Best Halo games: every mainline series entry ranked

best halo games: side view of Master Chief holding an assault rifle
(Image credit: Xbox Games)

The best Halo games showcase why the series has long been an absolute Microsoft staple. When Microsoft entered the console market, they knew they needed a strong exclusive – enter 2001’s Halo: Combat Evolved. The shooter, sold alongside more than half of all Xbox consoles, felt cinematic and gave us a recognizable hero in Master Chief. Its combat felt great, thanks to smart enemy AI – and those vehicles!

In short, players loved plenty of Halo and its multiplayer provided entertainment in many living rooms and college dorms over the years. Halo’s success is largely credited to Bungie, now developers of one of the best FPS games out there, multiplayer blockbuster Destiny 2, but that wouldn’t be entirely fair to current Halo developer 343 Industries, whose Halo is simply different – because it’s a different studio.

Halo has become a pop culture powerhouse with spinoff games, its own TV show, and plenty of novels in the universe, so of course you’d want to know what the best Halo games are. Whether you’re new to the series and want to take the jump (which you can easily do on Game Pass), or you just want to have a look at our ranking to see how wrong we are, welcome. Let’s have a look at the best Halo games.

Best Halo games

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best Halo games: two Spartans overshadowed by a large enemy

(Image credit: Microsoft Studios)

Halo Wars: Definitive Edition

Everyone loves a good prequel, right?

Reasons to buy

+
Pitting your favourite factions against each other is fun
+
Designed by RTS veterans Ensemble Studios

Reasons to avoid

-
Big simplistic for strategy veterans
-
Can be repetitive

Developed by Ensemble Studios, Halo Wars takes place 21 years before the events of Halo: Combat Evolved. With sumptuous pre-rendered cinematics and a control scheme that worked extremely well on a controller, Halo Wars was a bold attempt to make the RTS genre work on consoles – and it certainly accomplished that goal.

While Halo Wars 2 expanded on many of its ideas, Halo Wars was generally well-received by critics and fans alike. It was also the first time the series branched out from Master Chief’s core adventures. It may not be remembered as one of the best Halo games ever made, but if you never quite clicked with first-person shooters, it was great having the option to experience the Halo Universe as a real-time strategy game. 

best Halo games: A busy battlefield in Halo Wars 2

(Image credit: Microsoft Studios)

Halo Wars 2

The sequel to the prequel

Reasons to buy

+
The world fits tactics game mechanics really well
+
Gives fans of the series a new perspective

Reasons to avoid

-
Managing several battlefields can be overwhelming

It might seem unfair to pit Halo Wars 2 against the main entries in the series – it’s a real-time strategy game after all. But Halo Wars 2 is worthy of a mention, partly because the game’s main antagonists, The Banished, are the enemy faction you face off against in Halo Infinite

Halo Wars 2 was a valiant effort that attempted to pack the core elements of the Halo universe into an RTS game. And in many ways, renowned strategy developer Creative Assembly achieved this. Halo Wars 2 is a fast-paced game that has a fairly engaging story that focuses on a new menacing villain, Atriox, and there’s a generous amount of content for players to delve into. 

While it’s almost an impossible task to cram everything that makes Halo great into an entirely new genre, Halo Wars 2 did a fine job at nailing the fundamentals, and it’s awesome to see armies of soldiers collide with Brutes and Covenant forces from a top-down perspective. If you ever wanted to be the master and commander of a miniature Halo army, Halo Wars 2 lets you do exactly that. 

best Halo games: Master Chief and a group of Spartans

(Image credit: Microsoft Studios)

Halo 5: Guardians

En garde

Reasons to buy

+
Great multiplayer through and through
+
Movement feels amazing
+
New, useful abilities

Reasons to avoid

-
Overcomplicated plot 
-
Unlikeable protagonist
-
Doesn't do fan-favourite characters justice

Let's just say it – Halo 5: Guardians got a lot of things wrong. Its marketing campaign promised an exciting story that centered on a supposed betrayal by Master Chief, but that never actually transpired. Instead, we were left to chase Master Chief across the galaxy as Spartan Locke – one of the driest and most boring individuals we’ve ever encountered. 

We did at least get to play as Chief, but only sparingly, as the majority of the campaign’s missions revolved around Locke and his band of equally uninspiring teammates. Throw in dreary four-player co-op that never felt fun to play due to the awful Promethean enemies – and frankly broken AI when playing alone – and it’s easy to argue that Halo 5 might feature the worst campaign of the entire series.

While it’s never a good idea to make a fan-favorite character into a heel, 343 Industries decided that Chief’s faithful AI companion, Cortana, would also turn rogue. Two of the series’ beloved stalwarts were now brandished as baddies, and unsurprisingly, that never sat quite right with fans. Halo 5’s campaign also assumed every player had read all of the Halo novels, and its story was horribly convoluted and bloated as a result.

