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The Almighty Buck Entertainment Games

Every Half-Life Game Is Now Free On Steam (theverge.com) 69

With Half-Life: Alyx launching in March 2020, Valve is offering gamers the opportunity to play every Half-Life game on Steam for free. "This is basically a two-month-long trial; you won't get to keep these games," notes The Verge. "Every game is compatible with Windows, Linux, and macOS (though all of these games are 32-bit apps, which means they don't work on macOS 10.15 Catalina)." From the report: This promotion includes the original Half-Life (the Source version of the game with added physics to make it feel more modern to play, not the beautiful remaster Black Mesa) and its expansions, Half-Life: Blue Shift and Half-Life: Opposing Force. Also available for free is Half-Life 2 and its two episodic expansions. (According to Valve, Half-Life: Alyx takes place before the events of Half-Life 2.) Valve's Half-Life 2: Lost Coast, its tech demo for HDR lightning, isn't included in this promotion. You can view all the Half-Life games on Steam and start downloading them here.
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Every Half-Life Game Is Now Free On Steam

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  • I bought and played all Half-Life games when they were released back in the days, still have the CDs.
    Seems Valve want people to see how great these games are without spending the money, as they will need it to buy and play Alyx.
    Iâ(TM)m very interested in this game, but the cost of VR is quite steep. I wonder if a lot of people are going to spend the money.

    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      I hope Valve makes a non-VR Alyx in the future. I don't want to get a high end PC and wear VR stuff.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      Seems Valve want people to see how great these games are without spending the money, as they will need it to buy and play Alyx.

      Except they'll run into the problem of the hanging storyline after Half Life 2 Episode 2.

      Half Life has a great storyline, and how they designed the dialog around the player is simply brilliant. (After all, Gordon (you) doesn't speak, and the dialog is designed around that).

      And of course....

      From Ars Technica [arstechnica.com], the top comment about Half Life Alyx, by dEvErGEN:

      Yes, because the gap betw

    • I wonder if a lot of people are going to spend the money.

      Given the Index was sold out and on backorder basically all through the holiday season the answer is mostly yes. And that's the most expensive option. This will run just fine on cheaper setups too.

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        Steam has proven to be unreliable forcing bad upgrades on gamers. You know the crap, added advertising for DLC, change play style to incorporate pay to win, altered contract long after purchase, agree of the game no longer runs and all this forced on customers, can not run an earlier version, just the latest version to fuck over steams customers and not shits given by steam. The post purchase abuse of gamers is getting quite bad and being enable by steam by blocking gamers from using earlier versions of the

        • "Steam" has done no such thing, and neither has Valve. Publishers however have. You're directing anger at the wrong party.

          In fact Steam has a lovely little feature in that it *always* retains previous versions of games in their database. You just have to use the steam console to download them. Also once you do that Steam won't attempt to update them again until another version is released.

          Beatsaber auto updated to v1.6 to add 360 support recently and broke all my mods in the process. It took me a whole 2 mi

  • Not free (Score:5, Informative)

    by war4peace ( 1628283 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2020 @02:45AM (#59643516)

    Not free. Free trial.
    You play then for two months (to build hype), then they take them back.

    • Not free. Free trial.
      You play then for two months (to build hype), then they take them back.

      Worth noting that, should you try them and find that you like them, you can purchase the entire Half-Life 1 collection for about £5 (probably around $7).

      Seems like a pretty reasonable trial period - with a decent price if you decide that you want to take the plunge.

    • Not free. Free trial.
      You play then for two months (to build hype), then they take them back.

      Half-Life: Indian Giver

    • Correct, however, you can extract the files and keep them forever(similar to Doom/Quake .wads). The Oculus Quest (through sideloading) currently has a way to take your HL files and play them on it. HL1 in VR is pretty great.
  • by Noishkel ( 3464121 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2020 @03:02AM (#59643546)
    I've never really given a damn about the 'features' that supposed to be selling points of using Steam, so I don't use it. And as such I never bothered playing anything past the original 3 Half-Life games, which came on a disk. There's nothing about this new game that tickles my nostalgia boner enough to dig out my old barely used steam account and play the most recent incarnation of that series. Especially when I'm not going to have access to them long enough to make them worth my time to complete them all. Maybe if Valve would just bring them over to GOG, which I do use, then maybe I'd buy them and spend the time to play them all the way though. 'Course, I'm not holding my breath on that.
    • by fazig ( 2909523 )
      You'll probably never get Half-Life 2 and derivatives on GOG.
      If I remember correctly Half-Life 2 was one of the first if not the first game to require online authentication through Steam instead of just a CD key.
      This caused a lot of privacy and software ownership concerns back then. But today a lot of people seem to have embraced Valve and Steam for various reasons. (I think it's some kind of Stockholm syndrome)

