Weapons (gameplay)

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For the full list of weapons see Category:Weapons

The weapons from the Halo Universe, available in Campaign and Multiplayer gameplay, form the basis of First Person Shooter Gameplay within the Halo games.

Origin

The player is allowed to use weapons from many races, such as Humans, Covenant, and Forerunner, often turning the enemy's firepower against them.

Human weapons tend to use bullets, explosives, and rail guns. Covenant Separatists weapons are generally plasma or energy based. Covenant Loyalists weapons use spikes or explosives. All plasma weapons use charge. All weapons run out of ammunition or charge when used extensively. Covenant Separatists weapons typically overheat if fired continuously for long periods of time, which causes your weapon to become temporarily unresponsive while it cools down.

To know more about the weapons from each set of races:

UNSC Weaponry Covenant Weaponry Forerunner Weaponry
Two Covenant Plasma Rifles.

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Gameplay

An extensive array of weapons are available within the gameplay, with each weapon operating differently. This allows players to take different approaches and sometimes forces a change in tactics depending on the strengths and weaknesses of each weapon. Each player will also find a weapon to suit his or her tastes, in terms of power, speed, range, kickback and/or feedback.

Usage

Halo: Combat Evolved limited the number of weapons players could carry to two (of which only one could be used at any one time), forcing players to carefully select their preferred armament.[1] Players fight with ranged and melee attacks, as well as a limited number of grenades. Bungie refers to the "weapons-grenades-melee" format as the "Golden Triangle of Halo",[2] which has remained fundamentally unchanged throughout the trilogy. The player character's health is measured in both hit points and a continually recharging energy shield.[3] The energy shield absorbs a significant portion of enemy fire until it becomes depleted, after which the player character will sustain damage, potentially causing death.

Halo 2 introduced new gameplay elements, most notably the ability to hold and fire two weapons simultaneously, known as "dual wielding". The health system was altered in this game, with the player no longer having hit points as well as shields. The Assault Rifle was not included in this game.[4]

Halo 3 adds to the series new weapons, and a class of items called Equipment. The Assault Rifle returns in this incarnation, albeit with a decreased magazine capacity, but with more damage per hit.[5]

Halo 3: ODST adds sound-suppressed weapons, namely the Silenced SMG and the Suppressed Auto Mag. Also, the game does not contain the Battle Rifle, Equipment, or dual wielding. Halo 3: ODST also marks the return of the Brute Plasma Rifle, replacing the regular version.[6]

Aiming

 
A few weapons as displayed in-game, with icon and name. Screenshots per weapon are when normal, firing, and when in scope/zoomed view. All in Halo 2.

The typical arrow cursor is hidden within gameplay, and replaced with a blue targeting reticule that stays locked to the center of the screen, when in first person and third person views. The reticule turns red when a shot will hit an enemy target, and green for allies.

Many weapons are scoped and have the capability to zoom 2x or 5x into any area, with some long range weapons even capable of reaching up to 10x magnification such as the Sniper Rifle. These always show the reticule and continue scoping after shots are fired.

While wielding non-scoped weapons, the player's armor has the capability to zoom, to a minimal extent. These hide the reticule when in the zoomed view, returning to the normal view after every shot, making them inefficient for sniping. However, skilled players can use this in online gameplay to keep a good eye on enemies or destinations.

Types

The types of available weapons follow the basic standards present in real life; Assault, Battle and Sniping.

Grenades are frequently made available, primarily for anti-infantry combat. Some grenades can stick and some grenades are stronger than others.

Melee attacks are always available; if the player is able to get in range of an enemy, that can cause heavy damage. And melee attacks are very dangerous when you hit an enemy in the back, this will kill almost any enemy. Most times, a single melee attack is sufficient to completely deplete an enemy's shields. These are also used to take control of an enemy vehicle, by Melee attacking the craft, then planting a grenade to kill its driver.

Heavy weapons, such as turrets, are also present within Halo levels, either stationary, or mounted on Vehicles. Some turrets can be removed from their stands and used as hand held Support Weapons, but it makes the player move slower and gives the turrets limited ammunition. Only when driving a vehicle, controlling a Missile pod, controlling the Flamethrower, and controlling a turret, does the game switch into third-person view. Some vehicles, such as the Ghost, Scorpion Tank, and Banshee allow the driver to directly control mounted weapons while driving the vehicle. Other multi-occupant vehicles such as the Warthog require the player to remain in the weapon seat to control fire, and driving seat to control navigation.

Explosives and large scale weapons, missiles, Nuclear Weapons, and Halos are usually involved in the storyline of every game, though not usually playable.

Availability

 
A Covenant Supply Case, holding two Carbines.

Within campaign levels, the player's character (Master Chief or the Arbiter) usually begins with two weapons, and will always have access to weapons lying around, either near corpses or within weapon caches and stores.

Killed enemies or allies can be robbed of their dropped weapons as well. In Halo 2 and onwards, the player can exchange weapons with allied AI when requested, making it unnecessary to kill them only to use their weapons, although grenades still cannot be traded.

Weapons can be reloaded by collecting ammunition or swapping the player character's weapon with a loaded dropped weapon. If the player is already wielding the same weapon, they can swap if the new weapon is loaded or charged more than the wielded weapon.

Certain weapon types usually have more or less ammunition available. For instance, sniper rifles typically have less ammunition lying around then assault or battle rifles, which are intended as primary/multipurpose weapons.

Common Tips

  • Shooting a players' weapon will cause them to take damage, and even kill them. You can also stick their weapon with a grenade in addition to this.
  • A good trick to find snipers is to watch for the smoke left behind from the weapon's tracer bullets.
  • A tactic to staying aware of enemy campers is to watch for their gun barrels sticking out from behind walls, barriers, etc.
  • Simply running towards your enemy and shooting at the same time is not a good tactic. Try strafing too.
  • Try shooting the head, not the body when using headshot capable weapons.
  • Shoot at the feet of your opponents with explosives, as a body shot could be easy to evade.
  • Snipers that stay in tight spaces will be vulnerable to explosives and grenades due to lack of room to move.
  • Fire in short bursts with automatic weapons, such as the assault rifle, as it is a good way to maintain accuracy and overpower enemies from afar.

Trivia

  • The Marathon symbol can be observed on most if not all human weapons, it is very small and often blends in and is better observed on very zoomed in close up. For example it can be found being on the butt of the MA5C Assault Rifle, it can also be found on the Sniper Rifle close to the gun's trigger. They are all best observed in the Halo Encyclopedia.

Gallery

Sources

External links

  • How to Snipe in Halo 2 is a wikiHow guide that describes strategies for sniping in Campaign and especially Multiplayer.