

If you don’t fancy the grind, basically, you can use this mod.

Halo: Reach armor can be a bit of a time sink as it requires earning Halo: Reach season points. More of a timesaver than a gameplay changing addition, this Halo: Reach mod unlocks all character customisation just for you. There are over 500 maps and 300 game mods packed into the Halo: Reach Forge Collection 2.0 mod. That hasn’t stopped modders from bringing old favourites back such as Duck Hunt, Jenga, and Indiana Jones, though. The Halo: Reach Forge mode hasn’t landed just yet, so we can’t jump in and create new maps. Read on to find out how you can do it so you can use Halo: Reach mods, too. Luckily for us, 343 has provided a pretty simple workaround. Modding in Halo: Reach, or any of the other Halo games in the Master Chief Collection for that matter requires bypassing the game’s anti-cheat software. “It took them maybe an hour from the first flight to start changing weapon behaviours, making players that could jump and fly.” “The speed at which people have started to mod and tinker already has been really cool,” he recalls. Speaking to PCGamesN at X019, 343 Industries community lead Brian Jarrard shares that, during a test flight, Halo: Reach modding took players no time at all to get into – the game wasn’t even out then, either. One of the most popular is the Grunt Birthday Party, which results in confetti popping out of the diminutive foe’s head when you pop it off their shoulders.Įarly signs indicated that Halo MCC modding was going to be especially popular. Not just because we’re in the merry land of PC gaming where everything can be tweaked, but because Halo has always had a swathe of game-changing cheats, items, and special skulls.


The ability to mod your Halo PC experience makes sense. Halo: Reach mods are one of the new additions introduced to Bungie’s iconic shooter since 343 Industries brought it to PC via the Master Chief Collection.
