Gameplay

Warfare (game variant)

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Halo 2 Alpha screenshot showcasing the Warfare gamemode.
A screenshot of the Halo 2 Alpha with the Warfare mode in the menu.[1]

"Pit Humans against Elites in an epic battle that will shape the outcome of the Covenant war. You have but one life to give for your homeworld."
— Official description in the Halo 2 Alpha.[1]

Warfare was a large-scale multiplayer gamemode intended for inclusion in Halo: Combat Evolved and later, Halo 2 - though was ultimately realised in neither.[2]

Overview

Halo: Combat Evolved

During the development of Combat Evolved, the team at Bungie had prototyped elements of a large-scale multiplayer mode featuring Marines taking on Elites, in an immersive and round-based setting. The mode would have been asymmetric with an attack versus defense interplay, with maps that were more "strategically designed" to feature different kinds of objectives to attack. This design was intended to focus on control points, with attackers able to choose different kinds of locations to attack.[3]

Warfare received some light prototyping while Bungie was still based in Chicago - prior to their acquisition by Microsoft in mid-2000.[2] Ultimately, the scramble to finish Combat Evolved's campaign meant that very few resources were available for the multiplayer component, resulting in Hardy LeBel creating the final arena-style multiplayer almost single-handedly. Because of this, the design team fell back on what they knew from their experience working on the multiplayer mode for Marathon, and ultimately shipped a more traditional arena experience. However, the larger scale did make it into the game, with maps such as Blood Gulch and Sidewinder containing larger scale vehicle gameplay.[3]

Halo 2

Early layout documentation for Sandtrap.
An early design for Halo 3's Sandtrap, showcasing a similar design intent to Warfare.

"“We still have the multiplayer game-types that people loved in ‘Halo’, but we’re planning something special for multiplayer in ‘Halo 2,’” hinted Jaime Griesemer, “Halo 2's” lead designer. “I don’t want to ruin the surprise, but imagine the essential ‘Halo’ single-player experience: pitched battles between the humans and the Covenant, massive vehicle and infantry engagements. Now imagine that every combatant is an actual person playing over Xbox Live!”"
— An excerpt from the original Halo 2 press announcement, referencing the then-in-development Warfare mode.[4]

Following on from Combat Evolved, Warfare was once again reconsidered for Halo 2's multiplayer, with the majority of the team at Bungie pursuing it as the game's primary multiplayer component - intending to realise what they had envisioned for the first game. A design document was written by Jaime Griesemer containing three top-down paper map designs for the mode. Seeing that the plan for Halo 2 was to only ship the larger multiplayer experience, Max Hoberman protested the change due to how popular Combat Evolved's multiplayer had become in the LAN setting. Hoberman was eventually able to make his case such that Alex Seropian and Jason Jones eventually greenlit Hoberman to lead the development of a traditional arena-style multiplayer to supplement the larger scale battles that Warfare was to offer.[3][5]

At this time, Hoberman and Chris Carney were designated to work only on the small-scale multiplayer mode for Halo 2 - focusing on small playercounts such as 2v2 or 4v4, with no consideration for Big Team Battle modes due to the ongoing development of Warfare. This was partially due to the fact that in 2001-2002, the majority of the US did not have broadband internet to support online play, meaning a huge market was still left for traditional split-screen and LAN games.[3][5]

Six months later in 2003, the three-page design document written by Griesemer was still all that had been made for Warfare, and very little active development had been done on it (in part due to the development troubles which plagued Halo 2's campaign). By March 2003, Hoberman was approached by Jason Jones and his arena team integrated back in with the main Warfare multiplayer team and Hoberman made the lead for the entire Halo 2 multiplayer. At this time, the Warfare mode was officially cancelled, and work instead began on creating a series of large maps for the arena multiplayer to add a large-scale element akin to Combat Evolved.[3][5] The ability to play as Elites in the multiplayer did ultimately make it into the final game.

