Halo Infinite’s Winter Update feels like the beginning of the fightback

Plenty has been said about the state of Halo Infinite – a game which launched to deserved praise on the strength of its campaign and multiplayer, but has since struggled to gain any real momentum. Our State of the Game from Vikki this summer goes into this in closer detail, but in short, despite being a brilliant return to form for the series, Halo Infinite has been left to dwindle through delayed updates and a clunky live service model that even Microsoft itself admitted it must recover from.

Almost a year after launch, that recovery starts here. Despite being pitched as a stopgap before the next full (and recently delayed) Season 3, the Winter Update is substantial, delivering long-awaited features and carefully considered tweaks alike. The headliner is the arrival of online campaign co-op, a series staple that should have been there at release.

Its belated implementation has the hallmarks of something that’s been patched in after the fact. If you played Halo Infinite at launch, working out how to start a new playthrough while keeping your existing unlocks is far from clear. On a first attempt, our session started after 10 minutes of fumbling through menus and slightly panicked double checking of save states as we tried to line up our respective playthroughs intact.


Even when you’re underway, mission replay – another new addition to the update – requires navigating with yet another confusing menu from the map screen, with no obvious sign of the mission order.

But once you get going, the faff is worth it. As good as the campaign was at launch, Halo isn’t quite the same without a friend – and having multiple players charging into combat with grapple shoots and plasma coils flying is Halo at its chaotic best. For first timers, this is surely the best way to play, even if cancelled split-screen co-op would have been just as welcome, and I’m excited to rediscover the whole thing over the coming weeks – especially with the lure of new achievements to sweeten the deal.

Another long-awaited feature is Forge, Halo’s level editing suite. This has launched in beta form, and it shows, with both creation and discovery features tricky to get your head around. There’s no in-game tutorials (official ones are provided on YouTube, and I’m sure many community-made videos will join them) and the recommendation system is pretty poor, surfacing 343-made launch maps and random prefabs up first, forcing you to dig deeper through a trial-and-error combination of filters. Even then, expect to get ‘problem with dedicated server errors’ when you find something that takes your fancy.

There’s some stunning early creations in Forge already.

Curation needs some work, then – it is a beta after all – and for now, I advise browsing dedicated communities on reddit or Twitter and bookmarking your favourites in a web browser. But like the campaign, once you’re over the hump of setting up, it’s fun to get lost in its early creations. Various map remakes and scripting experiments currently hold the community’s focus – and even testing the most simple maps can shine thanks to Infinite’s well-honed armoury and suite of abilities.

My days of pouring hours into learning new creation tools are likely over, but as with the likes of Dreams, I can see myself popping back into Forge regularly to see what the community is up to. If you don’t fancy that, the two most newly added multiplayer maps were created in Forge to show you what’s possible. Meanwhile, a remake of Halo 3’s The Pit is making a Forge-powered appearance before the year’s end – suggesting Forge could be an answer to Halo Infinite’s problems on the content front.

An official Forge remake of a classic Halo 3 map will be coming before long.

Forge has potential, then, but for me, the most welcome multiplayer update is a quiet re-examination of rewards and progression. Halo Infinite is perhaps a textbook example of how intrusive live service systems can kill all momentum of a game post-launch, and though its clunky challenge swap and cosmetic unlock systems remain, there have been a number of simple but effective tweaks – such as giving XP for match performance and halving the challenges required to earn weekly winnings – that now better reward you for your time and effort.

My favourite change, however, is to the challenges themselves, making them more agnostic to work across more than one playlist. This has a remarkably big impact; I’ve lost count over the past year I wanted to spend an evening honing my sweaty skills in Tactical Slayer, or to level up the battle pass with a friend, only to be forced to play modes we didn’t enjoy, or in the most extreme, have to break up the party when our respective challenges weren’t aligning in order to make any progress.


The match rewards screen has seen a minor, but welcome, facelift to go along with its new bonuses.

This was all implemented with the earnest aim of increasing engagement across every mode, I’m sure, but had extremely off-putting results in reality. Now, much of this should be a thing of the past. I’ve still found myself needing a Challenge Swap from time to time, but challenges better have complemented what I was doing.

How challenges behave when events roll around will be the true test, as they were the biggest of Infinite’s offenders in funnelling you towards certain playlists against your will – but fingers crossed now, across any given week, you can enjoy Infinite for the otherwise satisfying – and moment-to-moment in the multiplayer space, I’d argue unparalleled – shooter that it is.


The Winter Update comes with a free battle pass to tide you over until Season 3 – but it’s hard to get excited over unlocking more shoulder and knee pads for an armour set you probably won’t use.

As mentioned, Winter Update is ultimately a stopgap, and work continues on grabbing your attention fully after a difficult first year. There’s already some promising other additions in the works; plans to surface Forge maps into a dedicated multiplayer playlist, ray tracing on PC and Season 3 ushering in a much-needed three-monthly update schedule starting in March among them, there’s the feeling 343 is slowly turning things around.

I’d love to see more, of course. I’d argue a full cosmetic and progression revamp is needed, and my pie-in-the-sky request is more story content, as the addition of co-op will only keep you going for so long – the move to an open world campaign feels made for it, after all. Until then, if you’re hoping to recapture the excitement experienced at Halo Infinite’s launch, there’s more than enough here to reignite that spark.

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