      One of the most 'interesting' arguments I've heard for Steam support over GOG is that Valve s
      • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

        As bad as a walled garden is, games are just a form of entertainment... They are not holding your data captive, restricting your ability to earn a living or restricting anything essential in life.
        If you lose access to a game it's an annoyance, if you lose access to a piece of software critical for your livelihood or critical for something like paying taxes you're up shit creek.

        • by fazig ( 2909523 )
          You might be referring to Unreal Engine? You'd have a point there, but it's not critical to my livelihood. So far its node based programming has been just a great tool for designing software architecture.

          And other than that: So what?
          I can be pro open platforms like Linux and still against walled gardens even if they support Linux. That is how it can start, with 'just games'. And as that gains acceptance other corporations can smell the foolishness of customers and expand into that area with products that
          • That is how it can start, with 'just games'. And as that gains acceptance other corporations can smell the foolishness of customers and expand into that area with products that are more than 'just games'.

            Nah...They've already figured out the real money is in SaaS. [wikipedia.org] You don't ever have to worry about installing software ever again. We'll keep it safe in the cloud and you can access it whenever you want...as long as your subscription is current.

            • by fazig ( 2909523 )
              Yes, they already figured it out with the cloud.
              However there are still issues with our internet infrastructure that makes it difficult to provide a wide audience with these services. Whenever there is a time critical task to be done, where latencies start to matter a lot, a remote service can't beat a localized one until they can figure out how to predict the future with sufficient accuracy.
              That is why services like Google's Stadia are still dead on arrival for gamers that like to play fast paced games th
        • Very true, and for me most games have a limited life span. If I lose access to a game after a couple of years, not a big deal, most likely I'll be long done with it anyway.

          It's the other restrictions imposed by Steam that made me look for alternatives. There are a few alternatives like GOG and on some you can get triple-A titles as well as good Indie games. My main problem with Steam is that I can only play 1 game at a time. If my wife wants to play too, she has to buy her own copy. Now that would b
        • by Anonymous Coward

          I would argue that entertainment, enjoyment and escapes (from reality) are essential to life. Otherwise what's that point of music, movies, theater, novels, poetry, watching a sunset etc etc etc. If your idea of life is holding onto your data and earning a living and paying taxes then your idea of a life is pretty dismal. So, no, losing access to a game is not a mere annoyance, it's taking away something you enjoy and at the end of the day enjoyment is a very important part of life -- not working in an offi

        • As far as that goes, steam is markedly better than just about any other DRMd software I've used. All of purchases from 15-20 years ago work just fine. Can't say the same about Adobe, or others, for instance.

      • I wonder how many people complaining about "walled gardens" when it comes to PC environments, own any product from Nintendo, PlayStation, Xbox, etc.

        Nobody bitches about the fact that you can't plug a Wii game into your PS4, because it's understood that the hardware and software are converged. Is it really some terrible cyberpunk-hipster sin for a software developer to attempt to re-create, on otherwise modifiable PC hardware, the exact same "walled garden" video gamers have been happily playing in for the p

        • by fazig ( 2909523 )
          Now that would be a tu quoque fallacy.
          Of course that means that it's also true that those devices are walled gardens. And that fact should not be denied.

          I own an NES and Gameboy original (they still work). My parents bought them for me before I even had my first PC. Then I went for the PC platform with (Windows and Linux) and never looked back.
    • by ledow ( 319597 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2020 @08:11AM (#59643924) Homepage

      Because Steam was the first, most sensible, and has been the most reliable service.

