Flood (Halo)
Flood | |
---|---|
'Halo' character | |
First game | Halo: Combat Evolved (2001) |
Created by | Robert McLees |
The Flood are fictional parasitic alien life forms in Bungie's Halo video game series. They are introduced in Halo: Combat Evolved as a second enemy faction alongside the Covenant, and return in Halo 2, Halo 3, and Halo Wars to fill the same role. The Flood are driven by a desire to infect any sentient life they encounter, and are depicted as such a threat that the ancient Forerunners were forced to kill themselves and all other sentient life nearly 100,000 years before the beginning of Halo in an effort to starve the Flood to death.
The Flood's design and fiction was spearheaded by Bungie artist Robert McLees, who utilized unused concepts from the earlier Bungie game Marathon 2. The ringworld Halo was stripped of many of its large creatures to make the Flood's appearance more startling. Bungie environment artist Vic DeLeon spent six months of pre-production time refining the Flood's fleshy aesthetic and designing the organic interiors of Flood-based space ships for Halo 3.
The player's discovery of the Flood in Halo: Combat Evolved is a major plot twist, and was one of the surprises reviewers noted positively upon release. The Flood's return in Halo 2 and Halo 3 was less enthusiastically praised. Reaction to the Flood has varied over the years; while publications such as The Dallas Morning News found the Flood too derivative and a cliché element of science fiction, Wizard Magazine and PC World Magazine rated them among the greatest villains of all time.
Game development
The Flood were added early in the development of Halo: Combat Evolved, before the game had made its jump from the Macintosh platform to the Xbox. A design for one Flood form appeared as early as 1997.[1] The early design for the Flood was done by Bungie artist and writer Robert McLees, who considers himself "the architect" of the Flood;[2] the Flood's roots are reflected in concept art of a "fungal zombie" that McLees did for the earlier Bungie game Marathon 2: Durandal.[3] McLees also did all the early concept art for the Flood.[4]
Based on the behavior of viruses and certain bacteria, the Flood were intended to be "disgusting and nasty".[5] The creatures were constructed from the corpses and bodies of former combatants, so the artists had to make sure the foot soldiers were recognizable enough while changing their silhouette enough to differentiate them from the uninfected. With the addition of mutable forms in Halo 3, the only fictional constraint on the designer's imaginations was that the Flood altered the DNA of its victims by digesting. Early concepts of these "pure forms" featured the creatures wielding an array of weapons via tendrils, while forms like the Flood Infector and Flood Transport concepts never made it into the final game.[6]
At one point, the ringworld Halo featured dinosaur-like terrestrial creatures, but due to gameplay constraints, these were dropped. An additional consideration was that Bungie felt the presence of other native species would dilute the impact and surprise of the Flood.[7] Commenting upon the inception of the Flood, Bungie staff member Chris Butcher noted that "the idea behind the Flood as the forgotten peril that ended a galaxy-spanning empire is a pretty fundamental tenet of good sci-fi. Yeah, and bad sci-fi too."[8]
For Halo 3, it was decided a new visual language for the Flood was needed. The task of developing the new Flood forms, organic Flood terrain, and other miscellaneous changes fell to Vic DeLeon, Bungie's Senior Environment Artist.[5] Flood-infested structures were designed as angular to counterbalance Flood biomass, as well as provide surfaces for the game's artificial intelligence to exploit and move on. New additions were designed to be multi-purpose; exploding "growth pods" that spew Flood forms were added to the game to adjust pacing, provide instant action, and add to the visuals. Endoscopic pictures provided further inspiration.[5] Bungie used Halo 3's improved capacity for graphics to make a host's sudden transformation into Flood form more dramatic; two different character models and skeletons were fused and swapped in real-time.[9]
Appearances
Halo: Combat Evolved
The Flood make their surprise appearance more than halfway through Halo: Combat Evolved's campaign, during the mission "343 Guilty Spark". The Master Chief is sent on an extraction mission by the artificial intelligence Cortana to find Captain Jacob Keyes, who disappears in a swamp while looking for a weapons cache with which to fight the alien Covenant. The Master Chief discovers that the Covenant have released the Flood accidentally, and the sheer numbers of the parasite overwhelm Keyes and his squad. Keyes' squad are turned into soldiers for the parasite, while Keyes is interrogated by the Flood in an attempt to learn the location of Earth. Keyes successfully resists,[10] but is assimilated by the Flood before the Master Chief can rescue him. The emergence of the Flood on the ringworld Halo prompts Halo's resident artificial intelligence 343 Guilty Spark to enlist the help of the Master Chief in activating Halo's defenses and preventing a Flood outbreak.[11] When Master Chief learns of the devastation that Halo would cause to humanity and all other sentient life if activated, he detonates the human ship Pillar of Autumn's engines, destroying the ring and preventing the Flood from escaping.
