Forerunner automated turret: Difference between revisions
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File:Autoturrethud.svg|The Automated Turret HUD icon. | File:Autoturrethud.svg|The Automated Turret HUD icon. | ||
File:ForerunnerAutomatedTurret-scantransparent.png|A scan of the Forerunner Auto-Turret from the ''[[Halo Encyclopedia]]''. | File:ForerunnerAutomatedTurret-scantransparent.png|A scan of the Forerunner Auto-Turret from the ''[[Halo Encyclopedia]]''. | ||
File:Automated Turret.jpg|An inactive turret on the [[Ark]]. | File:Automated Turret.jpg|An inactive turret on the [[Installation 00|Ark]]. | ||
File:At7.jpg|A deployed turret on the Ark. | File:At7.jpg|A deployed turret on the Ark. | ||
File:Auto Turret 2.jpg|A closeup of the Auto Turret firing its beam. | File:Auto Turret 2.jpg|A closeup of the Auto Turret firing its beam. | ||
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==List of appearances== | ==List of appearances== | ||
*[[Halo 3]] {{1st}} | *''[[Halo 3]]'' {{1st}} | ||
==Sources== | ==Sources== |
Revision as of 11:53, April 23, 2012
Template:Weapon The Automated Turret, also referred to as the Auto-Turret, is a Forerunner construct similar in design to a Sentinel.
As its name implies, it acts as an automatic antipersonnel weapon, and is featured in Halo 3 as a piece of equipment. When deployed, it hovers in place several feet above the ground, and will fire a powerful blue energy beam at any hostile targets within range.
It is so far only encountered on the Halo 3 levels The Ark, The Covenant and Halo, and is not found on any multiplayer maps due to the issue of keeping the game balanced, and its inability to work with multiplayer netcode.
Function
This small, robotic turret is a piece of Forerunner technology found on the Ark and Halo and resembles a stripped down Sentinel. Its mode of attack is firing a thin, blue beam at its target, similar to the beam fired by a Sentinel Major, although it is slightly stronger. This device is extremely adept at destroying Flood of all kinds, but is still highly effective at taking out other enemies. Its drawbacks are that it takes a long time to find and shoot a target, it has to wait a minute after deployment before it can attack, and it will occasionally shoot the player. It is useful to deploy when you have many hostiles in the area, providing the player with added firepower.
Its heads-up display symbol is a silhouette of the equipment itself, and slightly resembles the symbol for the Power Drain.
Advantages
- The Auto-Turret has enough power to remove a Brute's power armor, kill a Jackal and a Grunt with a single shot, and kill a Brute Chieftain within three shots.
- Even with its poor targeting and low damage resistance, the Automated Turret can still often provide kills without considerable player support.
- The Auto-Turret firepower increases significantly as the game difficulty increases.
- The Auto-Turret's beam is powerful enough to push back any airborne enemies.
Disadvantages
- The turret has a warm-up time of about three seconds. The turret also has problems picking out targets, often tracking allies with its targeting system.
- When the turret is your enemy, the AI skill level is greatly increased. As with AI-controlled Marines, it will pick out targets faster, fire more accurately, and will rarely turn away from you on higher difficulties if you are in its sight.
- It is rather fragile, easily being dispatched by enemy forces. Additionally, its sight is very narrow and can only attack enemies in front of it.
- It will also shoot at the player occasionally.
- If bumped by the player or an enemy, it may go flying up into the air in an erratic manner.
Behavior Against Foes/Allies
After the player has defeated 343 Guilty Spark, if the player deployed any Auto-Turrets outside the Control Room, they will turn against the player and fire at him/her. This could be due to the fact that a Forerunner construct has been destroyed, and any other Forerunner constructs in the immediate area must kill the construct's destroyer. Or that, as Guilty Spark betrayed you, he added you to the Sentinels "hostile list", making any Forerunner creation try to kill you. Another theory of why they behave in that manner is because the Monitor of the Installation has been destroyed, and without any protocol to follow, they fired at anything that moved. This includes the Master Chief and the Arbiter. When they are against the player, their shots are incredibly dangerous, strong enough to kill you in one shot on Easy. On the level The Covenant, if you use an Auto-Turret during the part where you are allied with the Flood, the Auto-Turret and the Flood will try to kill each other. A canon explanation for this is that the Forerunners programmed their creations to kill the Flood, period. So it attacks the Flood and when the Gravemind sees this hinderance and tries to destroy. Or it might be that the Auto-turret is encoded into the level as a 'Forerunner team member', meaning its allegiance lies with Guilty Spark. When Guilty Spark, a member of the 'Forerunner team', becomes your enemy, it follows a script to break the team allegiance between the player (the Master Chief, and on Co-op, the Arbiter). This is also why the Flood and Auto-turrets fight each other, because while the player's allegiance is aligned with the Flood, the Forerunner and Flood teams remain enemies.[1]
However, on the same level, when you get to the Separatist Phantom that arrives to pick up the Arbiter, if you destroy the Phantom (thus preventing Guilty Spark from departing) and you pick up and deploy an Auto-Turret, it will fire at Guilty Spark for unknown reasons.
Gallery
- Autoturrethud.svg
The Automated Turret HUD icon.
A scan of the Forerunner Auto-Turret from the Halo Encyclopedia.
- Automated Turret.jpg
An inactive turret on the Ark.
- At7.jpg
A deployed turret on the Ark.
- Auto Turret 2.jpg
A closeup of the Auto Turret firing its beam.
- AutoTurret1.jpg
An Automated Turret attacking a Grunt.
List of appearances
- Halo 3 (First appearance)
Sources
- ^ By using HMT to exam the actor tags of an AI, the different allegiance flags can be seen and altered. For Halo: Combat Evolved, these teams are 'Flood', Sentinel', 'Covenant', 'Human', and 'Player', as well as several others, which are never used. The allegiance of a unit is determined by the team flag selected for that unit. No one unit of a team can ally with another team without the use of scripts, or that specific unit relocating to another team, but the former is much easier.