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Modding is a way of changing the form and play of a game by manipulating its base coding. This can vary from changing colors of a character, to re-making a map or weapon, such as in Halo 2. Using the mods can significantly alter the processes of a game. Bungie bans some modders for modding, but understand that Halo: Custom Edition is legal as it was created by Gearbox Software. An example of a Meta Tag modding program is Halo Map Tools.
Modding for Cheating
Modding can add weapons, turn weapons that are single-wielded into dual-wielded weapons, such as the Covenant Energy Sword or even Sniper Rifles. Also, mods can make a player jump incredible distances and in some cases, break the game or map barrier.
Other mods include:
- Auto-headshots
- Infinite ammunition
- Super-Speed
- Making undrivable vehicles driveable (e.g. pelicans,longswords and phantoms)
- Extra Damage Delivered
- Damage Resistance
- The creation of new weapons
- The modification of weapons and vehicles in Halo 2.
- The modification of maps
- The modification of weapon, vehicle, and player spawn points
- Automatic power weapons, like sniper rifles and rocket launchers
- Creation of energy barriers
- Creation of flying turrets
- Changing the physics on a map to make players lightweight or super-dense
- The introduction of AIs into maps
- Swapping weapon abilities and characteristics (example: shotgun ammunition turns into a spray of wraith shots, plasma pistols shooting overshield power-ups).
Most of these maps are hard drive maps such as Containment (Level) or Terminal (Level), It is possible to modify the maps on the Game Disk, But it is a very hard process and may break your DVD drive, The easier way is to copy the game to the Xbox HardDrive, But you won't be able to play on XBL with them.
All of these mods are used in Halo 2 to give the "modder" a slight edge in gameplay. However, he/she can only use a lot of the mods if he/she has host of the game. Often, modders are in a party with a "bridger" or a "stand-byer." Bridgers use a program on the computer which interacts with other players' routers and xboxs to make a modder or anyone else host of the game. This is effective in the process of "leveling-up." This is when gamers join a modder's game to get their level boosted up because the modder is almost unstoppable. Stand-byers use many techniques to freeze other gamers games. This includes: Pressing the "stand-by" button on a modem, and slightly unplugging the Internet cable from their Xbox. When a stand-byer is successful, other gamers either get the dreaded "blue screen" or they get a similar black screen. Everyone but the stand-byer gets this. This allows the stand-byer to run around the map and kill all opponents. This is effective, but illegal, as are all mods.
Any use of these mods is in violation with the Code of Conduct and will get their account banned from all matchmaking games.
Bungie takes action
- Main article: Halopedia:Bungie With Teeth
This has become such a widespread problem in the "Matchmaking" system that Bungie was forced to resolve the problem by releasing auto-updates which ban hackers from the system and terminate their accounts. Bungie has banned thousands of players and is working to clean up the rest, earning in the process the moniker 'Banhammer.' Several sites offer a list of cheaters and hackers.
Although there used to be several ways to mod, Xbox Live and Bungie have collaborated to rectify the programming mistakes and prevent the game from being modded as much. They are also reinforcing much stricter punishments for cheaters, such as instant bans and longer suspensions.
Demo Modding
In the demo level of Halo: Combat Evolved, there has been two kinds of mod, the land mod, allowing Ghosts and Gun Turrets and tanks. And the Tank Mod with many variations of the tank mod.
Modding for Everyone's Enjoyment
Sometimes, though, people mod for fun by making the mods on the maps able to be used by everybody in the game. This is what modding was originally intended for: fun and messing around. Often modders make a map with a theme, such as a snowy version of a normal map, a night time version of a normal map, a SWAT type map, or anything you can imagine. Some mods add player models from a Campaign map to a Multiplayer Map, including Heretic Elites, ODSTs etc. Sometimes people make mods just to see what kind of new and innovative things they can do such as "Active Scenery" which allows objects, like Pelican Dropships, to move around the map without AI or anyone controlling it. An example of Bungie made active scenery is the Train on Terminal the Monitor on Backwash, the monitor and flood tentacles on Cold Storage
Some also mod to make nice screenshots like those seen at Halouvre.
It should be noted, however, that this type of modding can still result in a ban from matchmaking, and is still considered illegal, although Bungie doesn't appear to mind it as long as the modder does not go onto Xbox LIVE.
Halo 3 Mods
Recently, a man with the gamertag of Shade4510 leaked out three modded maps for enjoyment by fellow players.
People have recently figured out how to mod Halo 3, but Shade4510 was the first person to give out three of the modded maps on Xbox Live.
Please note: the maps were NOT made by him.
The three maps are:
A modded Last Resort which is almost identical mods to the actual High Ground map with little exceptions of computers, three windmills, a detached gauss Warthog, Scorpion and machine gun turrets. All are usable save the main Scorpion turrets. There is also lots of little grass patches sticking out of walls of the posterior structure.
Modded High Ground, where there are Elites and Spartans standing alive still whom have no weapons but hold up to 4 Frag or Plasma Grenades depending on whether it is an Elite or a Spartan, flags, random gates, oddballs, and Wraith shots at the start of the game.
Also, a modded Sandtrap with 7 Elephants.
Recently, an abundance of modders have came out and released their own made maps. These modded maps include, The Pit, Vahalla, Snowbound, Blackout, Guardian, Standoff, and Foundry.
Softmods and Hardmods
Despite common belief getting a chip installed in your Xbox is not the only way to have mods. Many popular mods are retrieved through what is called "soft" modding.
- Soft modding does not require a chip; it is done through a special file and an Action Replay.
- "Hard" mods are done by buying a certain chip from the internet and installing it on to your xbox.
Sources
Note- There is no "True Source" for modding as it is done at a players demand. However, it may be witnessed in the following games.
- Halo: Combat Evolved
- Halo: PC
- Halo: Custom Edition
- Halo 2
- Halo 2 Vista
- Halo 3 Beta- please note that this was the beta version and not the final product
- Halo 3
External Links
- Why We Mod - A collection of creative mods displayed in a music video.