The Orange Box

See more screens from The Orange Box ...

Half-Life 2: The Orange Box is a collection of five superb shooters value priced at $59.99. Valve blends its older games with newer content, delivering an essential bundle only a fool would ignore, unless said fool demands the best version. Although the PS3 edition is lots of fun, it runs noticeably slower than its Xbox 360 counterpart.

It starts with Half-Life 2. Despite its age, the game looks stunning, showcasing magnificent environments, rippling water, tons of action and the best physics of any console game. You don't just play it to find out what happens to its protagonist, Gordon Freeman or to kill things for the sake of slaughtering them. Most of the fun comes from experimentation, setting off chain reactions with exploding barrels, splintering wood, chopping zombies in half, skimming across the water in a hovercraft, squaring off against an attack chopper and chucking around large objects with the gravity gun. If you already played this on PC then great. There's nothing new to explore. But if you somehow missed this monumental achievement in gaming, you just won the lottery.

Half-Life 2's follow up, Episode One continues where its prequel left off. Once again, you step into Freeman's hazard suit and battle against the alien nemesis, the Combine. It's a short, 5-7 hour adventure, but you won't mind its abrupt conclusion, since you'll immediately segue into HL2's latest addition, Episode Two. During the course of this 10-12 hour adventure, you'll face countless enemies across a dangerous forest, fighting aliens topside and in the bowels of a dusty mine. Familiar weapons such as the shotgun, pistol, magnum and gravity gun return, along with a new vehicle and adversaries. Much like Episode One, it provides more Half-Life 2, which is in no way a bad thing, other than the fact that it doesn't finish the story, and Episode Three is probably a year from release.

The Orange Box

See more screens from The Orange Box ...

Once you finish with those games, and that'll take anywhere from 30-40 hours, there's Portal, an impressive puzzle game that'll both amaze and frustrate you. Basically, you play as a test subject that, at the prompt of a sterile sounding voice with humorous dialogue, complete a series of challenges using a device that creates portals almost everywhere, allowing you to pass through walls and fall through floors. The effect looks just as stunning as in 2K Games' Prey, if not more so since you have greater freedom in a portals' placement. You'll spend the first few minutes marveling at the technology, especially as you watch your character walk through the portal and pop out the other side, which creates the illusion that you're right behind them, when in fact you're someplace else entirely.