That was literally the toughest part of the game playing it on hard, what I did was baracade myself in one of the small cells. I stayed in the far back, with the three bulletproof oil drums surrounding me as cover, and then the turrets wedged in near the entrance. The turrets were so densely...
It's a rip off the X-Files, which is a rip off the tv series "V", which is a rip off the "Attack of the Pod People", which is a rip off of every sci-fi book dating back to the 1920s. But who cares? It's a great story and well told.
That's pretty weird someone brought this up. I've had a cronic headache since I started playing HL2 on Tuesday. I beat it (on hard by the way, cause I'm so 1337!) on Friday, and I've felt fine all weekend.
The thing is, I've been a huge FPSer since Wolf3D, and played all the most fast paced...
Man, this guy is on top of things. Take a look at his amazingly insightful contribution to the Valve Info Only thread. Makes me wonder why I ever stopped posting here.
Physicists don't measure temperatures that low with thermometers. No thermometer or thermal diode would ever survive temperatures that low. Instead they measure how long it takes for a supercooled subject to rise to ambient temperatures in a controlled evironment.
Someone posted what the mythical creature was last summer/fall, I just can't remember exactly what it was for the life of me. It is something like elves or leprechauns though, I remember thinking "that sounds a little goofy". But it's Shyamlan, so you never know.
Hey yall, it's been a while. My anticipation about HL2 has long since ceased, but I've got a question about M Night Shyamalan's new movie. I remember sometime last summer, someone was talking about his new movie in this forum, and they mentioned that it was about some sort of mythical creature...
Don't bother with PC4000, it's very stuborn ram. It doesn't like running at ANYTHING but 1:1 3-4-4-8. PC3200 is very flexible, it'll run at 1:1, 3:2, and 5:4 no problem. The speed differences between PC4000 at 1:1 and PC3200 at 5:4 isn't that big either.
Oh, and the difference between 2-2-2-6...