It wasn’t all bad, though – Halo 5: Guardians multiplayer was truly exceptional. After the missteps of Halo 4’s Call of Duty-esque approach, Halo 5: Guardians managed to successfully transition Halo’s legendary multiplayer modes into something fit for modern players. It didn’t get a pass from the purists, of course, but the gunplay, fluidity of movement, and incredible multiplayer map designs absolutely deliver.

best Halo games: A closeup of Master Chief from the side in Halo Infinite

(Image credit: Microsoft Studios)

Halo Infinite

A satisfying return for the series

Reasons to buy

+
Liberating and expansive gameplay
+
An evocative and enthralling story
+
Impeccable sound design

Reasons to avoid

-
Can only equip one piece of equipment
-
Reload animations and cutscenes can stutter

More than five years lie between Halo 5 and Halo Infinite, enough time for fans to worry that the game they thought of when they thought Halo was maybe a thing of the past. Underwhelming first looks at the gameplay and multiple delays did nothing but assuage those fears in most fans.

In reality, the changes that Halo: Infinite brings to the series are nothing we didn't expect 343 to eventually tackle. Environments opened up gradually from game to game until Halo went open-world at last, the grappling hook is fun to use, and the multiplayer went free and released separately from the campaign – all things players are long used to elsewhere. There are even boss fights now.

Halo Infinite is a very good game with great encounters that does not need to hide behind any other series or even games within the larger franchise, and the multiplayer is fantastic. After a long wait, Halo Infinite co-op, often so vital to the Halo experience, is also available.  The campaign does feel like it's slightly lagging behind, however, still trying to live up to greats like Halo 2 while introducing new mechanics to the formula long after everyone else.

best Halo games: armoured soldiers in a vehicle firing at an outpost

(Image credit: 343 Industries / Valve)

Halo 4

343's first entry in the Halo series

Reasons to buy

+
The game that made us love Cortana
+
Beautiful environments
+
Best weapon variety yet

Reasons to avoid

-
Multiplayer feels markedly different
-
Promethean enemies are not as fun to engage

Halo 4 was always going to be intensely scrutinized, perhaps unfairly, for being the first Halo game after Bungie passed on the baton for the franchise. But 343 Industries decided to bravely implement their own vision of where Halo was heading, which deserves some credit. 

While Halo has never really been praised for its visual fidelity in the past, Halo 4 was absolutely gorgeous when it was released on Xbox 360. The campaign is full of evocative moments, too, as Cortana battles against the ‘rampancy’ that is affecting her mental state. We’d like to have faced off against fewer Forerunner and Promethean enemies, but overall it’s an entertaining ride. 

Halo 4’s multiplayer was where the game faltered, however, as it was a dramatic change from what Halo fans were used to. It tried to ape the speed and twitch-like nature of Call of Duty games, but unlike its successful muse, Halo 4 never felt really satisfying to play. 

best Halo games: two squad members in a firefight against aliens in Halo 3: ODST

(Image credit: Microsoft Studios)

Halo 3: ODST

Get your Sherlock hat on

Reasons to buy

+
Great performances
+
New vehicle battles
+
Atmospheric design throughout

Reasons to avoid

-
Narrative doesn't tie into the rest of the series

ODST is a curious entry in the Halo franchise, in that you don’t play as Master Chief at all. Instead, you play one of the UNSC’s Orbital Drop Shock Troopers – a rank of soldier that plummets into battle inside a protective missile – who wakes up from a crash landing in a ruined, Covenant-covered city and pieces together the events of the night before.

The so-called ‘detective’ elements are light, with Bungie content to use a smashed-up vehicle or waylaid helmet as a prompt for a ‘flashback’ to another ODST’s mission. The tight alleyways and corridors are certainly a change from the usual vistas of other Halo games, while it’s hard not to feel underpowered compared to Master Chief’s usual capabilities (or underwhelmed by some of the scripted cutscenes). You’ll end up backtracking through a lot of areas, too. 

But ODST goes off the beaten path as a Halo game, encouraging you to put the pieces of this day-old warzone together, and deserves its fifth-place slot in our list of best Halo games for that reason.

best Halo games: Master Chief standing on a raised platform, a sniper rifle at the ready

(Image credit: Microsoft Studios)

Halo 2

Introducing an unexpected alliance

Reasons to buy

+
Dual-wielding is a fun addition
+
The feeling of playing the Arbiter for the first time is quite novel
+
Great cutscenes

Reasons to avoid

-
The massive number of drones to fight

If Halo 3 was the game that helped cement the Xbox 360 as a genuine contender in the console space, Halo 2 was the litmus test that helped Xbox Live grow into the service it is today. The game’s multiplayer was the perfect companion for Microsoft’s burgeoning online services – and it also upped the ante from the first game considerably. It was so popular that Microsoft only shut down the online servers in 2010.

