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    Halo Infinite gameplay trailer, release date, multiplayer and what we know

    Halo Infinite is the long-awaited next entry in the Halo series and it's launching alongside the next-gen Xbox Series X in late 2020. 

    After being revealed all the way back in 2018 we're now closer than ever to Halo Infinite's release date and we're finding out more about the game with increasing regularity. After getting a long-awaited look at Halo Infinite's campaign in the Xbox Showcase in July, we're expecting to find out more about other aspects of the game, particularly its free-to-play multiplayer, over the coming months.

    This is developer 343 Industries' third mainline Halo game, after Halo 4 and 5, and it's been described as a "spiritual reboot" by the studio, though it will continue the series' story. 

    Microsoft has confirmed that Halo Infinite is coming to Xbox One and PC (including Steam!) as well as Xbox Series X, and it'll be available on Game Pass from day one. 

    The game will support ray-tracing, added in a post-launch patch, and Microsoft has promised Series X players will enjoy an optimized version of the game, with "up to 4k resolution at 60FPS in campaign and greatly reduced load times creating seamless gameplay that ushers in the next generation of gaming."

    Halo Infinite is launching in late 2020, with an exact release date still to be confirmed. Here's everything we know about the game so far.

    Halo Infinite: key facts

    • What is it? The sixth game in the main Halo series 
    • When is it out? "Holiday 2020" (So between October and December 2020)
    • What can I play it on? Xbox One, PC and Xbox Series X
    • Will Halo Infinite be on Xbox Game Pass? Yes, from day one
    • Will Halo Infinite have split-screen multiplayer? Yes

    Halo Infinite release date

    Halo Infinite

    (Image credit: 343 Industries)

    We know that Halo Infinite is coming at the end of 2020, to coincide with the launch of the Xbox Series X (though it will be a cross-generation title). Microsoft has given a release window of "Holiday 2020", so we're expecting the game to release, alongside the Xbox Series X, sometime between October and December 2020. 

    We think a November release date is the most likely as that's when, historically, Microsoft has previously launched new consoles. But as of the Xbox Games Showcase in July 2020, no further info has been revealed beyond the holiday window. There are rumors of another Xbox news drop taking place in August and it's possible we'll hear more then if it comes to pass. 

    Halo Infinite gameplay

    The main event of the Xbox Games Showcase in July 2020 was the gameplay reveal trailer for Halo Infinite, which you can watch above. You'll see a very traditionally Halo-looking game in action, with familiarly verdant environments, as well as iconic weapons and vehicles from the series, including the Warthog. It's reassuringly Halo-like, but leagues ahead in terms of presentation compared to the older games.

    Here's everything we've learned about the Halo Infinite gameplay footage so far.

    As mentioned, this is a more open world-looking Halo game, with an in-game map called the 'TacMap' showing how you can explore different parts of this extra-sized Halo ring. 343 Industries says the environment in Halo Infinite is "several times larger than that of the last two Halo games combined". 

    In the menu screen, we see an item called 'Upgrades', too, suggesting you can make RPG-style improvements to Master Chief.

    We also see some of the Banished, Halo Infinite's main alien antagonists who were previously seen in Halo Wars 2. In the story, the Banished, led by Brute War Chief Escharum, have declared victory over the UNSC forces and taken over a Halo ring. This is Chief's first encounter with the Banished. Some of the Covenant enemy types here look familiar, but the presence of the Banished means new spins on the Brute enemies from classic Halo games. 

    We see a grappling hook revealed (technically called a Grappleshot), too, which lets you pull Master Chief towards enemies and objects, or help him reach higher ground to deliver fire from above. We glimpse a Drop Shield, too, which offers the Chief protection in the field. These new additions are designed to help you personalize your approach to combat in Halo Infinite. 

    It's a beautiful-looking showcase of what the console is capable of, and an exciting teaser of more to come from 343 Industries. Halo Infinite is built on 343's Slipspace Engine and although Microsoft confirmed that the gameplay wasn't running on an Xbox Series X, it was at least on a PC that’s “representative of the experience players will have on Xbox Series X”.

