Skip to main content

Create your own levels: 'Halo 5: Forge' available as a free download for Windows 10

Microsoft has released a free Halo mapmaking tool for Windows 10, giving series devotees the chance to create their own levels and compete with friends in online 16-player matches free of charge.

The free Halo 5: Forge app for Windows 10 also allows amateur map designers to share their custom levels online. Imported maps can be unlocked for play in Halo 5: Guardians for the Xbox One.

Recommended Videos

Unveiled earlier this year, Halo 5: Forge is a powerful level-making toolkit that allows users to modify every aspect of a Halo 5 multiplayer map, from terrain elevation to object placement. Players can also assign maps custom objectives, giving their creations an added degree of depth beyond straightforward deathmatch-style gameplay.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

The trailer above showcases some of the more outlandish maps players have created using the Forge toolkit, including first-person takes on games like beer pong and the arcade classic Frogger. Members of the Halo 5: Guardians community recently produced a playable version of the Harry Potter universe’s fantasy sport Quidditch using the Forge editor’s Grifball mode.

The Windows 10 version of Halo 5: Forge also includes support for online 16-player matches in the Arena multiplayer mode. Players will need to either host or join custom lobbies in order to play with others, however, as Forge for Windows 10 does not include the ability to search for matches in progress. Microsoft notes that support for multiplayer matchmaking will arrive in a future update.

While developer 343 Industries previously stated that “there is plenty of chance that Halo 5 could appear on the PC,” the studio has yet to reveal whether it intends to produce a full-fledged Windows 10 port of Halo 5: Guardians. Despite Microsoft’s recent pledge to bridge the gap separating Windows 10 and Xbox One first-party releases, the publisher has scaled back its “Xbox Play Anywhere” initiative in recent months, dropping Dead Rising 4 from its promised lineup.

The Windows 10 version of Halo 5: Forge requires the Windows 10 Anniversary Update, and is available for download from the Windows Store.

Danny Cowan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Danny’s passion for video games was ignited upon his first encounter with Nintendo’s Duck Hunt, and years later, he still…
Top 10 Windows shortcuts everyone should know
An individual using a laptop's keyboard.

Windows 11 shortcuts are a constantly-used feature by practically all PC users. Apart from saving you time from carrying out the specific command without having to perform a few extra clicks on your mouse, it’s simply more convenient to refer back to shortcuts via your keyboard.

Although you may be satisfied with the Windows shortcuts you already know about and utilize on a daily basis, you can enhance your general Windows experience in a big way with these 10 shortcuts everyone should know.
Ctrl + Z
Tired of always having to use your mouse to find and click the Undo button on a program like Microsoft Word or, say, entering details on a website or editing images? Ctrl + Z will basically undo whatever your last action was, providing you a convenient way to reverse edits and changes within a second. From personal experience, this shortcut proved to be especially useful for productivity applications.
Ctrl + Shift + T
We’ve all been there. Nowadays, our browsers are inundated with multiple tabs, and as such, it’s hard to keep track of at times. Eventually, you’re going to close a tab on accident when trying to select it. Instead of trying to remember what it was or spending a few seconds accessing it and reopening it via the Recently Closed feature (on Chrome), simply hit Ctrl + Shift + T to restore the last closed tab. Similarly, Ctrl + N will open a new tab.

Read more
After 10 years of headaches, I’m finally a believer in Windows on ARM
The Microsoft Surface 3 with its blue keyboard.

Almost two years in, Apple is on the verge of completing its transition to ARM. It might surprise you to know, then, that Microsoft started its own journey to ARM chips long before Apple.

But Windows' support for ARM has been far less smooth. There aren't many more Windows devices with ARM chips than there were five years ago -- and I can attest to having personally used every failed attempt along the way.

Read more
Windows 11 might pull ahead of Windows 10 in one key way
Windows 11 and Windows 10 operating system logos are displayed on laptop screens.

Windows 11 has been around for nearly a year, but the debate on how it stands up against Windows 10 is still going strong. That's why custom computer builder Puget Systems revisited that very topic, with the results finding that Windows 11 might pull ahead of Windows 10 in one key area.

This one key area involves content creation, and Puget Systems detailed that in several tests, made gains over Windows 10 in the last year. Those gains are mainly due to monthly Windows 11 patches, and the launch of new CPUs. Yet Windows 10 also performed faster in some tests, too, where the hardware running the tests were the same.

Read more