Home » News » 343’s O’Connor: Halo: The Master Chief Collection was a “black eye”, won’t happen to Halo 5
halo5feature
News

343’s O’Connor: Halo: The Master Chief Collection was a “black eye”, won’t happen to Halo 5

Long-standing Halo guru and current 343 Industries studio head Frank O’Connor has called Halo: The Master Chief Collection a “black eye” and asserted the same won’t be true for the upcoming Halo 5: Guardians.

“We’re not going to rest on our laurels or hide from the mistakes we made,” O’Connor said to Xbox Achievements. “I will say that the nature of The Master Chief Collection – you’ve got five different game engines, you’ve got five different studios working on it, you’ve got 343 working on putting it all together – the footprint and complexity was outrageous.”

O’Connor said work on The Master Chief Collection isn’t finished.

“We’ve been sort of scrambling to get it first in a playable stage and now we’re going to get it in a polished stage, so that people are getting what they deserved in the first place. We’re never going to back away from that or shy away from that.”

O’Connor said people shouldn’t worry about Halo 5.

“Halo 5 is being made by a completely different team. It’s a singular product. It was built from the ground up for this new technology, rather than being sort of dragged kicking and screaming from 2001 and forced and shoehorned into a 2014 console.

“I think the beta is already a decent first step, in a retail environment, showing that we don’t have the same problems.”

Halo 5: Guardians will be available from 27 October on Xbox One.


This article may contain affiliate links, meaning we could earn a small commission if you click-through and make a purchase. Stevivor is an independent outlet and our journalism is in no way influenced by any advertiser or commercial initiative.

About the author

Steve Wright

Steve's the owner and Editor-in-Chief of Stevivor.com, the country’s leading independent video games outlet. Steve arrived in Australia back in 2001 on what was meant to be a three-month working holiday before deciding to emigrate and, eventually, becoming a citizen.

Stevivor is a combination of ‘Steve’ and ‘Survivor’, which made more sense back in 2001 when Jeff Probst was up in Queensland. The site started as Steve’s travel blog before transitioning over into video games.

Aside from video games, Steve has interests in hockey and Star Trek, playing the former and helping to cover video games about the latter on TrekMovie.com. By day, Steve works as the communications manager of the peak body representing Victorians as they age.