      Your disks, first example, make you eligible to get all the HL1 series games for free on your Steam account anyway. Just plug in the key. It was one of the first things they ever did on Steam.

      They've given them away any number of times. We're talking 20+ year old games, still available on a double-click download, still eligible to redeem your CD-Key for free extra versions online that are updated regularly.

      And that's precisely it... if you don't support the least-objectionable version of what everyone else has, they have absolutely no incentive to compete with them anyway. You not buying a game, just means you don't have those games. They're not suffering, they have made enough money from Steam to last, pretty much, forever. It's one of the biggest video game incomes to a single company in the world.

      And... 16 years later my games still work like they did before Steam came along. My account still has all my games. I can install it on any number of PC's I like. I can literally install it at a friends house, sign in as me, play my copy of the game together, and then remove it. I can double-click install and play games I haven't played in 16 years. And I can buy, gift and redeem games through a simple website and get them instantly.

      I'm only sorry that Steam doesn't do more normal software, I would happily pay for portable, follow-me versions of quite a lot of things I use, but they either have their own crappy ideas of how to do it, or they don't have a similar service at all.

      I don't care about "friends", or streaming, or their controllers... and they respect that. I have small-mode Steam in my taskbar with notifications off. It stays there. I click it, I find my game in a pure list of games, I play my game, it goes away. Oh, and it backs up my saves/config for me, but that's optional too.

      Valve are never going to do what you ask... it's their games and their launcher, in effect (that's all Steam is) and it's a damn sight less intrusive than ANYTHING else. I won't even install Origin. The GOG launcher is a mess of huge screens and images when I just want a list. I quite liked the Desura launcher but it went bankrupt, because nobody wanted to buy their games on other services. GOG even match some of my games to Steam, so I get Steam and GOG versions of them. I can't recall the last time I loaded GOG to play a game that's on my Steam.

      Honestly, Steam gets a bad rap because of silly reasons. Just install it. Put it in small mode. Close it when you don't want it. You will not notice a single difference, except that you don't need your CD, and you can do it on your new computer in ten seconds and a few double-clicks rather than having to reinstall every damn thing all over again.

      Whatever you're scared of... it's been running for 16 years and still dominates the PC games market, with well-funded rivals. It totally laughed off Games For Windows Live, which was an abomination far worse in scope. EA's bringing their games back from being Origin-only to Steam too because they realised their mistake when nobody followed them. Now it's competing with Windows Store, which is another abomination that I've never seen anyone actually use except by mistake.

      Load steam. Take it out of your startup if you like. Put it in small mode. Turn off notifications. Redeem your key. Play those games you have, in a far more friendly and simple way. Delete them when you're done. Close Steam if you don't want it doing things on your system. And you can repeat that every year if you like, with everything you put on the account.

      "If they go bankrupt then I'll lose my games". Yes. Same as anything. And your old CD's won't keep working forever, sorry to tell you this. I can't install Age of Empires 2 from CD and play it any more. You need all kinds of shit to make it work on modern Windows. But I can just double-click on AoE2 (several different modernised versions

      • Congratulations, though, on misunderstanding my issues with Steam.

        The problems with Steam? Yeah, they're as great with Epic, Games For Windows, the lot.

        It's not "If they go bankrupt then I'll lose my games". It's "they control whether or not I play the game I purchased." Turn of Steam while playing? After a bit, it demands you turn it on again, "if only for a minute".

        Can't play your games any more? Did you upgrade your computer system? Well, then, whose fault is it that you can't play them? Folks li

        • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

          It's not "If they go bankrupt then I'll lose my games". It's "they control whether or not I play the game I purchased." Turn of Steam while playing? After a bit, it demands you turn it on again, "if only for a minute".

          Can't play your games any more? Did you upgrade your computer system? Well, then, whose fault is it that you can't play them? Folks like me? We accept that responsibility. Don't have a CD player any more? They make those that work on USB these days. CD platter scratched, broken, degraded? Did

          • > Steam has "Go offline".

            Good to know that they made that a selectable option. But as I said, it's about "Can Steam control whether I am allowed to play my game". Being able to play offline is great, but (for this particular concern) that is "hiding from steam to keep them from controlling your game", which does nothing to put control back in the hands of the legitimate purchaser.