Although the mode was ultimately cut, it was referenced in magazines discussing the game, making mention of "supporting events" such as the ability to call in an air strike.[6] The mode was intended to support 32 players, though whether this was actually feasible or possible is something Bungie had never explored in-depth.[7] The Warfare mode was still in the menus of the Halo 2 Alpha, containing a description though was not selectable.[1]

In design documentation created by Hoberman for Halo 2, he co-opted the name "squad" from the Warfare mode to refer to what would eventually become known as a party of players. By July 2003, documentation still referenced the possibility of Warfare making it into retail.[8][9]

Legacy

Halo 5: Guardians' large-scale mode Warzone has been likened to Warfare.[5]

Although stated by Hoberman as having no relation, the described concept of Warfare is strikingly similar to the Invasion gametype which did eventually ship in 2010's Halo: Reach - though by this time Hoberman had left Bungie to found Certain Affinity. [10] Notably, Reach did see the return of another multiplayer mode cut from Halo 2 - Headhunter.

A similar concept to the Warfare mode was also considered during the development of Halo 3. Early design intent by Justin Hayward for the multiplayer map Sandtrap was to make a map supporting an asymmetric attack/defense mode, with the attacking team pushing into the "bowl" that would become the Sandtrap map in the final game.[11] Despite this, Hoberman has maintained as recently as 2023 that Warfare was never actively considered for inclusion in Halo 3 during his time working on the game (having left Bungie around nine months prior to release). He did suggest that he would be willing to share some of the paper-design map layouts the team concepted out, should Jaime Griesemer grant him permission.[12] However, Griesemer is reluctant to, due to the legalities of breaking a non-disclosure agreement sharing Bungie and Microsoft design documentation without permission.[13]

The Warzone mode later featured in 2015's Halo 5: Guardians was later likened to the design intent for Warfare.[5]

Sources

  1. ^ a b c YouTube - The Vengeful 'Vadam, Full Analysis of the Halo 2 Private Alpha: 7:07
  2. ^ a b Twitter, Max Hoberman (@MaxHoberman): "Warfare was the team's original multiplayer game design for Halo 1. It got some light prototyping back in Chicago, but it only existed on paper for H2 - a single design document. It never got worked on for H2." (Retrieved on Nov 14, 2021) [archive]
  3. ^ a b c d e Halo 2: Artifacts, Episode 1
  4. ^ GTPlanet, Halo 2 Announced (Retrieved on Nov 14, 2021) [archive]
  5. ^ a b c d e VICE, The Complete, Untold History of Halo (Retrieved on Nov 14, 2021) [archive]
  6. ^ EDGE, September 2002 (Issue #114) - Prescreen Focus: Halo 2, page 46-52
  7. ^ YouTube - IGN, Ex-Bungie Dev Shares Halo 2 Stories - Podcast Unlocked
  8. ^ Twitter, Max Hoberman (@MaxHoberman): "Ooh, here's a summary of our plans for taking Halo 2 online that I wrote in the Summer of 2003. This was right before I decided on a new, much better name for squads: parties. I'd repurposed the name Squads from Warfare, then temporarily replaced that with Units here. 1/2" (Retrieved on Nov 14, 2021) [archive]
  9. ^ Twitter, Max Hoberman (@MaxHoberman): "Interestingly, there's still a nod in this doc to the possibility of Warfare launching at some point. I think we were holding out hope that it might post-launch. 2/2" (Retrieved on Nov 14, 2021) [archive]
  10. ^ Twitter, Max Hoberman (@MaxHoberman): "Did it ever end up turning into another game mode later in Halo’a life cycle like Invasion? Nope." (Retrieved on Nov 14, 2021) [archive]
  11. ^ Bungie.net, Sense of Scale - Postmortem: Postmortem analysis of the Sandtrap multiplayer map (Retrieved on Jan 31, 2021) [archive]
  12. ^ Twitter, Max Hoberman (@MaxHoberman): "Not for H3, but @32nds[Jaime Griesemer] can tell you if it ever came up again after I left. If you're lucky one day he may even give me permission to share some of the paper designs of maps for it." (Retrieved on Apr 11, 2023) [archive]
  13. ^ Twitter, Jaime Griesemer (@32nds): "Sorry, I’ve seen what can happen when you share MS/Bungie “work product”. No matter how minor or obsolete (or potentially fascinating to fans.)" (Retrieved on Apr 11, 2023) [archive]