Push is a phenomenally-popular kinda rare literally never-played map from Team Fortress Classic. Right? Behold the Hydro of Team Fortress Classic. They are loads of fun, but the sort of non-serious fun that’s in TF2 but not TFC. It even gets it own unique kill icon! Choo choo mother ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥er!ģ) The soccer ball.Remember the Ball-Kicking Boots? I did an article on them. Players can get on the trolly and make it drive at three different speeds, and hitting enemy players who wind up on the track gib them spectacularly.
My favorite map is Subtransit, which contains the trolly from Half Life as a major map feature. Personally this is one of my favorite game modes in TFC because the complete dearth of ammo pickups means that I’m often forced to use weapons that I’m less familiar with as my tried-and-trues run out of ammo. However, number two on our list:Ģ) The train.Except it can be ridden by the players.ĭue to their similarities, Half-Life Multiplayer maps can be transferred effortlessly into TFC, where they work as 4-team deathmatch arenas. Well is a bit different, but the map is very simple in design and the main thing missing is the train. Seriously, the two maps have like nothing in common). These are great maps for TF2 veterans to start out on because there are familiar aspects for them to get acquainted with (except badlands. The complete list is 2fort, dustbowl, well, and badlands. Things like:ġ) A bunch of popular TF2 maps.This one’s pretty common knowledge, but if you have no experience with TFC you may not know that a number of popular maps began as TFC maps, and before that Team Fortress Quake maps. Contrast that to Team Fortress 2, where I’m hard-pressed to think of anything that hasn’t made it into the game in some fashion.īut dig under the surface and there are a couple of things that actually debuted in TFC which you might not know about.
Two teams of nine mercenaries grab flags and kill each other, and that’s pretty much it. TFC is a simple game, especially compared to its predecessor.