The polish is beginning to dull, and with minimal plot progression throughout the whole game, the appeal of episodic instalments of Half-Life 2 is waning. To have you fighting old enemies and arbitrarily picking up all your old weapons (which you somehow lost again, and were somehow scattered along the first level again), well, it feels like we're retreading old ground, fighting fights we fought in Half-Life 2 and Episode One. It's not an entirely bad section of the game, but it whiffs of Xen, and leaves you feeling deflated - especially after the stunning intro showing off the Source engine's newfound ability to explode really large things.įor the game to be touted as taking a new direction towards grand, open vistas and rolling, beforested hills, only to send you almost immediately down a mine shaft, is disappointing. A wholly more annoying sort of antlion which vomits acid on you, not unlike the original game's bullsquids. Valve have decided to have the mute Gordon Freeman spelunk a giant antlion cave, full of not just antlions, but a new sort of antlion. If you're like anybody else, and had had enough of the limitless, hive-minded cannon fodder by the end of Half-Life 2, then you won't. If this sounds like you, and you'd marry an antlion, then you'll love the first section of Episode Two. So Who Likes antlions? And I mean really likes antlions, enough to marry one.
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