Makes sense, as they were "accidentally" released in Halo 1 and happened upon in Halo 2/3. If they can keep this "30 years of Halo" thing going, I can see it playing out masterfully.
That's one thing I'm concerned about, in the abstract sense.
The real world doesn't have "ends", history keeps marching forward, chains of cause and effect and all that. But stories do need to have ends, and I've never to my knowledge seen a franchise successfully migrate from one genre to another, or completely change its characterafter all if you do that it's not the same thing people loved, right?
The LTTP thread on
Stargate Atlantis, and my own binge rewatch of the series, has made me think about where Halo goes. I think
Stargate: SG1 is an excellent series, with a blend of standalone episodes and long arcs, plot hooks that get followed up seasons later, and an overall sense of progress, rather than stagnation.
Towards the end of
SG-1s run, however, it started suffering because its previous thematic cores were replaced. Suddenly, the United States Air Force had starships. Then, they gained access to ancient technology that made them more than a match for the enemy Goauld. Suddenly, it wasnt a story that could really be taking place in our world, it had gone to a much more futuristic place, and one where humanity not being the underdogs made things seem less vital and less interesting. As a result, new Big Bads had to be brought in to shake up the status quo, but the storylines were still not as fulfilling as before.
To bring this all back to
Halo, I think theres a similar concern. Breaking the Covenant and humanity learning the secrets of the Forerunner soon after worked in their respective games, but as far as we know
Infinity is the most powerful warship currently out there. The only thing that could stop it is a huge bunch of Covenant or some massive Forerunner ship
which weve already seen. Humans have essentially become the dominant force in the galaxy. 343 has made that part of the storywhether humanity has the maturity to work for interests other than its own, for instancebut its still threatening to turn into another kind of universe entirely. If humanity does encounter the Flood and beats them in
Halo 6 or
7 or
9, wheneverwhat do you do after that? It would essentially close out the entire saga as weve seen it laid.
I think this is one subconscious reason some people had a hard time making the transition from Bungies tales to 343sI mean, Bungie purposefully made some story elements weirdly anachronistic on its face for their own (gameplay) reasons; after all everyones using weapons that are essentially unchanged from stuff we have now on the human side of things, so that there was a clear Human/Forerunner/Covenant visual and conceptual divide. But that divide has been blurred since.
Halo started out as a military scifi, and while weve seen parts of it can work outside that context, the Forerunner Trilogy being chief among themtheres still the threat that itll essentially and by necessity start turning into a more generic world that might not appeal to people.
In short
I really hope that Microsoft will be willing to one day let the
Halo franchise end on a bang, and not turn it into a soap opera.
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