I've got the Portal 2 blues.

Yes, and it is utterly awesome. You can play split screen or online. I’ve played it with my kids, they think it’s hilarious. And they hate GlaDOS now.

It has been almost 10 years, so I don’t remember if there were two endings. I will have to go back and play it again.

Thanks for the input guys.
Thanks to Jophiel, I happened to find one today that is very similar to P2. I was in the Playstation store looking up “The Talos Principle” When I happened to see a title called: “The Turing Test”.

At $20, I went ahead and bought it. Compelling story, great design and a steal for the money. I highly recommend to anyone who likes P2.

Glad to help in a roundabout way :slight_smile:

I’ve heard good things about The Turing Test but don’t have any hands-on experience with it so didn’t want to make a blind comparison without personally knowing what it was like.

“Your test assignment will vary, depending on the manner in which you have bent the world to your will. Those of you helping us test the repulsion gel today, just follow the blue line on the floor. Those of you who volunteered to be injected with praying mantis DNA, I’ve got some good news and some bad news. Bad news is we’re postponing those tests indefinitely. Good news is we’ve got a much better test for you: fighting an army of mantis men. Pick up a rifle and follow the yellow line. You’ll know when the test starts.”

You’re thinking of Portal 4, which features a co-op mode with Chell and Gordon, and it’s revealed that several key Half-Life moments were the result of future-Gordon using the gravity gun through a temporal portal to help his earlier self. There’s also a platforming segment where you play as Dog, with an autonomous weapon mount controlled by a Cave Johnson sphere shooting stuff for you.

Wait a minute! That completely contradicts the events of Half-Life 2 Episode 3!

Time-travel. Duh.

:wink:

I just played through Chamber 19 again, and it’s what I remembered - after the end of the normal testing, if you don’t rescue yourself from the candescence chamber, you die, but after a few seconds it just puts you back to the previous checkpoint. No ending.

The problem with having Portal 2 as the first game you beat is that very very few games will ever live up to it. The puzzles, writing and voice acting are all incredibly wqell done. I wish Valve would actually make games again rather than just sitting on their enormous pile of money they make from steam…

Or if they don’t want to do it, how about just license the IP and let another studio develop Portal 3 and HL3 (with Valve having creative input of course).

I’ve never played any Half Life. Will I still be able to follow the story of Portal 3?

Historically, there doesn’t seem to have been much correlation between playing Half-Life and understanding any stories. :smiley:

Portal and Half-Life are set in the same universe in the sense that there are occasional small hints hidden in one or the other about things common to both games. But Portal takes place entirely (well, yes, except for that) within the Aperture Science facility, which is pretty isolated from the rest of the world. Even knowing all of the hints, it’s impossible to even place the games chronologically relative to each other: For all we know, Portal might take place at the same time as Half-Life, or a thousand years later.

So no, not knowing Half-Life won’t handicap you at all. At worst, you’ll miss a few Easter eggs.

I’m about to make some of you very, very happy. There is a fan game, free on Steam, that is about as close to Portal 3 as we will get. The story is weaker, but the puzzles are amazing.

I heard they have now added a “not as hard” mode. Don’t use it. I and my wife played all the way through the hard mode and we aren’t exactly puzzle geniuses. Lots of fun.

Portal Stories: Mel

It requires Portal 2 on Steam.

My review, written at the time reads:

I stand by this review. It was awesome.

Can you tell me how this Steam thing works please?

I’ll have to check out the Portal Stories. Otherwise, the most Portal-like game I’ve found is the Portal Level Pack for Lego Dimensions. It’s pretty much what you’d expect from a Portal world built up in the Lego video game engine. It’s funny, and they manage to give a Portal feel to the Portal-style puzzles.

Steam is just a program that delivers games you buy to you for PC. You would have to re-buy Portal 2 for PC. Then, Mel would be free of charge.

I need Lego Dimensions for PC.

They don’t have it for PC, presumably because on the PC it would be just too easy to spoof having the RFID tags that are supposed to come with the toys you buy.

I figured.

SWEET!!! Time to do my happy dance!!!

Off to Steam!