According to one of Half-Life: Decay creators Gina Cross died somewhere in Xen. Colette Green got stuck in the personal collection of a bureaucrat with a suitcase. I stubbornly deny this scenario, but one needs to have a plan in case it turns out to be canon.
Gina invented the HEV Suit. Therefore, HEV has her voice. So here’s another scenario for you: Colette wakes up from stasis to do great things… and then her armor speaks to her using the voice of her deceased girlfriend.
289 Notes/Hide
Overview A shorter, two player version of Half-Life, where you play as two female scientists (both equipped with the hazardous environment suits). The Decay mission pack is split up into seperate. Half-Life HEV Suit / Gina Cross / Black Mesa Transit System Announcer (1998) Pajama Sam: No Need to Hide When It's Dark Outside Pajama Sam's Mom / Snooty Tree (1996). PlayStation 2 - Half-Life + Decay - Gina Cross - The #1 source for video game sounds on the internet! Alyx Vance isn’t Half-Life’s first female protagonist.Nor is she its second. In fact, the VR heroine follows in the hazmat boots of Gina Cross and Colette Green. Like Gordon Freeman, both are Black Mesa scientists who discover a sudden and vital talent for shotgunning aliens.
- lechaterrant-thestraycat liked this
- bizarepistachio liked this
- jurpples liked this
- rightmaninthewrongplace reblogged this from rachell-redacted
- rightmaninthewrongplace liked this
- misslovey32 liked this
- jonnyism64 liked this
- gay-fallen-angel-art liked this
- glauxtales liked this
- techn0b1ade reblogged this from librius
- techn0b1ade liked this
- aquacure reblogged this from catboy-coolatta
- and-uwu liked this
- librius reblogged this from catboy-coolatta
- thebadcomedian liked this
- aquacure liked this
- catboy-coolatta reblogged this from rachell-redacted
- radrat liked this
- skyblurry liked this
- inspector-loki liked this
- sparrtsmarts liked this
- kastiakbc liked this
- st4rshiptr00per liked this
- iconicfool liked this
- rhymingwithpurple liked this
- chickenbeanofdoom liked this
- liliflower137 reblogged this from rachell-redacted
- stageplaymlp liked this
- desert-rose-wolf-forever reblogged this from rachell-redacted
- ozimulmakesartwork liked this
- jpivblog reblogged this from rachell-redacted
- jpivot liked this
- carbonatedsalt reblogged this from rachell-redacted
- sleepycolakidd liked this
- nymm-kirimoto reblogged this from rachell-redacted
- nymm-kirimoto liked this
- raveninhazinha liked this
- beanstorage69 liked this
- pochenlat reblogged this from rachell-redacted
- pochenlat liked this
- goodgamingair799 liked this
- greasyalex reblogged this from rachell-redacted
- greasyalex liked this
- ashas-arts liked this
- abelard-tullus liked this
- septichistamine liked this
- wolf-beil reblogged this from rachell-redacted
- maplerivers liked this
- bonavitaetgaudium liked this
- jj-the-hamster liked this
This is a list of characters in the Half-Lifevideo game series, which comprises Half-Life, Half-Life 2, and their respective expansion packs and episodes.
Introduced in Half-Life and expansion packs[edit]
Colette Green
This section deals with characters that appear in Half-Life, Opposing Force, Blue Shift, and Decay.
Gordon Freeman[edit]
Gordon Freeman, Ph.D., is the silent protagonist of the Half-Life series and the playable character in Half-Life and all games in the Half-Life 2 series. He is a theoretical physicist and holds a Ph.D. from MIT in that field. At the time of Half-Life, he works at Black Mesa Research Facility, a facility in New Mexico, conducting nuclear and subatomic research.
The G-Man[edit]
The G-Man (voiced by Michael Shapiro) is a mysterious recurring character in the Half-Life series of first-person shooter computer games. He is known to display peculiar behavior and capabilities beyond that of a normal human, and his identity and motives remain almost completely unexplained. He plays the role of an overseer and employer, both observing the player as the games progress and pulling strings to control the outcome of specific events throughout the Half-Life saga. The G-Man's constant appearances in the Half-Life games, as well as his revealing monologues with series protagonist Gordon Freeman, imply that he is of great importance and somewhat anchors the endeavors of the player. His mysterious nature has made him an icon of the Half-Life series.
