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Rail-based transportation

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A Razor Train locomotive.

Rail-based transports such as trains, trams, monorails, railway tracks and train stations are recurring themes throughout the Half-Life series. At numerous points in every one of the games (excluding Portal), the player encounters one or more moving or stationary locomotives, lone carriages, or full-length coupled trains. There are also several instances where the player must cross or follow railway tracks, either on foot, non-rail vehicle, riding in or on the train itself, or by use of an electric monorail, the latter a prominent feature in the original Half-Life game.

Contents

[edit] Types of rail vehicles

[edit] Half-Life and its expansions

The passenger monorail in the Black Mesa Transit System.
  • The monorail is the type used in the Black Mesa Transit System. It comes in two varieties, passenger and freight.
  • Regular trains are used among the Black Mesa Research Facility to bring supplies. Train cars can be seen in Blue Shift, among others.

[edit] Half-Life 2 and its episodes

  • Three trainstations are featured in Half-Life 2 and its episodes: the City 17 Trainstation and the Depot in Half-Life 2 and the Technical Trainstation in Episode One, although the Citadel also features a train depot.
  • The Combine heavily use the existing railway. They mostly use it for troop and Stalker transport in Combine-designed Razor Trains. Also, old existing human trains are recycled for Citizen transportation among the Combine-ruled cities, one of the few remains of the cut concept of the Combine recycling human technology for their needs. This is in that kind of train Gordon Freeman wakes up at the start of Half-Life 2.
  • The train in which the player arrives in City 17 is pulled by a railcar based on the DR1 DMU railcar produced in Riga, Latvia. Coupled with units from a different train, it is used by the Combine like a locomotive. The DR1 and its modifications (DR1P, DR1A, etc.) are common DMU trains in post-Soviet countries (Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, etc.).
  • The freight train locomotive seen in Episode Two seems to be based on the Russian TEM2 DMU freight locomotive.
  • The train using the railway linking Combine outposts located in the Wasteland is called the "Wasteland Train".[1]
  • Train tracks can also be found in Ravenholm, and a track-mounted Zombie defense is present in a small mining section between the town and Shorepoint.
  • In Episode One, Gordon and Alyx leave City 17 on a regular train as the Citadel Core explodes. In Episode Two, their train has crashed in the Outlands.
  • The Victory Mine complex features an old mining network where rusty carts can be found.

[edit] Railways as a literary device

Citizens on a train on its way to the City 17 Trainstation at the very start of Half-Life 2.

Railways, along with roads, rivers, and other paths, have long been used in literature and visual arts as a device representing a journey taking place, such as the railway in the film Stand By Me, or the River Congo in Joseph Conrad's novella Heart of Darkness.

Valve may well have not intended this consciously when developing the environments with which the characters interact, but the effect of the motif's appearance throughout the series is a constant symbol and reminder of the long and often difficult journey each character is making as the games progress. The implications of these journeys often include an "inner journey" that each character undertakes parallel to the physical one, emerging at the end having gained something metaphysical, like a greater sense of self, a broader understanding of the world, or inner and outer strength.

In the Half-Life series, Gordon Freeman, because of the circumstances he finds himself in, is forced to be brave and strong, and endure tasks he was not prepared to undertake. In this way, he follows a "path" throughout his experiences, and is a stronger person for it.

What is known is that the player's path through the train station was meant to play a role similar to that of the train ride in Half-Life, i.e. reveal the story setting to the player. In Half-Life 2, the story would unfold at the player's own speed, rather than on a fixed rail, and come about through interaction with the characters naturally found in that setting.[1]

[edit] Behind the scenes

  • The railway theme was decided to be a major theme along the Coast very early in the development of Half-Life 2, although it was initially even more present.[1]
  • At some point, Gordon was to ride along the coast on a train; a story fragment has his train crashing near the Air Exchange, meeting Alyx and Skitch there and being attacked by the Combine. While Gordon rides the Coast with the Buggy and on foot, the idea was kept for Alyx who arrived at the Depot by train.[1]
  • An elevated railway for the Razor Train bringing Citizens into City 17 (a normal terrestrial train in the final version) was to cross the Combine Factories.[2]
  • City 17 was originally to feature trams; one tram can be found in the E3 map "e3_c17_02". Parts of that map were recycled in the Half-Life 2 map "d3_c17_13", the last map of the chapter "Follow Freeman!", where tracks and a shelter can still be seen. Furthermore, an early test map, "prefab_streets_blvd.vmf", features a boulevard with trams going in both directions.[2]
  • Before trams, school buses were to be used as the primary local transportation.[2]

[edit] Gallery

[edit] Concept art

[edit] Screenshots

[edit] Models

[edit] List of appearances

[edit] Notes and references

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Half-Life 2: Raising the Bar
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 WC mappack
  3. Based on the WC mappack map "wasteland_railbridge.vmf".
  4. Based on the WC mappack map "wasteland_depot_inside.vmf".
  5. A predecessor of the map "e3_terminal.vmf"

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

Vehicles, vessels and transportation
Black Mesa transportation Black Mesa SUV · Black Mesa Transit System · Black Mesa Truck
HECU vehicles AH-64 Apache · F-16 Fighting Falcon · M1A1 Abrams · M2A3 Bradley · M35 Cargo Truck · V-22 Osprey
Combine vehicles Advisor Platform · Armored Personnel Carrier · Hunter-Chopper · Razor Train
Resistance vehicles Airboat · Mil Mi-8 · Muscle Car · Scout Car
Trainstations City 17 Trainstation · Depot · Technical Trainstation
Other Borealis · Rail-based transportation
Combine (cut) AirEx Truck · C-130 · Combine SWAT Truck · M2A3 Bradley · Merkava · School Bus · V-22 Osprey
Resistance (cut) Borealis · C-130 · Jalopy · Jet Ski · Submarine · V-22 Osprey
Other (cut) F-117 Nighthawk · Digger
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