Halo remakes advance as Rebs Gaming reports Halo 2, 3
Halo is reportedly expanding its remake slate again, with Rebs Gaming saying Halo Studios is developing remakes of Halo 2 and Halo 3. He said the projects are in early development, alongside Halo: Campaign Evolved, which would push the series’ remake plan beyond a single prequel release.
Rebs Gaming on three remakes
"I’ve received confirmation from two more sources that Halo Studios is developing remakes of Halo 2 and Halo 3" Rebs Gaming said in his latest video. He added, "Active development is underway on all three remakes and the Halo 2 and 3 remakes are in early development," giving the clearest sign yet that the remade lineup is broader than the first project alone.
"One of my new sources sent me proof to verify themself and that the trilogy remakes are definitely happening" he said, and another source was the same one that previously told him about Campaign Evolved. That makes the reporting more than a single tip, but it still leaves the studio’s own timing and rollout plans outside the public record.
Halo 2 and 3 clues
"We will notice things from Halo 2 and 3 in the prequel missions" Rebs Gaming said, tying the later games back to the prequel work already underway. For players, that suggests Halo: Campaign Evolved is not being treated as a dead-end remake; it may be used to seed ideas that carry forward into the next two projects.
Brutes will appear in Halo: Campaign Evolved, and a source claimed the enemies are based on the Halo: Reach designs, will wield plasma rifles and spikers, and can appear throughout the rest of the campaign by activating a specific skull. Those details remain separate from the remake confirmation itself, but they show the prequel is already being used as a testing ground for how the older games may be refreshed.
Campaign Evolved's role
The practical takeaway is simple: Halo players are not looking at one-off nostalgia treatment. If Halo Studios keeps moving on all three remakes, Halo 2 and Halo 3 would follow the prequel rather than replace it, and the franchise’s remake strategy appears to be building as a sequence rather than a single event.