
The Weekend Gamer has an editorial cautioning gamers about thinking that we've come farther than we actually have into the mainstream of entertainment culture.
"Video game aren't as mainstream as we think we are. This year's casual games boom has certainly increased the amount of people who are playing video games, and most people know what a "Wii" is, but we have a long way to go.
As I look over various gaming site forums, people talk as if a few stories in the national news media and the popularity of the Wii means that gaming has become accepted, that we no longer have to be careful about who we relate our passion to, that most people get it. There are constant stories in the media about the growth of gaming into a mainstream industry–I've even covered some of the statistics myself. But you'll never find me making the assumption that video games aren't still viewed as foreign and childish by a majority of people–let's not get ahead of ourselves."

The Xbox One Backward Compatible versions of Xbox 360 titles Left 4 Dead, Left 4 Dead 2, The Orange Box, and Portal are now enhanced for Xbox One X, Microsoft announced.
Nothing but great memories with all these games! Playing Left for dead series during the college years with friends was the best.

The year is 2007. Console owners tap their fingers in barely contained impatience. For years they have been starved of Valve's delicious, full-bodied courses, forced to watch from the bleachers as Valve mixes a unique blend of kinetic first-person with extraordinary tech. Besides a brief dalliance with the original Xbox and the PlayStation 2 - which produce pale imitations of its best work - Valve has remained faithful to the PC.
And then, in a flash, five of them arrive at once; neatly packaged morsels for a new generation reared on Microsoft's & later Sony's consoles. Five games, all in one orange box. Valve serves the PC too, for it is October 18 - a day of celebration - and everyone should feast.
Valve didn't really "release" 5 of its greatest games in a single day, Half-Life 2 came out 3 years before The Orange Box. In no other context do we talk about a port being the "release" of a game.
The orange box was an excellent release. I don't think Valve will do much beyond online only games now.

Robin Walker discusses the impact of Portal, Team Fortress 2 and more.
Little cheeky to talk about it when you know we're still waiting for Half Life 3...the Orange Box included Episode 2 and is still left unfinished story wise to this day.
At this rate we better get a second Orange Box. Half Life 3, Half Life Remake (Black Mesa Mod), TF3 or L4D3 and the HL spin offs like Blue Shift.