HL2, Jump to Lightspeed Demos
HomeLAN has details on newly available demos of two of the most interesting late-2004 releases. The folks over at Valve have released a Half-Life 2 demo, available where you download stuff, and FilePlanet has available a demo version of Star Wars Galaxies: Jump to Lightspeed should you want to try it out for 10 days.
Question: What self-respecting geek doesn't already have Half Life 2?
The demo torrent can be found on 3dgamers here
What are we going to do tonight Brain?
If it isn't then it could infect your computer like the naughty FireFox broswer doo-hicky thing.
-Dipster
I'd have to disagree. Sure, it takes some time to download the demo, but unless you have to sit in front of the computer and pedal it to make it go, this really isn't an arduous task. Why download the demo? Because the full game costs $50 or $60. Once people do this, however, they may see how simple the Steam process is and decide to buy the game. But that's a different story altogether than "You need to get a Steam account so you may as well buy the game, so the demo is a stupid idea."
I'm not sure I'm following you here. You say "You might as well just buy the full game if you're going to go through the process of getting a steam account and a verification just for a demo.", but I'd imagine most people interested in this would already have Steam accounts for Half-Life 1, or to preload HL2.
My question is, is this just a level from the final HL2, or is it a little bit of new content? I remember back when they released Half-Life they had a demo available that actually wasn't part of the game - Half-Life:Uplink, I believe they called it. It was a pretty fun 30 minute or so mission, if I remember correctly. Anyone try out the demo yet?
I rather enjoyed the HL demo Uplink and it was worth the download time.
The one who uses a different OS than Windows on non-x86 hardware, which isn't supported by HL2 or any emulators out there.
Keep an eye on Gametab's Frugal Gamer and you should be able to pick it up for ~$35 ($40 here). Whatever you pay, it's worth every penny.. it even just won Gamespy's GOTY award and a number of other awards (best character - Dog!).
I'll buy Half Life 2 when someone makes a decent multiplayer mod that's respected. I'm only interested in games that I can compete in world wide tournaments anymore. Single player games that tweak your ego by letting you crush your enemies are silly. Multiplayer games that don't become popular because they suck are imbalanced aren't my interest either. Its the solidly balanced multiplayer game that interests me.
God spoke to me.
does that mean the sales already dropped?
I wish I would have waited. I could have saved myself $50 to experience the frusteration that is Half Life 2 on an n-n-n-vi-d-dia-a-a c-c-a-a-r-r-d-d-d.
and I bet you don't have a New York Times free registration either... ;)
[/runs away]
Fast, non-reg download herem l
http://www.ngi.it/download-3301-half-life-demo.ht
Hack your mind out of its sandbox.
You might as well just buy the full game Uhm? Except the part where you pay 60$ (only 45 Euros! Ha!, sorry) for a game you're not sure about. Needless to say though, I already have my copy.
Where's the "Steam, for the most part, fucking rocks, but hell will freeze over before I contribute to its success as an authentication mechanism" option?
If it was quick (and free) to transfer a single game from one account to another, maybe (making separate accounts for each game so they can be transferred to another party is just lame). If they promise to remove all remote authentication schemes from it completely after 5-10 years (perhaps kept in escrow, so they can't renege), maybe. But a system that neatly kills the "pre-loved" market, the buddy system (borrow games from friends), and will eventually stop authenticating new installs (when I get all retro sometime in the future and want to reinstall), can go and get fucked.
I have the original Half-Life (released pre-steam of course), and have since installed Steam for it (free), so I'll be playing the HL2 demo for sure. But I won't buy the full game.
Opportunity knocks. Karma hunts you down.
Has Sony learned nothing from its newest and closest competitor?