and in-house studio 343 Industries.

Fans have been nervous about the prospect of a Bungie-less Halo. But surprises abound in the gaming world, and 343 has taken Bungie's blueprint and given us a title that reinvigorates the franchise.

Legendary supersoldier Master Chief and his AI companion Cortana make a stellar return in Halo 4 (for Xbox 360, $59.95), an excellent opening instalment in what 343 calls "The Reclaimer Trilogy." Boasting arguably the finest art design, graphics and soundscapes of this generation, Halo 4 should make anyone remember why they fell in love with this series in the first place.

Picking up several years after the events of 2007's Halo 3, we find Master Chief in cryogenic sleep, drifting through space aboard the damaged military freighter Forward Unto Dawn toward an unknown world. You'll do battle with a Covenant horde once again and contend with a challenging new enemy in the Prometheans.

The plot is somewhat complex -- incorporating a few elements from the larger Halo universe of novels and comics -- and has plenty of surprises, so I won't spoil too much of the roughly 12-hour campaign. But you will see Master Chief and Cortana in a whole new way through several scenarios that humanize them more than ever.

The pacing of the action is the game's greatest strength. Mixing epic first-person battles with vehicular combat can get tricky, but 343 has managed to find a perfect balance. Just when you've blazed your way through a first-person onslaught and feel the need for a change, there's a Scorpion tank waiting for you. After a trek through battlegrounds that may leave you desperate for ammunition, you get to pilot a Pelican dropship and wreak havoc from above.

The gunplay is some of the best the series has ever seen. Among the available arsenal are human and alien weapons, each with its own unique feel and plenty of options to fit your playstyle. You can charge in with heavy weaponry or hang back and snipe away. The wealth of weapons and vehicles -- you'll flip when you see the Mammoth -- is staggering.

The enemy AI is reactive and challenging, even on the lower difficulty settings, and the mechanics are close to perfect. Moving Master Chief around is a very smooth experience, whether on foot or flying around with a jet pack. The old warrior can also take advantage of shield upgrades, "active camouflage" cloaking and infrared vision.

There's a versatile collection of competitive multiplayer modes with 10 built-in maps, as well as a separate "Spartan Ops" co-operative campaign. The revamped Forge provides plenty of great tools to manipulate physics when building your maps. With the franchise's strong history of multiplayer-driven content, rest assured you'll be battling it out on Xbox Live for quite some time.

The Gears of War trilogy over the last few years seemed to supplant Halo as the console exclusive that made the Xbox a must-own, but Halo 4 returns Master Chief to his throne.

-- The Associated Press

Game review

Halo 4

Xbox 360

$59.95

4 stars out of five

Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition November 22, 2012 C16

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