Multiplayer aside, Halo 2 also brought many innovations to the series. Regenerating health replaced the need to find first aid kits, dual-wielding was introduced, and the game lets players step into the eight-foot frame of the Arbiter, a Covenant elite. Much like Halo: Combat Evolved helped popularize first-person shooters on consoles, Halo 2 paved the way for the likes of Call of Duty by making online first-person shooters a mainstay for console gamers. 

best Halo games: Master Chief looking at a small hologram of Cortana

(Image credit: Microsoft Studios)

Halo 3

Third time's the charm

Reasons to buy

+
Great new mechanics and vehicles
+
Best multiplayer of the series

Reasons to avoid

-
Playing as the Arbiter could be more fun

The game that called for players to ‘finish the fight’ was certainly worthy of the trilogy that it ended, even if Microsoft was never going to let the franchise end there. As the first Halo game to launch on the Xbox 360, it offered a big graphical upgrade over the first two iterations, with expansive and detailed levels that required real strategy to navigate, and incredibly explosive set pieces that stick in the mind years later. Who can forget blowing up a Scarab from the inside for the first time? Halo 3 belongs high up on the ranking of best Halo games for such moments alone.

We’re always sad to miss the chance to fight off Elites – a sad side-effect of the alliance made in the previous game – and the Cortana level will remain divisive for some. But Halo 3's carefully woven plot makes this a truly varied Halo game that always earns its stripes as one of the best Halo games.

best Halo games: A group of Spartans fighting the Covernant, one of the Sparts wears red armor

(Image credit: Microsoft Studios)

Halo: Reach

This is where the fun began

Reasons to buy

+
Great campaign
+
Challenges keep things interesting
+
Fun armor customization

Reasons to avoid

-
Underwhelming maps

Halo Reach holds a special place in many gamers’ hearts, as the swansong of Bungie before it passed the mantle onto 343 Industires. This prequel game takes place on the planet of Reach, a farming planet that fell to the Covenant in the early years of humanity’s struggle with the galactic cult. This game is all about goodbyes, both from Bungie and its array of Spartan characters, as Reach’s team of super soldiers are slowly picked off in a brutal battle for survival. The last-stand endgame, too, is one of the finest and most memorable levels in the franchise, and it’s hard not to shed a tear for what was lost.

It’s not all frowns and sorrow, though. Reach’s campaign is a thrilling and off-beat look at the Halo universe, introducing new power-ups for sprinting, invulnerable ‘armor locks’, and hologram decoys. The spaceship battle level is a startling break in pacing, too, pitting you against Covenant warships before putting you back, breathless, on the ground. The biggest tragedy? That the campaign never ends at all.

best Halo games: Master Chief inspecting a weapon on teh ground

(Image credit: Microsoft Studios)

Halo: Combat Evolved

FPS evolved

Reasons to buy

+
Great gunplay
+
Offered unique freedom for its time
+
Introduced players to the value of narrative in shooters

Reasons to avoid

-
Slightly subpar level design

Halo: Combat Evolved is the game that started it all, and it's hard to overstate its importance. Microsoft making a game console seemed like a laughable prospect only 20 years ago, but Halo: CE had a massive part in proving the company knew what it was doing. Its vision of galactic warfare, alien technology, and humanity on the brink of defeat captured the hearts of so many players and showed that Xbox was here to stay.

More than anything else, though, Halo: CE showed off what Bungie’s team could do with gunplay. The iconic pistol and assault rifle were introduced here, while the chance to flip between human and alien weaponry was inspired, making each encounter a thrilling chance to shake up the way you played. 

The opening levels of Halo: CE may still be the franchise’s best, with the chaos of a claustrophobic ship boarded by Covenant soldiers, leading into the calm and open vistas of a Halo ring – and it’s this tussle of on and off, fast and slow, hurting and healing, that makes Halo what it is. For all its successors, this is where the formula was forged, and that makes it the best Halo game, bar none.

How we made out best Halo games list

The team at TechRadar Gaming has an excessive experience with the Halo series, with multiple members of the team pouring hundreds of hours into each game. Because of this, we've got a decent community of Halo fanatics who have come together to be able to offer valuable opinions on which games are the very best. 

Because of our experience with the series, we're convinced that we can provide opinions that you can trust. We're educated on the subject, so we know exactly what makes a Halo game one of the best. 

Now you've covered all grounds for the best Halo games, the best FPS games may be worth looking at if you're ready for what's next. For more multiplayer action, our guides to the best co-op games might also help.

Adam Vjestica

Adam was formerly TRG's Hardware Editor. A law graduate with an exceptional track record in content creation and online engagement, Adam has penned scintillating copy for various technology sites and also established his very own award-nominated video games website. He’s previously worked at Nintendo of Europe as a Content Marketing Editor and once played Halo 5: Guardians for over 51 hours for charity. He is now an editor at The Shortcut.

With contributions from