Barney Calhoun[edit]
Half Life Deathmatch Player Models
Barney Calhoun is the playable character in Half-Life: Blue Shift and a major character in Half-Life 2 as well as Half-Life 2: Episode One. Michael Shapiro provided Barney's voice in the games of the Half-Life series. Scott Lynch, Valve's Chief Operating Officer, lent his face to the game for use in-game as Barney in Half-Life 2.
Barney's name stemmed from the earlier alpha versions of Half-Life in which the model for the security guards held a resemblance to actor Don Knotts, inspiring comparisons with Knotts's character Barney Fife from The Andy Griffith Show, which in the United States has long been a disparaging term for an inept policeman or security guard. Initially, the 'Barneys' were intended to be hostile NPCs who would attack the player.
In Half-Life: Blue Shift, the playable Barney progresses through Black Mesa to escape the events of the Resonance Cascade and is able to do so, in contrast to Gordon Freeman and Adrian Shephard, who are held in stasis. In Half-Life 2, Barney works as a mole for the Lambda Resistance in the Combine Civil Protection Forces. He provides the player information in the first chapter, leading him to Kleiner and Vance, and in the end of the second chapter, he provides the player with his crowbar. The fact that Barney owes Gordon Freeman a beer is a running gag in the series.
Adrian Shephard[edit]
Adrian Shephard, a 22-year-old U.S. Marine Corporal, is the playable character in Half-Life: Opposing Force. Assigned to the Hazardous Environment Combat Unit (HECU) from the fictional Santego Military Base in Arizona, he is one of the personnel sent into the Black Mesa Research Facility to kill the aliens and silence the witnesses, especially a scientist named Gordon Freeman, the player character in the original game. However, during the events subsequent to the Resonance Cascade, Shephard finds himself separated from his unit and fighting for his life.
Unlike the other Marines, he works with the increasingly distrustful scientists and guards in order to make it out of Black Mesa alive. He and Gordon Freeman do cross paths during the game, but at that point, Shephard is merely an observer to a climactic event from the original game: the time when Freeman jumps into the portal that leads to Xen; however, if players tried to follow Freeman, they would appear in Xen but subsequently fall to their deaths. Shephard never fights alongside or against Gordon Freeman.
The G-Man appears to take an interest in his movements, even before the Black Mesa Incident. As early as three months prior, Shephard spots the G-Man during the boot camp training mission. Later on, as he makes his escape from Black Mesa, he comes across a thermonuclear warhead brought in by the Black Ops and deactivates it, but the G-Man later reactivates it, leading to the eventual destruction of Black Mesa. In the end, the G-Man reveals that he has successfully argued for Shephard's life, detaining him in some unknown void. The G-Man expresses a degree of respect for Shephard, offering praise for his ability to 'adapt and survive against all odds' which 'rather reminds [the G-Man] of [himself]'.
Shephard is briefly mentioned in Half-Life: Blue Shift, where a soldier grumbles about taking over some of Shephard's squad's duties.
Shephard was planned to be the player character of Arkane Studios' Ravenholm spinoff game, developed around 2007 to 2008, a project which Valve later cancelled.[1] Valve also affirmed that Shephard had no connection to Portal after players found that the keyboard images in game showed the lit characters 'ASHPD' and believed that hinted at Shephard's return; the letters instead referred to the long name of the 'Aperture Science Handheld Portal Device' a.k.a. the 'portal gun', with the nearness to Shephard's name a 'total freak coincidence' according to Valve's Doug Lombardi.[2]
Rosenberg[edit]
Dr. Rosenberg (voiced by Jon St. John) is a scientist and a survivor of the Black Mesa incident. He first appears in Half-Life: Decay. When Gina Cross and Colette Green first arrive at the test chamber's control room and are receiving instructions from Dr. Keller, Rosenberg interrupts and voices his concern to Keller over having the anti-mass spectrometer run above 90% capacity, which is past the safety buffer zone for the equipment. Dr. Keller, however, dismisses his concern and states that the administrator's orders for this were clear. He tells Rosenberg that he can either stay and watch the experiment or return to his labs by the train yards. Rosenberg remains, and shortly thereafter the Resonance Cascade occurs.
Immediately after the disaster, Rosenberg converses with Dr. Keller and makes it clear that he believes their greatest responsibility should be the safety of the people at Black Mesa. Although Keller thinks that they should attempt to reset the displacement fields first, he eventually agrees with Rosenberg, and they come up with a plan to contact the military, so that they can help and evacuate the facility as soon as possible. Gina and Colette escort Rosenberg through the Hazard Course to a satellite communications center on the surface, where he is able to transmit a distress signal. Dr. Rosenberg decides to wait there for the military, and this is the last time he is seen in Decay as Gina and Colette return below to assist Dr. Keller. However, his voice is heard once more in the game later on.
