I genuinely can’t believe Half Life Alyx is five years old.

No other video game has felt the way Alyx felt. No one else has taken such a bold swing in what a video game can be. It’s burned into my mind as my Half Life game, the one that came out at just the right time for me.

It was also my “pandemic” game. While everyone else was playing Animal Crossing or Doom Eternal, I was playing and replaying Half Life Alyx.

It definitely feels like it’s somewhat doomed to be less remembered in the popular consciousness than most big games that come out, and indeed the rest of the games in the Half Life lineage. Cries of “Half Life 3 when?” still abound in spite of the very clear effort Alyx made to move the story forward. But to me it feels like a game that still hasn’t been topped in the five years since it came out, not by a long shot.

Half Life Alyx received a Game of the Year win from GameSpot, and nominations from a few other publications. When it came to events like The Game Awards with a dedicated “Best VR Game” category, it won handily.

  • Baggins [he/him]@lemmy.ca
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    3 days ago

    The reason it’s forgotten because most people aren’t able to play it. If valve really did put important story in a game that they knew most gamers would never be able to play that’s kind of shitty

      • gonzo-rand19@moist.catsweat.com
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        3 days ago

        The idea of sinking $500 into a headset and then another $80 for one game is pretty crazy. Not like Valve doesn’t have the ownership numbers from the hardware survey. It was never going to sell like HL2.

        • PhAzE@lemmy.ca
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          2 days ago

          You could buy a quest 2, connect it to your 5 year old PC and play it just fine. I ran it off a gtx 1070ti with that headset just fine.

        • Asetru@feddit.org
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          3 days ago

          Do you know about gaming consoles? 3D accelerator cards? Graphics cards? Or… CD ROM drives?

          People have been buying hardware to play a certain game for literal decades. The games are called “system sellers”. Games so good they sell hardware. It’s usually even the opposite: if your hardware doesn’t have such a game, it doesn’t sell (atari Jaguar anyone?).

          • pory@lemmy.world
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            3 days ago

            $1000 and your gaming PC for Alyx is way beyond buying a PS4 for Bloodborne, and even doing that is a bridge too far for me.

          • Stovetop@lemmy.world
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            3 days ago

            VR has the extra element of needing a suitable living space to play in, though. Other games I can do at my desk or in my tiny, cramped living room, but I have nowhere I can easily set up for VR that would allow for significant range of motion.

            I own a VR headset, but I only really use it for games that allow you to be stationary and just use the headset as an immersive monitor with a standard controller. As one would expect, it doesn’t get much use, because not many VR games are made to play that way!

          • Hadriscus@lemm.ee
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            3 days ago

            I thought you still needed to plug the VR headset into a computer ? is the computer built into the headset ?

            • Kanzar@sh.itjust.works
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              3 days ago

              Most of the common ones now do wireless streaming from the PC for PCVR. But yes, for PCVR games you will still need a PC to run it. There are some VR headsets that are capable of running some games on it without a connected PC, like my Quest 2 can run Superhot or BeatSaber etc.

          • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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            3 days ago

            So people should buy hardware to play a single game and then leave the hardware to accumulate dust after a few hours of gameplay? Quite the waste!

            • tauren@lemm.ee
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              3 days ago

              I agree, that would silly. Luckily, Half-Life Alyx is not the only VR game.

              • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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                3 days ago

                Sure, but if people love Half-Life and don’t care about other VR games it sucks that it’s locked behind hardware requirements that even Valve doesn’t give a crap about considering it’s the only VR game they made.

                Edit: I’m sure all of you would be pissed if Sony released a new PlayStation with one game from a beloved series and then just said “now it’s in other people’s hands, let them take care of creating more games for our hardware!”

                • skulblaka@sh.itjust.works
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                  2 days ago

                  This entire argument can be made identically for Half-Life 1 and 2 requiring people to upgrade their PCs to be able to play them.

                • tauren@lemm.ee
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                  It isn’t up to Valve alone to push forward the industry and release top-tier VR games every other year. They took a risk and created one of the best games I’ve played, and I’m not alone in that opinion. Valve are trying expand the gaming experience, they are trying to be innovative, and people blame them for “not giving a crap”. Say what you want, but I thank Valve for what they are doing.

        • CosmoNova@lemmy.world
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          3 days ago

          I mean it‘s 5 years old now and what has Valve released for VR since? A single game isn‘t gonna make a hardware and they know that. It was a failure in the end of the day.

          • gamermanh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            5 years old now and what has Valve released for VR since?

            You know Valve has released a whopping 3 things total in that timespan (didn’t include deadlock cuz I’m not sure that’s officially released yet), right? A free steam deck teaser, the card game they’ve been working on for a while, and the CSGO 2 update

            Valve works slow, my guy

            A single game isn‘t gonna make a hardware

            Good thing there are a shit ton of other games, then

            It was a failure in the end of the day

            No it wasn’t, you high? They sold out of Indexes around the games launch. Would have sold more if not for COVID, too

            • CosmoNova@lemmy.world
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              2 days ago

              Hold on. Why are you replying with unrelated things that Valve did instead of focusing on VR to get people onto that platform? Kind of proves my point, doesn‘t it? Also Covid? Seriously? If anything Covid should‘ve accelerated development on VR games.

