Thanks to Nick, Co-Optimus, and Bungie, I have the pleasure of playing in the Halo Reach Friends & Family Beta (it’s super awesome) this weekend! So far, I’ve only played six games, but oh boy was it fun! I played some Team Slayer, 1 flag CTF, Stockpile, and SWAT. They were all enjoyable minus the one match where the other team was able to lag switch on us (unfortunately, Bungie has not stopped that completely). During the beta (it’s super awesome), I’ll excuse that sort of thing since that is what the beta is for, catching those sorts of things.
The new weapons are great. I haven’t played with all of them but I REALLY enjoyed the DMR and the Magnum. Armor abilities are sweet, although, I was a bit disappointed with armor lock. I’m guessing it will be more useful in other maps and game types, but so far, armor lock just saves your butt for a few seconds and lets the enemy line up their shot for when you pop out of it. We’ll see how it plays out. The only thing that really bugged me about the beta was returning flags. Right now, you pretty much have to be standing right on the flag to start returning it. Obviously, that leaves you in a pretty vulnerable position and the flag obstructs your vision quite a bit. I’m sure that will be tweaked as the beta continues. I’m really looking forward to the other game types coming later in the beta (it’s super awesome).
Overall, it was a blast. I just wish I had someone to play with. Since last night was also a co-op night for the new L4D2 DLC, Nick and the others were busy (I don’t have the DLC yet). Hopefully, I’ll be able to hook up with them over the weekend. If not, I’ll still play (duh). Feel free to send me requests on Monday when the beta (it’s super awesome) goes live for anyone with an ODST disk. Don’t forget to stop by Halo Waypoint after playing a few games to pick up your free beta tester hoodie!
P.S. No, I do not have codes.
Cross-posted at Co-Optimus.
Eric is a software engineer and father of two, who's hobbies include video games, open source software, and just being a geek. Read more from this author