In Half-Life: Blue Shift, Rosenberg makes his first appearance during the Hazard Course tutorial, long before Calhoun encounters him in the train yards. He can be seen behind the observer's window during the duck-jump portion of the training.
Sometime between Gina and Colette's last sight of Rosenberg in Decay and Calhoun's eventual rescue of the scientist in Blue Shift, he tries to enact an escape plan to get out of Black Mesa with the help of several other scientists. During this time, he is captured by soldiers and held captive in a freight car for questioning, while a colleague, Harold, is cornered and fatally wounded. Before Harold dies, Barney Calhoun discovers him, and he instructs Calhoun to find Dr. Rosenberg to help him with his plan. Calhoun is able to reach the train yards and free Dr. Rosenberg. Rosenberg informs him that their plan is to use the equipment in the prototype labs to teleport to safety.
He leads Calhoun to the unused part of the complex where two other scientists, Walter Bennett and Simmons, are already preparing the machine. Rosenberg instructs Calhoun that he must activate and align a relay device on Xen in order for them to be able to accurately set their destination. Calhoun travels to Xen and is successful in accomplishing this task, but after returning through the portal back to Earth (it is here that Gina and Colette in Decay, temporarily caught in a harmonic reflux, hear Rosenberg's voice calling Calhoun through the portal), they discover that they need another power cell to replenish the teleporter's power for their escape. Calhoun acquires a newly charged power cell from the lab's sub-basement and delivers it to Rosenberg and the others. Dr. Rosenberg then initiates the system and brings it online. They all narrowly avoid the military's invasion of the prototype labs, teleporting to the safety of an unnoticed access tunnel. They get into an SUV and leave Black Mesa.
Rosenberg's fate remains unknown.
Gina Cross[edit]
Dr. Gina Cross (voiced by Kathy Levin) is a Black Mesa scientist who first appears as the Holographic Assistant for Gordon Freeman in the Black Mesa's Hazard Course and then later as one half of the protagonists in Half-Life: Decay.
In Decay, Cross is the one who delivers the GG-3883 crystal sample to the delivery system and then heads to an area below the test chamber, where Dr. Colette Green is stationed, to fix a jam in the lift that allows the specimen to be delivered up to Gordon. After the Resonance Cascade occurs, Cross teams up with Dr. Green to battle their way through the now alien-infested facility. They first escort Rosenberg to the surface to contact the military, and then under the guidance of Dr. Richard Keller, they succeed in starting a resonance reversal to help lessen the effects of the dimensional rift.
In Half-Life: Blue Shift, Cross can briefly be seen on a security camera in the surveillance room, delivering the GG-3883 crystal. In Half-Life: Opposing Force, Adrian Shephard finds Cross's corpse in Xen after being teleported there by the Displacer Cannon, which implies that she died sometime after the events of Decay. Randy Pitchford, the president and CEO of Gearbox Software, has since confirmed this fate.[3]
Cross was originally planned to be Gordon Freeman's spouse as well as another playable character in the original Half-Life, but this idea was cut from the final game.[4]
Colette Green[edit]
Dr. Colette Green (voiced by Lani Minella) is a Black Mesa scientist and one half of the protagonist team in Half-Life: Decay.
In Decay, Dr. Green's role in the experiment is to make preparations in a room below the test chamber and initiate the Anti-Mass Spectrometer to run at 105%. Dr. Gina Cross also enters the same room to fix a jam in the specimen delivery system's lift mechanism, meaning they are both in the same place when the Resonance Cascade finally occurs. Following the disaster, the two team up to fight their way through the facility for survival. They escort Dr. Rosenberg to the surface to call the military for help and then, with the help of Dr. Richard Keller, manage to start a resonance reversal to prevent the dimensional rift from becoming too large to be repaired.
The outcome for Dr. Green, along with the rest of the survivors in Decay (with the exception of Dr. Cross, who later died in Xen), is unknown to the other Black Mesa survivors.
Richard Keller[edit]
Dr. Richard Keller (voiced by Brice Armstrong) is a Black Mesa scientist, working with Colette and Gina. He appears in Half-Life: Decay. He is a 55-year-old, senior scientist in a wheel chair. He gives missions to Colette and Gina during the game. Keller also condemns Gordon Freeman and asks himself what Kleiner sees in him. His final fate is unknown.