              • gamermanh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                2 days ago

                Also Covid? Seriously? If anything Covid should‘ve accelerated development on VR games

                Your claim was that the game was a failure, my point with COVID was that you would have been extra wrong about that had there not been a pandemic limiting how many headsets they could actually sell, which was the point of the game. In the world that we got they sold out and had Back-orders for a year, had there not been a global pandemic those Back-orders would have been sales, and likely many who couldn’t buy one would have been able to as well

                The rest of your comment shows you have 0 idea how Valve works internally. The whole studio doesn’t just work on one project, there are smaller teams that pick and choose what they do. This is why Valve tends to release shit a couple years apart that are wildly different (Alyx and Artefact), but 5-8 years between similar products (Portal 2 and Alyx). It being 5 years or more since their last major VR release is to be expected from them, not a sign of failing at anything

        • AdrianTheFrog@lemmy.world
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          3 days ago

          The game starts at 60 USD and goes down to 30 pretty often. If you have VR already, it’s not very expensive.

        • circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org
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          3 days ago

          It’s also way different from the goal of HL2. Downloading a launcher called Steam for free is not the same thing as buying specific hardware to play one game.

        • UnbrokenTaco@lemm.ee
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          Plenty of people do that to play a single game.

          Given how different it is to other, normal 3d games, I don’t think the comparison is fair. Additionally there are a lot of other, really great games in VR too.

          Regardless, I don’t think the problem is financial anymore. Rather that VR requires a sort of “commitment to inconvenience” where you feel cut off from the outside world (among other things) that I don’t think a lot of people are comfortable with.

          • gonzo-rand19@moist.catsweat.com
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            3 days ago

            Are “plenty of people” enough to make a game commercially viable? And not in an indie way.

            I zone out, completely cut off from others, while playing games all the time. What I don’t want to do is fork over more cash for things that will collect dust (like a headset for a single game).

            Given how different it is to other, normal 3D games, I think it’s a bit much to stake your franchise on something most people will never have. It’s obvious Valve knew that, they’re not idiots and have put out good hardware that didn’t see mass adoption in the past (Steam Controller, Steam Link, etc.); it’s clear they wanted to try out something new even if it wasn’t a huge blockbuster. They have lots of revenue from other sources to fall back on.

            They probably hoped that some people would take a chance and get the hardware to play the game, and some people did. But to expect that most would do that? Lol. They’re not that dumb.

            “The idea” was to do something no one had done before with a beloved franchise. Not to sell headsets.

            • ampersandrew@lemmy.world
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              3 days ago

              I don’t think they particularly cared if you bought their headset, but they had the premium offering if you were interested. I think they wanted Alyx to be the Mario 64 of VR.

          • Quazatron@lemmy.world
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            3 days ago

            It’s both financial (huge investment for a single game) and not. Playing with a thing strapped to your face does not sound fun. Especially with glasses. Or in the summertime. Plus I’m a Linux gamer, so I’d probably run into a lot of issues before I could run it.

            • Antithetical@lemmy.deedium.nl
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              3 days ago

              I also run on Linux exclusively and I could play Half-Life Alex almost flawlessy on the Steam Index. And other VR games as well, including Beatsaber, Gorn, Walkabout Golf and many others. I’m really grateful to Valve and their Proton.

            • UnbrokenTaco@lemm.ee
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              3 days ago

              True in regards to the index kit but WMR has been around for a long time as well and that was a fraction of the price without base stations.

              Also nobody has missed out on playing it yet! There’s still time before half life 3! 😅

              • AdrianTheFrog@lemmy.world
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                3 days ago

                True

                it’s doomed now, but I love my Reverb G2, I got it for the same price as a Quest 2 (before the q3 released) and, having used both, its a lot better.

            • Jessica@discuss.tchncs.de
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              2 days ago

              Maybe not in your country. I literally just checked on the American store and it’s still included with the Valve Index.

              They even give you a free copy of Half-Life Alyx if you buy a pair of knuckles controllers for $279.

        • tauren@lemm.ee
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          3 days ago

          But it’s not required, there are much cheaper options, especially today with used quest 2 devices.

          • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 🇮 @pawb.social
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            3 days ago

            The “other reasons” people aren’t buying affordable VR setups is because they don’t trust Meta or their privacy policies. If the new Valve headset was $300-500 it would go a long way. But $1200 isn’t it.

            • piecat@lemmy.world
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              3 days ago

              That is why those other VR sets are so cheap.

              With valve, you’re paying for the hardware. With Meta, you’re the product

            • BroiledShit@reddthat.com
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              2 days ago

              Psvr2, plus the pc adapter, i got both for a total of like $400 a few months ago, and got hl alyx on sale.

                • Lv_InSaNe_vL@lemmy.world
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                  2 days ago

                  I’ve used pretty much all of the headsets on the market. I still haven’t tried a Big screen VR headset though :(

                  For popular headsets I’d rank them kinda like this

                  1. Valve Index - it’s just really old and really expensive now, don’t buy one unless you get a hell of a deal on it used
                  2. Quest 2 - Still very very good, screens are getting a little dated now
                  3. PSVR2 - its a little janky on PC but it works fine and the OLEDs are sublime
                  4. Pixmax Crystal - Money not a problem this is the best headset I’ve tried. The FOV is crazy, displays are beautiful, and tracking is damn near perfect. Its just like $2300 for the whole lot
                  5. Quest 3 - Overall the best headset on the market. Its $570 (just get the pro strap, trust me) and gets you so close to the big boys in screen quality, plus it’s wireless, plus it has crazy good passthrough (I use it a lot, most people don’t), and streams PC games perfectly.

                  PSVR2 has really really really good looking displays, but it has some other downsides which really bring it down in the rankings. I’d stay away from it unless you get a deal on a used one, then it would absolutely be worth it.

                • BroiledShit@reddthat.com
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                  2 days ago

                  The only other one ove used is psvr1, and one of those smart phone ones, psvr2 is obvioisly miles ahead of bith, though i cant say how it compares to Index, or quest. Id imagine its probably near quest quality.