The Flood are depicted as having a complicated lifecycle. The largest self-contained form that the Flood can produce itself, without using other biomass,[12] is an "infection form". The infection form seeks hosts (living or dead), attempting to drive sharp spines into the host and tap into the nervous system. The host is incapacitated while the infection form burrows into the host's body and begins the mutation process, bringing the host under Flood control.[13] Depending on the size or condition of the body, the Infection form mutates the hapless host into various specialized forms in the continual drive for more food. Larger hosts are seen turned into forms for combat, growing long whiplike tentacles,[14] while mangled and disused hosts are turned into incubators for more infection forms.[14] The Flood also create forms not suited to combat, which interrogate and strip information from the minds of its victims[15] or serve as a central intelligence to drive the infestation.
Halo Graphic Novel
The 2006 comic The Halo Graphic Novel expands upon the Flood's release from Halo in two stories. The first, Last Voyage of the Infinite Succor, takes place at the same time as the Master Chief hunts for Keyes during Halo: Combat Evolved. The Flood manage to pilot a Covenant dropship off Halo, and crash-land the vessel in the hangar of a Covenant agricultural ship, Infinite Succor. Successfully assimilating most of the Covenant and wildlife aboard the ship, the Flood are stopped by a Covenant strike team led by Rtas 'Vadumee, who sets the ship on a course into the nearby sun.[16] The second story, Breaking Quarantine, details the escape of Sergeant Avery Johnson from the clutches of the Flood, immediately after Keyes' squad is overrun during Halo. Due to a pre-existing medical condition, the Flood parasites cannot infect Johnson and attempt to kill him instead.[17] Whereas the Flood are only hinted at being intelligent in Halo: Combat Evolved, the Halo Graphic Novel shows the Flood have a hive mind, assimilating the knowledge of their hosts rapidly.[18]
Halo 2 and Ghosts of Onyx
The Flood make a return appearance in Halo 2, first after being released on a Forerunner facility near Halo, and again on Installation 05 or "Delta Halo".[19] The Flood on Delta Halo are led by the Gravemind, a massive creature that dwells in the bowels of the ring. Gravemind brings together the Master Chief and the Arbiter and tasks them with stopping the Covenant leadership from activating the ring.[20] In the meantime, Gravemind infests the human ship In Amber Clad and crashes it into the Covenant space station of High Charity.[21] Once there, the Flood sweep through the city, before Gravemind appears and questions Cortana.[22] As the Flood spread across Halo and infect High Charity in Halo: Ghosts of Onyx, the Covenant form a blockade in an effort to prevent the parasite from leaving its prison.[23]
Halo 3
The Flood reappear in the Halo 3 mission "Floodgate", on board a damaged ship that escapes the quarantine around Delta Halo. While the infestation of Earth is prevented by vitrification of half the African continent,[24] Gravemind follows the Master Chief and his allies to the Ark aboard the infested High Charity. Though the Master Chief and Arbiter form a tenuous alliance with the Flood to stop the activation of all the Halo rings, as soon as the firing sequence is stopped Gravemind turns on the humans and allied Covenant again. The Master Chief fights his way to the center of High Charity, freeing Cortana and destroying the city, but Gravemind attempts to rebuild himself on the ring under construction by the Ark.[25] Realizing that lighting the ring will destroy only the local Flood infestation and spare the galaxy, the Master Chief, Arbiter, Cortana and Sergeant Johnson proceed to Halo's control room, activate the ring, and escape. Gravemind leaves the Master Chief and the Arbiter with a final warning that his defeat will only delay the Flood's goal of consuming all sentient life.[26] Halo 3 added new capabilities to the Flood, including the ability for the parasite to infect enemies in real time.[5] The Flood are also seen to produce a mutable "pure form" which can mutate into several other Flood types.[5]
Cultural impact
Merchandise
The Flood have been featured in four series of Halo action figures, produced by Joyride Studios. For Halo: Combat Evolved, Joyride produced a Carrier Form and Infection form bundle.[27] Halo 2's series contains both a human Combat Form and Infection form (bundled with the Master Chief), which were released after the video game.[28] Reviewer Aaron Simmer of Armchair Empire.com expressed the sentiment that Joyride's models could not totally capture the ghoulishness texture and detail of the Flood.[28] The action figures for Halo 3 were produced by McFarlane Toys and although the first series did not feature the Flood, the third series featured a human Combat Form.[29]
