Ethical Hedonism
Banned
Sad that I'll never play this. 

Sounds like people are reading way too much into the plot considering he wrote the first and final paragraphs to address the Valve situation specifically.
Fitting that that kickstarter video was also a massive disappointment that never left the prototype stage.
Saying that Valve is "treating fans like shit" by not making a sequel is entitlement.
August 25, 2017, a day that will live forever in the minds of every single PC gamer out there.
RIP Half Life, you will be missed forever.
Saying that Valve is "treating fans like shit" by not making a sequel is entitlement.
Oh yeah, fans are so entitled, wanting a sequel for this story driven videogame, where the last one ended with a huge cliffhanger. How dare they.Saying that Valve is "treating fans like shit" by not making a sequel is entitlement.
Not following through on promises IS treating fans like shit.
Ok Black Mesa devs, it's time to get to work.
Oh yeah, fans are so entitled, wanting a sequel for this story driven videogame, where the last one ended with a huge cliffhanger. How dare they.
But you see it's the gamer's fault for wanting a product that was advertised, wanting the story of said product to be finished and being willing to pay for its existence all the while.
Valve is like that super smart kid at school that starts selling pot and decides as opposed to going to Harvard they just sell pot because they like the money. A lot of potential wasted in pursuit of money.
Let's not get carried away, Valve never formally announced Episode 3, let alone advertise it.
Let's not get carried away, Valve never formally announced Episode 3, let alone advertise it.
Let's not get carried away, Valve never formally announced Episode 3, let alone advertise it.
Maybe like shit isn't neccessarily accurate. Valve treats its fans the way a casino treats the marks who go inside to play.
Oh yeah, fans are so entitled, wanting a sequel for this story driven videogame, where the last one ended with a huge cliffhanger. How dare they.
I'm the last person to ever stand in defense of a for profit company but yes that's actually entitlement. Same with fans demanding book sequels.
Glad this got posted.
Now I'm off to wander downtown Seattle in a daze.
A company wants to make money? Breaking news.
I doubt it. Took a lot of work to get them on board with Black Mesa. If it was possible I'm sure they would've outsourced the game to a legitimate team a long time ago, but I have a feeling they're holding on to it for when VR matures (purely conjecture based on conversations I've had with people from the industry)
Oh, spare me this "entitlement" bullshit. People aren't mad because they feel "entitled" to a sequel, they're mad because the latest entry in the story ends on a cliff-hanger.Saying that Valve is "treating fans like shit" by not making a sequel is entitlement.
im gonna guess Valve is going to sue the fuck out of him.
Sure, but it would have at least been decent of them to say, at one point, that they were not making a new Half-Life game and had no current plans to do so. They announced Half-Life 2: Episode 3. Rather than officially cancelling it, they've opted to say and do nothing. No, their fans are not entitled to a sequel but I think they've owed them that much.Saying that Valve is "treating fans like shit" by not making a sequel is entitlement.
What a shitty birthday this is.
Sometimes, people are actually entitled to something.Saying that Valve is "treating fans like shit" by not making a sequel is entitlement.
No, honestly, I still remember when and where I was when playing Episode 2, it was that big a deal back then. I was super excited for the 3rd episode that they said was coming, I actually do feel entitled to that episode. Entitlement can be completely justified and I feel it is in this case.Oh, spare me this "entitlement" bullshit. People aren't mad because they feel "entitled" to a sequel, they're mad because the latest entry in the story ends on a cliff-hanger.
I am genuinely curious, why was this posted now?
Force an acknowledgement from Valve? Have the fans stop bugging him? Give people some closure?
Or is it just to tell everyone that it is dead?
Sometimes, people are actually entitled to something.
If you pay for episodes 1 and 2 with the promise of a 3rd. You are in fact entitled to the 3rd. "Entitled" isn't a word you can just throw around to get out of an obligation in the hope that people won't remember all the stuff you've said.
Everything involves opportunity costs. Spending time X on the steam platform and hats seems to return way more capital than spending time X on developing games. Business is never about passion, it's about the money. And money is a medium that make it easier to live your passion.
Sometimes, people are actually entitled to something.
If you pay for episodes 1 and 2 with the promise of a 3rd. You are in fact at least slightly entitled to the 3rd, even if you've not paid for it. It'd be like paying for 2 episodes of a series on Google Play, under the promise of a series, which then never comes to fruition.
"Entitled" isn't a word you can just throw around to get out of an obligation in the hope that people won't remember all the stuff you've said.
Said fans are idiots, who don't understand that Steam is a much greater contribution to gaming than Half-Life.Breaking news: some fans of video games are unhappy with a game developer turning into a glorified Walmart store manager and online bookie for teenagers.
People aren't mad because they feel "entitled" to a sequel, they're mad because the latest entry in the story ends on a cliff-hanger.
Sure, but it would have at least been decent of them to say, at one point, that they were not making a new Half-Life game and had no current plans to do so. They announced Half-Life 2: Episode 3. Rather than officially cancelling it, they've opted to say and do nothing. No, their fans are not entitled to a sequel but I think they've owed them that much.
Is this truly the darkest timeline?
At this point I would prefer a no holds tell all about the stuff that went down behind the scenes at valve rather than the actual game.
Agreed on all counts, Newell's appearances at events with '3' references in fake tattoo or hat form come across as insulting and more resemble deliberate mockery of fanbase expectations over the years.
It would have been the conclusion to Episode 3, not to Half Life in general (not to the combine, not to the G-Man, not to any other characters). I guess it's just what Laidlaw had on the table for that Episode and it wasn't meant to be the last.
So Alex became the new Gordon Freeman in this and Gordon was left to die by both Alex and Gman, only to have his life spared/saved by the other alien dudes? Interesting and bleak, feels like the portal endings.
And Respawn. It's ironic how Titanfall 2 shares a similar mechanic to the Borealis,
Funny that Giant Bomb was talking about Half Life stuff this past week.
thank god Valve never accepted.
G-Man is simply a being of another universe. The real question is, who is he working for and what are the real motives for his interventions
I'm really not joking. I consider the ending of Portal 2 to be the conclusion of all of this. Earth looks pretty ok
Nobody at Valve is making games right now. They do QA patch work (that takes time) and work with primary studios they contract out to do the actual design work now.
I am genuinely curious, why was this posted now?
Force an acknowledgement from Valve? Have the fans stop bugging him? Give people some closure?
Or is it just to tell everyone that it is dead?