Keller was originally going to be an antagonist, who lied about his ability not to walk, but the idea was scrapped.[citation needed]
Walter Bennet[edit]
Dr. Walter Bennet (voiced by Harry S. Robins) is a Black Mesa scientist. He is seen in Half-Life: Blue Shift.
In Blue Shift, Dr. Bennet is seen fixing a battery in Dr. Rosenberg's office, along with Dr. Simmons. The three scientists soon get it fixed with the help of Barney Calhoun, and they start their teleportation out of Black Mesa. The four successfully make it out the facility, making Dr. Bennet one of the few known survivors of the incident. They open the gates and start their journey to the outside world with an SUV.
Dr. Bennet is briefly mentioned in Half-Life: Opposing Force. As Adrian Shephard travels within Sector E of Black Mesa, he enters a testing laboratory where Xen specimens were being experimented on prior to the Resonance Cascade. He opens up a transmission intended for Dr. Bennet, revealing a hologram of a scientist talking about the results of an experiment conducted on a Barnacle, one of the Xen creatures being examined. Following the transmission, Shephard takes a nearby Barnacle specimen that was intended for Dr. Bennet to experiment on before the Resonance Cascade.
Dr. Bennet's final fate is unknown.
Simmons[edit]
Dr. Simmons is a Black Mesa scientist. He is seen in Half-Life: Blue Shift.
In Blue Shift, Dr. Simmons is seen fixing a battery in Dr. Rosenberg's office, along with Dr. Walter Bennet. The three scientists soon get it fixed with the help of Barney Calhoun, and they start their teleportation out of Black Mesa. The four successfully make it out the facility, making Dr. Simmons one of the few known survivors of the incident. They open the gates and start their journey to the outside world with an SUV.
Simmons does not talk at all in the game, and his first name is unknown. Furthermore, his final fate is unknown like all of his colleagues.
Introduced in Half-Life 2 and episodes[edit]
This section deals with characters that appear in Half-Life 2, Episode One, and Episode Two.
Alyx Vance[edit]
Alyx Vance (voiced by Merle Dandridge in Half-Life 2 and its episodes and by Ozioma Akagha in the prequel Half-Life: Alyx[5]) is a prominent figure in the human resistance against the rule of the Combine over Earth and their human representative, Dr. Wallace Breen. Alyx is the daughter of Dr. Eli Vance and his deceased wife Azian, and she becomes a close friend and ally of Gordon Freeman over the course of Half-Life 2.
The 2020 VR title Half-Life: Alyx, which takes place between the events of Half-Life and Half-Life 2, focuses on Alyx and Eli Vance as they fight against the Combine's occupation of Earth.[6]
Isaac Kleiner[edit]
Dr. Isaac Kleiner (voiced by Harry S. Robins), a Black Mesa survivor, is one of the leading scientists in the human resistance to the Combine. His character design is based on the generic 'bald, glasses (Walter, as its model name suggests)' scientist model from the original Half-Life.
Dr. Kleiner was one of Gordon Freeman's professors at MIT, recommending him for employment at the Black Mesa to the Civilian Recruitment Division and working with him as part of the facility's Anomalous Materials team. He managed to survive the Resonance Cascade disaster of the first game with the aid of Eli Vance.
In Half-Life 2, he operates an underground lab in an abandoned Northern Petrol building. A teleportation system, developed jointly by Kleiner and Eli Vance, connects to Vance's facility, several miles away. As a pet, Dr. Kleiner keeps a debeaked headcrab he calls 'Lamarr' (after the 1930s actress and inventorHedy Lamarr).
In Episode One, Kleiner appears on the video screens previously reserved for Dr. Breen's propaganda and instructs survivors to evacuate City 17, also encouraging them to procreate. He rallies people to prepare for the Combine's retaliation, stating that several new technologies developed during their occupation would be deployed as soon as possible to help fight the Combine.
In Episode Two, Kleiner is working out of the White Forest Rocket Facility with Eli Vance and Arne Magnusson on a device intended to close the Combine superportal created by the Citadel's destruction. He mostly appears during radio transmissions while guiding Alyx and Gordon to White Forest, and argues bitterly with Magnusson, whom Vance states was Kleiner's rival for grant money at Black Mesa. Upon the discovery of the Borealis in Judith Mossman's decoded message, Kleiner expresses a wish to use the technology residing in the ship against the Combine, opposing Eli's vehement desire to destroy it in order to prevent 'another Black Mesa'.
