lego half life combine

lego half life combine

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Lego Half Life Combine

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This article is non-canon. The subject matter of this article does not take place in the "real" Half-Life and Portal universe and is considered non-canon. This article is within the scope of the Portal OverWiki Project, an attempt to improve articles related to Portal, Portal 2 and Lego Dimensions. Please see the project page for more details about the current article status. This article is a stub. Maybe you can help by . September 27, 2015 (NA), September 28, 2015 (AUS), September 29, 2015 (EU), October 1, 2015 (GER), October 2, 2015 (FIN) PlayStation 3PlayStation 4Wii UXbox 360Xbox One Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment Aaron Sapp (Additional music) Rob Westwood (Additional music) Finn Robertson (Additional music) Jonathan Coulton ("You Wouldn't Know") Lego Dimensions is a video game developed by Traveller's Tales and published by Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment. It features worlds and characters from many different franchises, including Portal 2.




It was released in September 2015. The game was announced to be in development on April 9, 2015.[2] Each level pack contains a new game level, a minifigure (as a playable character), a vehicle and a gadget that can be used in the game. Portal 2 is featured in the levels GLaD to See You and Aperture Science. GLaD to See You is the seventh level in the game, and is part of the base game. Aperture Science can be only played when the 71203 Level Pack[3] is purchased. Ellen McLain, Stephen Merchant, J.K. Simmons, and Nolan North returned to reprise their roles. The game also includes the original song "You Wouldn't Know". Alésia Glidewell as Chell in the Lego Dimensions trailer. ↑ Lego Dimensions end credits ↑ Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment, TT Games and the Lego Group announce Lego Dimensions (April 9, 2015) ↑ 71203 Portal 2 Level PackThis article has yet to be cleaned up to a higher standard of quality.You can help by correcting spelling and grammar, removing factual errors and rewriting sections to ensure they are clear and concise.




Visit our Cleanup Project for more details. The Combine Dropship, often simply referred to as the Dropship, is a support and deployment Synth used by the Combine to quickly send in and deploy units by air to areas they are needed. The front and two rearmost pairs of "legs" on the craft contain engines that give the Dropship lift and movement. The front two legs also hold retractable wings used for maneuvering. The middle four legs end in large suction pads which are used to carry various forms of cargo. Dropships by themselves are unarmed and as a result, they don't attack the player. However, the containers typically carried by Dropships sport a mounted pulse turret on the front, designed to suppress any opposition in front of the synth, allowing the occupants to deploy safely. Dropships are very useful aircraft for the Combine, being able to quickly transport Combine Soldiers, APCs, Striders, and Civil Protection officers to where ever they may be needed. Dropships are also seen dropping Rollermines along the coast, making it evident that the Combine also use them as minelayers.




The Scout Car was also taken away by a Dropship at the end of the battle at Lighthouse Point. The Combine Dropship Container is a large, streamlined container used to transport Overwatch and Civil Protection soldiers. It is used in conjunction with a Dropship, which picks it up and carries it wherever it is needed. These containers are equipped with a powerful and accurate pulse turret mounted on the front of the container, designed to provide suppressing fire for the troops as they disembark. Though the Containers are heavily armored, they can still be destroyed with enough explosives (4 RPG rockets in Normal mode). However, Dropships rarely stay in one place long enough for the container to sustain that much damage, so containers are rarely lost to enemy fire. During the Water Hazard chapter in the Canals, however, firing at the container from the airboat's pulse cannon will destroy it within seconds. The Dropship itself is completely undamaged. The cargo at that time, though, is actually an APC.




It should be noted that in Half-Life 2 Episode 2, several dropship containers are seen lying on the ground with dead soldiers and supplies strewn about, suggesting that either the Resistance somehow managed to bring them down, or that the Combine can manually detach them from the Dropships. Players are unable to destroy Dropships, however one is seen flying towards White Forest in Half-Life 2: Episode 2, and seen later destroyed, right before the Dog VS Strider scene. The container of a Dropship can hold up to six Overwatch soldiers per unit. Dropship with a placeholder container in the Half-Life 2 Beta.Dropship leaving after offloading the troops at Bridge Point.Dropship containers being transported inside the Citadel.Crashed Dropship Container in the Victory Mine. Half-Life Wiki has more images related to Combine Dropship. ↑ Half-Life 2: Raising the Bar ↑ Playable Half-Life 2 Beta filesLEGO Half-Life 2 Combine Strider and Gunship / / ©2013-2017 NeweRegion




EDIT 3: HOLY CRUD! IT ALREADY HAS WAY MORE FAVES THAN MY PREVIOUS MOST FAVED WHEATLEY!I can't believe this has almost passed my most favorited deviation in just two days! My LEGO Wheatley [link] only recently passed my first GLaDOS MOC, which was the first deviation I had that was most faved!EDIT: Geez Louise, why does everyone like this Half-Life 2 deviation so much? I have a lot of other good ones, you know. Like my Combine APC or the Gonarch (which I'm really proud of). What makes this one so special, especially to all the groups that want to add it? Not that I'm complaining, but it's just weird.Especially since the Strider isn't explicitly my own design. Also, this wasn't meant to look like a diorama, I just put Gordon there to show the scale.The Combine Strider and Gunship synths from Half-Life 2.My original versions of these can be found on MOCPages here: [link]I've since improved them a bit to make them more accurate.As I explain on MOCPages, the Strider wasn't originally my design, I saw someone else's LEGO Strider on MOCPages and thought that it looked the best of any I've seen (that was closer to minifig scale).

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