    Halo Infinite trailer

    Microsoft began its Xbox Games Showcase for the Xbox Series X with a beautiful-looking CG teaser trailer for Halo Infinite, followed by the gameplay demo above. The first trailer shows Master Chief's Mjolnir armor being reforged. Check it out below:

    Check out the Halo Infinite 2019 E3 teaser below too, in case you missed that:

    Halo Infinite was officially announced during Microsoft's E3 2018 conference, with the below teaser.

    Halo Infinite multiplayer

    We haven't seen Halo Infinite's multiplayer in action yet but we do know some things about it. 

    The first multiplayer details spilled out as early as 2017 when head of 343, Bonnie Ross, confirmed that the game would include split-screen co-op multiplayer at DICE 2017.

    The decision to remove split-screen co-op from Halo 5, in favor of an online-only version, was met with criticism from fans, as it had been a staple Halo feature that had been around since the first game was released in 2001. Ross said Halo 5’s removal was “painful”, adding that "It erodes trust with the community. [We’ve had a] lot of learnings from that, and I would say for any FPS going out forward we will always have split screen going forward."

    Commitment to split-screen was reiterated in an Xbox Wire post during E3 2019, where Community Director Brian Jarrard said that split-screen support would make its long-awaited return to the series. 

    Since then, we've learned that while Halo Infinite will restore this fan favorite feature, multiplayer will be quite different to other entries in the series with regards to its frame rate and resolution.

    According to a tweet from the official Halo account, Halo Infinite's multiplayer will run at 120fps and will also be free-to-play.

    Klobrille, an Xbox leaker who has previously leaked accurate Halo Infinite details, tweeted to say that Halo Infinite's multiplayer will also include a battle pass system as well as new customization options. These aspects have not been confirmed by Microsoft and therefore shouldn't be considered a certainty. 

    However, given a recent interview with Polygon in which Xbox boss Phil Spencer teased that Halo Infinite could see a change in structure from previous Halo games, with his comments leading many to speculate that Halo Infinite will be an ongoing platform for plenty of post-launch support, a battle pass system wouldn't be entirely surprising. 

    Battle pass monetization would also make sense if those rumors that Microsoft is planning to overhaul Xbox Live Gold, or phase it out, for free-to-play games do actually end up being accurate.

    343 has confirmed we'll see Infinite's multiplayer in action soon. "We will be back soon with more news, including our first details on multiplayer," it said in a blog about the recent campaign reveal.

    Halo Infinite news and features

    Below are the latest news and rumors around Halo Infinite.

    Beta problems

    Covid-19 has caused problems for development studios around the world and things are not different for Halo Infinite developer, 343 Industries, which has been working from home to deliver the game in time for its late-2020 release date.

    The developer revealed in a blog post that, due to Covid-19 concerns, Microsoft has instructed the studio to work from home, however the team is continuing to work on Halo Infinite remotely to deliver the game for its scheduled release window.

    However, while the game is still on schedule, the “the unprecedented challenges of this year” may have impacted the game's public beta plans.

    Plans for Halo Infinite test flights were first announced back in 2018 and, according to studio head Chris Lee, the community feedback that comes from such testing has proven to be “instrumental” in bringing Halo: The Master Chief Collection to PC.

    However, in a post published on the Halo Waypoint blog, Lee admits that “given the unprecedented challenges of this year, we’re not quite where we expected to be in terms of broader public flighting” when it comes to Halo Infinite. 

    According to Lee “the team is still working and assessing options for broader hands-on opportunities before launch and we’ll share an update when we can.”

    Campaign split-screen

    Head of design at 343, Jerry Hook, has tweeted to provide some clarity around split-screen in the game's campaign mode. According to Hook, Halo Infinite's campaign mode will support two-player split-screen and 4 player online co-op. 

    Addressing those underwhelming visuals

    Following the Halo Infinite reveal in July, some fans were expressing concerns about the underwhelming graphics on show, prompting a lengthy blog post on Halo Waypoint from 343 Industries’ community manager John Junyszek in which he acknowledges that the studio has heard the feedback from Halo fans loud and clear, and provides an explanation on why Halo Infinite looks the way it does.