Eli Vance[edit]
Dr. Eli Vance (voiced by Robert Guillaume in Half-Life 2 and its episodes and by James Moses Black in the prequel Half-Life: Alyx[5]) is a physicist, researcher, and Harvard University graduate who worked with Gordon Freeman at Black Mesa. He wears a prosthetic that replaces his left leg beneath the knee, which was lost when he was attacked by a Bullsquid while helping Dr. Isaac Kleiner climb over a wall into a Combine city. He is Alyx Vance's father; his late wife, Azian, died in the aftermath of the resonance cascade. The leader of the Lambda Resistance, Dr. Vance was the first human being to make peaceful contact with the Vortigaunt species and thus the 'first collaborator', quickly persuading the alien race to ally with humanity against the Combine invasion of Earth. In Episode Two, Eli Vance works at the White Forest base before being killed by a Combine Advisor.
The 2020 VR game Half-Life: Alyx, which takes place between the events of Half-Life and Half-Life 2, focuses on Eli and Alyx Vance as they fight against the Combine's occupation of Earth.[6] As a result of the events of the game, his death is prevented, albeit at the cost of his daughter Alyx becoming a willing agent of the G-Man. Upon learning the truth, Eli seeks to rescue her.
Arne Magnusson[edit]
In Episode Two, Dr. Arne Magnusson (voiced by John Aylward) runs the White Forest base and is described as a Black Mesa survivor. He gets on poorly with Dr. Kleiner due to their clashing personalities, as spelled out by their very names: 'Magnus' means 'great' in Latin, while 'klein' means 'small' in German and Dutch. Magnusson's peculiar personality seems to have gained him much respect from the Vortigaunts, such as his assistant Uriah, who makes awed references to him.
Magnusson also makes a remark to Freeman saying that if he successfully defends White Forest, then he will forgive Freeman for an earlier incident in Black Mesa, involving his 'Microwave Casserole', a reference to a scene in the first Half-Life.
Dog[edit]
Dog is a hulking robot belonging to Alyx Vance, built by her father Eli to provide both companionship and to protect her. Alyx subsequently upgraded the robot into its current form. Despite its name, Dog is anthropomorphic in appearance. Dog provides support to Freeman during training with the Gravity Gun, and makes appearances several times after.
Judith Mossman[edit]
Dr. Judith Mossman (voiced by Michelle Forbes) is introduced in Half-Life 2 as a physicist working with Eli Vance at the Black Mesa East Research Facility. Although she is apparently friendly with other scientists, her condescending attitude toward laypeople annoys Alyx. Over the course of the game, she is revealed as a double agent who betrays the resistance in an attempt to form an alliance with Dr. Breen, then betrays him in turn. In the follow-on episodes, she is again working for the resistance in a remote location.
Odessa Cubbage[edit]
Colonel Odessa Cubbage (voiced by John Patrick Lowrie) is a member of the Resistance against the Combine who speaks in distinct Received Pronunciation. He wears a jacket with emblems on it indicating that he was possibly once a security officer as part of the University of Rochester Security Services. According to Raising the Bar, his model was based on the martial arts instructor for one of the game's developers, and the name was found in a spam filter.
Odessa Cubbage leads a small Resistance base and town, dubbed 'New Little Odessa', in a coastal region outside City 17. Before arriving at New Little Odessa, the player can see Cubbage speaking with the G-Man by looking through a binocular spotting-scope device. When Gordon Freeman arrives at New Little Odessa en route to Nova Prospekt, Cubbage is briefing members on the use of the rocket launcher against Combine gunships. Cubbage entrusts the rocket launcher to Gordon and never turns up to fight himself, instead staying behind to attempt to contact another Resistance settlement.
Half Life Gina Cross
Grigori[edit]
Father Grigori (voiced by Jim French) is an Eastern Orthodox-like priest who appears throughout the Ravenholm chapter of Half-Life 2. He is the only human survivor encountered in Ravenholm.
He speaks enthusiastically about 'tending to his flock', i.e. dispatching the remaining zombie inhabitants of the city with a hunting rifle and homemade traps while offering them consolatory words. He helps Gordon Freeman intermittently in Ravenholm, giving him a shotgun, combat tips and advice mingled with biblical quotations. Eventually, Grigori escorts Freeman through a cemetery infested with zombies to show him a hidden passage to the mines out of the haunted town. After waving Gordon off, Grigori continues fighting the hordes of enemies until he retreats into a nearby tomb, ignites a wall of fire around it and disappears, laughing maniacally.