            And as I intended to say, the games themselves may insist on a steam connection at regular intervals. Perhaps not Half-Li

      • GoG does a lot of their work using emulators, which makes the task of supporting newer and different OS easier. I imagine with retrocomputing virtualization will become as important, and the death of Windows 7 will mean Proton will become more important, as well as people gaming under virtualization for security reasons (https://www.reddit.com/r/VFIO/).

    • The biggest upside for Steam for me is that their Linux support is really, really good.

      I found that I had amassed a pretty large Steam collection of indie games without even trying (mostly from the old Humble Indie Bundles and the like), although I had never bothered to set it up. Last year I set it up, and found that most of the "Windows-only" games work with no tweaking; also, a lot of the native Linux games which were difficult to get running on modern distributions due to relying on old libraries are n

  • by sTERNKERN ( 1290626 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2020 @03:21AM (#59643564)
    They are bulding up the hype for Alyx. Nothing to see here. Also it is not free. It is merely a trial period.
    • So nothing to see except for the things to see, namely the 2 months you get to play HalfLife for free?

    • Yes, but it is a trial period that lasts longer than the average person would take to beat the single player game.
    • I can't believe it's not free!!! How could the charge for a trial period?

    • by eepok ( 545733 )

      I usually hate hype... but Valve's Half-Life story has had me by throat since high school, so I'm buying into it.

  • 2 months? (Score:5, Funny)

    by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Wednesday January 22, 2020 @05:15AM (#59643694)

    So the half-life is 1 month?

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      No, that would imply that after 1 month you could only play half the game and after 2 months a quarter of the game or something like that.
  • by wilsong ( 322379 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2020 @05:51AM (#59643726)
    I gave up on Valve after their failure to complete the "episodes". I have no interest in VR, and won't be lured by Valve's nukemism.
    • You gave up on a publisher due to them not producing a game you wanted and therefore will not buy other games from them? This has to be one of the most petty butthurt comments I've seen on the internet.

      Your UID is low enough so I assume you're not in your teens, but seriously that is childish.

      • by wilsong ( 322379 )
        Crikey, that's a killer argument that you make. I shall immediately buy a product I don't want from a company that's I can't rely on, to improve your overall assessment of my character.
  • Now all Linux users can show they exist! Finally! Our moment has come! â½
  • Steam has good metrics for hardware support, they know only fraction of gamers have VR headsets. Are they hoping people going to rush to buy VR gear just to play their game?
    • by sd4f ( 1891894 )
      Some will, most probably won't. I think it's probably more a case that if they don't try, then definitely no one will, so why not use a franchise, with a rather loyal following, to try to push into VR. I suspect that the industry feels that it's there for anyone to take, but my perception is that for most people, it's too strong a gimmick to compel any main stream adoption, that is to say, some people will love it, but most probably won't see value in the hardware cost.
    • Are they hoping people going to rush to buy VR gear just to play their game?

      No hoping about it. The Index was completely sold out the entire holiday period from the day of the Alyx announcement. People *did* rush out and buy hardware for this. Expect it to happen again when the game actually gets released. Oculus has also seen the biggest Christmas sales spike yet compared to the normal sales throughout the year, though I don't think they sold out on Rift S at any point, they did sell out of Quests.

      Honestly this isn't a surprise. This is Valve playing catch-up after their critics a

  • Since the summary mentions it: How hard is it for them to recompile the games to create 64-bit compatible versions? I'd like to upgrade my OS at some point, but not at the cost of losing Team Fortress 2.

  • Damn, after Christmas I saw that the orange box was $2.99. Now itâ(TM)s $19.99.

  • Crashes on start. Run as Admin with compatibility for win 98.
    CTSListBase: Misaligned list Error!
    Google search leads to VCD Blocking Tool --- Valve Developer Community
    Something was left in the old code that is some form of DRM.
    I never got to play this game. The hype for this game died on the vine.
    Sad really due to the fan base surrounding the orange box.

  • I bought all of these during the XMas sale they had when I noticed they weren't in my library any more.
    At least they were $1 or less each.
  • Title: "Every Half-Life Game Is Now Free On Steam!"
    Article: Except for these.

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