Critical reception
The surprise appearance of the Flood during Halo: Combat Evolved was seen as an important plot twist[30] and a scary moment even after repeat playing of the game.[31] Gamasutra, writing about video game plots, gives the example of the Flood not only as an important reversal to the story of Halo, but a textbook example of how games and their stories are made more interesting by twists in the plot.[32] Mark Binelli of Rolling Stone credited the appearance of the Flood as an excellent way to keep players on their toes by forcing them to adjust their strategies, as well as being a twist as radical "as if, several levels into a game of Pac-Man, the dots suddenly began to attack you".[33]
Despite the positive acclaim in Halo, the response to the presence of the Flood in Halo 2 and Halo 3 was mixed. A panel of online reviewers noted that the Flood appeared in Halo 2 for no obvious reasons, and were simply described as "aggravating" to play against.[34] Similarly, reviewers including Victor Godinez of The Dallas Morning News felt that the Flood were too derivative of other sci-fi stereotypes, and functioned as "space zombies".[34][35] Daniel Weissenberger of Gamecritics.com noted in his review of Halo 3 that even though the Flood looked better than ever, their single strategy of rushing the player proved tedious over time.[36] GamesRadar's Charlie Barratt listed the Flood as the worst part of Halo, contrasting what he considered fun, vibrant and open levels before the Flood's appearance with confined spaces and predictable enemies.[37]
Lee Hammock, writer of the Halo Graphic Novel story The Last Voyage of the Infinite Succor, described the basis of the story as a way to showcase the true danger of the Flood as an intelligent menace, rather than something the player encounters and shoots. Hammock also stated that the story would prove the intelligent nature of the Flood, and "hopefully euthanize the idea that they are just space zombies";[16] this treatment was received positively by critics. In 2006, Wizard Magazine ranked the Flood as the 77th Greatest Villains of all time,[38] Game Daily ranked them 5th of their "Top 25 Enemies of All Time" and PC World ranked the Flood the 31st "Most Diabolical Video-Game Villains of All Time",[39][40] while Electronic Gaming Monthly ranked the Flood in their top ten list of "badass undead".[41] MTV ranked Flood possession in Halo 3 as a "great gaming moment" of 2007,[42] stating that "with the power of the Xbox 360's graphics, this reanimation comes to vivid, distressing life, more memorably than it had in the earlier games. Here are the zombies of gaming doing what they do worst. [...] It's grisly and unforgettable."[42]
References
- ^ Trautmann, Eric (2004). The Art of Halo. New York: Del Ray Publishing. p. 67. ISBN 0-345-47586-0.
- ^ Smith, Luke (2007-09-06). "Halo Universe: Covenant Weapons". Bungie.net. Retrieved 2007-11-09.
- ^ McLees, Robert. "Marathon Series Concept Art" (HTML, JPEG). Bungie.net. Retrieved 2007-11-09.
- ^ Bungie (2002-02-13). "Robert McLees Interviewed By You!". Bungie.net. Archived from the original on 2003-06-08. Retrieved 2008-04-10.
- ^ a b c d e DeLeon, Vic (2008-05-28). "Bungie Publications: Halo 3 Flood Alien Level Autopsy". Bungie. Retrieved 2008-07-12.
- ^ Bungie (2008). Mario de Govia (ed.). The Art of Halo 3. Roseville, California: Random House. pp. 26–27. ISBN 978-07615-6072-2.
- ^ "One Million Years B.X." Bungie.net. 2006-02-10. Archived from the original on 2006-02-10.
- ^ Butch, Chris; interviewers (2002-01-09). "Halo Chat with Developer Chris Butcher". Halo.Bungie.Org. Retrieved 2007-09-03.
{{cite web}}
:|author=
has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ McEachern, Martin (2007). "Making Halo 3 Shine". Computer Graphics World. 30 (12): 18–25.
{{cite journal}}
: Unknown parameter|month=
ignored (help) - ^ Dietz, William (2003). Halo: The Flood. New York: Ballantine Books. p. 199. ISBN 0-345-45921-0.
- ^ 343 Guilty Spark: Greetings. I am the Monitor of installation 04. I am 343 Guilty Spark. Someone has released the Flood. My function is to prevent it from leaving this installation. But I require your assistance. Come. This way. - Bungie Studios. Halo: Combat Evolved (Xbox). Microsoft. Level/area: 343 Guilty Spark.
- ^ Trautmann, Eric (2004). The Art of Halo. New York: Del Ray Publishing. p. 64. ISBN 0-345-47586-0.
- ^ Dietz (2003), p. 140.
- ^ a b Prima's Official Strategy Guide: Halo 2. New York: Random House. 2004. pp. 120–123. ISBN 0-7615-4473-9.
- ^ Dietz (2003), p. 225.