Wallace Breen[edit]
Dr. Wallace Breen (voiced by Robert Culp) was the administrator of the Black Mesa Research Facility at the time of the 'Black Mesa Incident,' the events depicted in Half-Life, but he was neither seen nor mentioned by name (he was instead referred to always as 'the Administrator'). After the Seven Hour War, he 'negotiated' a peace agreement with the Combine that saved humanity at the cost of enslavement. Dr. Breen was appointed as ruler of Earth — a puppet of the Combine, who have little physical presence on the planet.
The Half-Life 2 art book, Raising the Bar, has information that indicates Breen used, at least at one point of the planned story if not in the final version, a radio transmitter tower on the surface (i.e., not in Black Mesa) to communicate directly to the Combine and negotiate a surrender. Draft scripts for Half-Life 2 indicate that this would have been shown in an introductory segment to the game carried out through a series of projector slides. One of the slides would have shown Breen at the foot of a tower wearing a headset linked directly to it, with arms held wide and speaking to the skies.
Breen is alerted to the return of Gordon Freeman in Half-Life 2 when Gordon is temporarily teleported, by accident, to his office in the Citadel. Dr. Breen informs the Combine and immediately dispatches the forces at his disposal to capture Freeman and break the associated Resistance movement in City 17.
During Gordon Freeman's raid on the Citadel, Freeman is temporarily in the custody of Breen, until Judith Mossman turns against the administrator. During this period, Breen makes a very notable statement while in the presence of Alyx Vance and her father, Eli (who are also in his custody). He claims that Gordon 'has proven a fine pawn to those who control him.' He also comments that Gordon's services are 'open to the highest bidder,' and says he would understand if Gordon doesn't want to discuss it in front of his friends. These remarks imply that Breen may be aware of the mysterious G-Man and his influence over Freeman. It was also mentioned in one of the 'Breencasts' to the Sector Seventeen Overwatch in Nova Prospekt; 'I have good reason to believe that in the intervening years, he was in a state that precluded further development of covert skills.'
When Judith Mossman frees Gordon Freeman and Alyx Vance in his office, Dr. Breen attacks Gordon by firing at him with the supercharged Gravity Gun; however, the charge doesn't kill him, and Breen leaves it behind while escaping. Gordon manages to stop him by destroying the Citadel's dark fusion reactor, which destroys the teleporter Breen attempted to use to escape in a massive explosion; the platform Breen was standing on collapses, dropping Breen from the Citadel to his death.
Introduced in Half-Life: Alyx[edit]
Russell[edit]
Russell (voiced by Rhys Darby) is a member of the Resistance who serves as a mechanic.
Footnotes[edit]
- ^Olsen, Mathew (May 26, 2020). 'The Abandoned Half-Life Project From Arkane Was Going to Star a Fan-Favorite Character'. USGamer. Retrieved May 26, 2020.
- ^Bramwell, Tom (September 8, 2007). 'Valve clears up Adrian Shephard Portal speculation'. Eurogamer. Retrieved May 26, 2020.
- ^'Randy Pitchford on Twitter: @SheathEntertain You've discovered Gina's fate. We do not know of Colette's. I think maybe she's in G-Man's freezer with Shephard.', Twitter
- ^'Anelia's 'Decay'', HalfLife.org, April 28, 1999, archived from the original on May 11, 2005
- ^ abMacgregor, Jody (November 21, 2019), Alyx Vance will be voiced by a new actor in Half-Life: Alyx, PCGamer, retrieved November 21, 2019
- ^ abIngraham, Nathan (November 21, 2019), 'Half-Life: Alyx' is a VR prequel set before the events of 'Half-Life 2', engadget, retrieved November 21, 2019
References[edit]
- Hodgson, David. Half-Life 2: Raising the Bar. Prima Games, 2004. ISBN0-7615-4364-3.
- Hodgson, David. Half-Life 2: Prima Official Game Guide. Prima Games, 2004. ISBN0-7615-4362-7.
- Commentaries for Half-Life 2: Episode One. Valve. 2006.
- Commentaries for Half-Life 2: Episode Two. Valve. 2007.
- Commentaries for Portal. Valve. 2007.