    “In many ways we are in agreement here – we do have work to do to address some of these areas and raise the level of fidelity and overall presentation for the final game,” writes Junyszek.

    He goes on to clarify that the build we saw at the Xbox Games Showcase was a “work-in-progress from several weeks ago with a variety of graphical elements and game systems still being finished and polished”. 

    Halo Infinite could be a 10 year game

    In an interview with IGN, 343 Industries outlined a future vision of Halo built around Infinite. “Halo Infinite is the start of our platform for the future,” said Chris Lee from 343. “We want Infinite to grow over time, versus going to those numbered titles and having all that segmentation that we had before. It’s really about creating Halo Infinite as the start of the next ten years for Halo and then building that as we go with our fans and community.”

    The interview goes on to explain that future Master Chief stories will be told under the "umbrella" of Infinite, making it sound more like a platform for all future Halo games rather than just an individual title. 

    This lines up with a previous interview that Xbox boss Phil Spencer had with Polygon, in which he teased that Halo Infinite could see a change in structure from previous Halo games and said that lessons had been learned from the Master Chief Collection.

    "There's been a ton of learning in the studio around what does it mean to actually have a collection, the kind of totality of the Halo lore and stories and experience inside of one Halo world, one Halo UI, and platform," Spencer told Polygon. 

    "As 343 has gone through this journey, they've seen some of the benefits of not requiring that our customers make a decision between 'Do I want to play this one or that one?' I feel like in a way, the games almost compete with each other. You see that with some of the annualized franchises that are out there - which clearly Halo's not annualized - but you see that where you spend a lot of energy actually trying to move the customers who are already playing your game to a new version of your game. I think as gaming has evolved, there's a view of 'our customers are our customers and we should respect them where they are.' It's similar to our Xbox message, and I think you'll see that in terms of the way Infinite is talked about--even the structure of what the game is itself."

    Halo Infinite box art

    On July 22, ahead of the Xbox Series X games showcase, Microsoft revealed the game's box art. Here's what it looks like in full. It's very nostalgic in style, portraying Master Chief on a very traditional-looking Halo ring. 

    (Image credit: Microsoft)

    Banished are the antagonists but you don't need to do any homework

    Following the Xbox Games Showcase we now know that The Banished, the main antagonists from Halo Wars 2, are back to cause problems with a new leader called Escharum.

    In an interview with IGN, the development team promised that players won't have to have played through Halo Wars 2 in order to understand the role of The Banished, nor will it be necessary to be entrenched in every aspect of the Halo universe, saying “We don’t want a game where players have to do homework to enjoy this game."

    The Banished were the villains of choice for 343 in order “to have something that’s an evolution of the Covenant so you get some of the familiar, but something that’s different [too], and it comes together to feel fresh.”

    Halo Infinite

    (Image credit: Microsoft)

    Xbox Series X's SSD will make a "huge difference" for devs, says Halo co-creator
    Speaking to VGC, former Bungie art director, Marcus Lehto, explained that the Xbox Series X's custom SSD will give developers much more freedom.

    “It will make a huge difference,” Lehto told VGC. “It will open up the door for more expansive content that can stream a lot faster. Players won’t be waiting on load screens and we won’t have to hide loading behind cinematics and that kind of thing.

    “It will just help make things a lot more seamless and fluid for the player when it comes to their experience on those consoles.

    “I am really excited about that because that’s one of the things that’s really hard for us in particular right now: dealing with those old platforms."

    Halo infinite

    (Image credit: 343 Industries)

    Halo Infinite will be a cross-generation title
    While the launch of Halo Infinite will coincide with release of the next Xbox console, Xbox Series X, the game will also be playable on the current generation of Xbox One, Xbox One S, and Xbox One X consoles.

    Halo Infinite will undoubtedly look better on its newer hardware – we hope so, at least – but at least nobody has to miss out.

    Halo franchise director Frank O'Connor put fears about the quality difference to rest, though, saying at a Halo Outpost event in Orlando (July 2019) that "Xbox One is not going to be a second-class citizen" (via GamesRadar).

    Halo Infinite

    (Image credit: 343 Industries)

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