- ^ a b Hammock, Lee (2006). The Last Voyage of the Infinite Succor. Marvel Comics. ISBN 0785123725.
- ^ Nihei, Tsutomu (2006). Breaking Quarantine. Marvel Comics. ISBN 0785123725.
- ^ Legate: ...In addition, they have set up patrols throughout the Infinite Succor. Thus it seems they also absorb the knowledge of those they infect. - "The Last Voyage of the Infinite Succor"
- ^ Truth: We are, all of us, gravely concerned. The release of the parasite was unexpected, unfortunate, but there is no need to panic. - Bungie Studios. Halo 2 (Xbox). Microsoft. Level/area: Gravemind.
- ^ Gravemind: If you will not hear the truth, then I will show it to you. There is still time to stop the key from turning, but first it must be found. You will search one likely spot... / ...and you will search another. Fate had us meet as foes, but this ring will make us brothers. - Bungie Studios. Halo 2 (Xbox). Microsoft. Level/area: Gravemind.
- ^ Cortana: Flood-controlled dropships are touching down all over the city. That creature beneath the Library, that "Gravemind", used us. We were just a diversion; In Amber Clad was always its intended vector. - Bungie Studios. Halo 2 (Xbox). Microsoft. Level/area: High Charity.
- ^ Gravemind: Silence fills the empty grave, now that I have gone. But my mind is not at rest, for questions linger on. Now I will ask, and you will answer. - Bungie Studios. Halo 2 (Xbox). Microsoft. Level/area: The Great Journey.
- ^ Nylund, Eric (2003). Halo: First Strike. New York: Ballantine Books. p. 21. ISBN 0-345-46781-7.
- ^ Lord Hood: And you, Ship Master, just glassed half a continent! - Bungie Studios. Halo 3 (Xbox 360). Microsoft. Level/area: Floodgate.
- ^ Gravemind: Do I give life or take it? Who is victim? And who is foe? / Cortana: It's trying to... rebuild itself on this ring! - Bungie Studios. Halo 3 (Xbox 360). Microsoft. Level/area: Halo.
- ^ Gravemind: Resignation is my virtue. Like water I ebb; defeat is simply an addition of time to a sentence I never deserved... but you imposed. - Bungie Studios. Halo 3 (Xbox 360). Microsoft. Level/area: Halo.
- ^ Thorson, Thor (2004-02-17). "First Halo 2 action figures appear". GameSpot. Retrieved 2008-07-12.
- ^ a b Simmer, Aaron (2006-04-09). "Flood Human Form (Halo 2)". The Armchair Empire. Retrieved 2008-07-12.
- ^ Burg, Justin (2008-03-26). "Halo 3 series three McFarlane figures preview". XBox360Fanboy. Retrieved 2008-04-03.
- ^ Fielder, Joe (2001-11-09). "Halo: Combat Evolved for Xbox Review". GameSpot. Retrieved 2007-09-04.
- ^ "Sci vs. Fi - Halo 3 Documentary". Major League Gaming. 2007-10-02. Retrieved 2007-10-05.
- ^ Sutherland, John (2005-07-25). "What Every Game Developer Needs to Know about Story". Gamasutra. Retrieved 2007-12-23.
- ^ Binelli, Mark (2007-10-04). "Inside Halo's Secret Lab". Rolling Stone (1036): 28.
- ^ a b "Team Fremont: Halo 2 review". TeamFremont. 2004. Retrieved 2007-09-05.
- ^ Godinez, Victor (2006-07-16). "Review: The Halo Graphic Novel". The Dallas Morning News. Retrieved 2007-09-06.
- ^ Weissenberger, Daniel (2007-10-01). "Halo 3 Review". GameCritics. Retrieved 2007-10-02.
- ^ Barratt, Charlie (2008-06-16). "The Top 7... Worst Parts of Best Games". GamesRadar. Retrieved 2009-03-17.
- ^ "Top 100 Greatest Villains". Wizard Magazine. 1 (177). 2006.
{{cite journal}}
: Unknown parameter|month=
ignored (help) - ^ "Top 25 Enemies of All Time". Game Daily. Retrieved 2008-08-19.
- ^ Staff (2008-02-04). "The 47 Most Diabolical Video-Game Villains of All Time". PC World. Retrieved 2008-07-10.
- ^ Sharkey, Steve (2008). "EGM's Top Ten Badass Undead: Thriller Night". Electronic Gaming Monthly (233): 106.
{{cite journal}}
: Unknown parameter|month=
ignored (help) - ^ a b Totilo, Stephen (2007-12-18). "'Halo 3,' 'Pac-Man' And More Have Our 10 Great Gaming Moments Of 2007, In GameFile". MTV. Retrieved 2008-04-02.
External links