Cheaters, Glitchers, etc.
December 25th, 2008 by David | 944 viewsGoing through the videos that have been popping up left, right and center since L4D was realeased reveals quite a lot about the player base. There are those whose sole aim seems to be to break the game in as many ways as possible. The cheapest of these are the 360 cheat videos. I will concede that setting this up on a console requires some degree of knowledge and dedication. Using cheats in an online match though? Not cool. Thankfully this has mostly been stamped out with a recent update. The video embedded below is only really worth watching for the gigantic Francis at the beginning:
In an adjacent sub-group to the outright cheaters are those who love exploits and glitches. By now, I suspect that every single ledge, piece of rubble and telephone pole has been climbed on, scrambled over or edged down by intrepid survivors. While I have to admire the tenacity and ingenuity of the players who find these map glitches/exploits, those who take them and use them to skip large sections of the map confound me with the action. Here’s an example: On No Mercy 3 (Sewers), the crescendo event is a marvelous spectacle. You’ve got the slow climb of the lift, followed by a rooftop dash across a loading dock into the warehouse opposite. Brilliant. Sure, you can use your melee attack to break down the rolling garage door at the bottom and bypass that entire section… But why? One of the major draws of L4D for me is the cinematic nature of the encounters, as well as the stories you end up having to tell afterwards. The huge set pieces are the entire point of the levels, and definately not something that you should be proud of skipping. At least when people post these glitches up on sites like youtube it publicizes them, so hopefully they can be fixed in an upcoming update. Here’s hoping.
That video also made me go ‘huh?’ by putting the TF2 music over a L4D video. Huh?





Although I’m not sure how they managed to bind the commands to buttons in the 360 version, all of the cheats I saw in that first video are more or less standard cheat commands in console. Once you get access to the console, the source engine provides a lot of interesting things for you to play around with.
I agree. It’s the part where they gain access to the console that I’m impressed with (to a certain extent)