Race



Race is a free-for-all and team multiplayer gametype in Halo: Combat Evolved and Halo: Reach. The player's objective is to be the first person or team to reach all checkpoints marked on the map.

Additional Information
Checkpoints are demarcated by an arrow or, if a player is directly facing one, a flag icon. The maximum number of checkpoints is fifteen.

When a player has completed a lap, information is displayed at the top left corner of the screen, showing the lap number completed and time taken in seconds.

Race is ideally played on the large, flat map Blood Gulch. Playing on Sidewinder, the only other vehicle-enabled map in Halo: Combat Evolved, is more difficult, as some of the checkpoints spawn on high ledges that are difficult to reach while driving a Warthog. On close quarters maps like Prisoner or Damnation with heavy weapons can result in highly chaotic game, with players more focused on killing one another rather than actually trying to complete laps.

Gametype History
Race was removed from the list of playable gametypes in Halo 2 -- likely due to its unpopularity -- and replaced with the new gametype, Territories. Race did not return in Halo 3, although features of both Territories and VIP can be edited to recreate a similar experience. Bungie has created a gametype that is somewhat like Race called Rocket Race, found in the Team Doubles playlist of Halo 3. It is a variant of VIP in which everybody is invincible (except for assassinations) and carries a rocket launcher. The player that is not the VIP is supposed to drive the VIP in a Mongoose to a territory.

Race, however, does make a return in Halo: Reach. Not much else is known about the improvements or adjustments made to the gametype at this time.

Trivia

 * A Bungie Weekly Update mentioned a gametype with emphasis on vehicles, possibly hinting at the return of this gametype in Halo 3. However, Race did not return in Halo 3 and the mentioned gametype was Rocket Race.
 * Territories looks like the gametype that replaced Race.
 * Some players create racetrack maps in Halo 3 by Forging map variants with only one Territory. When the map is played in Territories with permanent capture turned on, the player who reaches the end first ends up capturing the only Territory on the map, winning and ending the game.
 * Alternatively in Halo 3, if the goal point for the race is edited to a position where it is impossible to continuously pass and cheat, for instance in mid-air, or surrounded by death bringing teleporters, then an actual variant of VIP, commonly known as "RACETRACKS" can be implemented, affording for a proper race with several laps.
 * It will be making a return in the list of gametypes in Halo: Reach.