Where are the Aperture Science Logos?

Where are the Aperture Science Logos? - A Woman in White Top Sitting at the Table with Flowers in Flasks

I'm replaying the original Half-Life on Steam. I seem to remember there being Aperture Science logos on the laser equipment that you pass on the way down to the containment chamber at the start of the game.

However they no longer appear to be there. Am I just mis-remembering or did Valve remove them from the Steam version at some point?

Where are the Aperture Science logos in Half-Life?



Best Answer

I can't remember encountering the name or logo at any point in the first Half-Life, nor any (unused) texture in the Hammer Editor referencing it (I rechecked to be sure).

According to the Fandom wiki entry on Aperture Science, there is no appearance in Half-Life.
This is corroborated by the Combine OverWiki.




Pictures about "Where are the Aperture Science Logos?"

Where are the Aperture Science Logos? - Black Dslr Camera Suspended on Air
Where are the Aperture Science Logos? - Black and White Stars during Night Time
Where are the Aperture Science Logos? - A Gold Rolex Watch with Diamonds



Is Aperture Science trademarked?

It does not meet the threshold of originality needed for copyright protection, and is therefore in the public domain. Although it is free of copyright restrictions, this image may still be subject to other restrictions.

Is Aperture Science abandoned?

Aperture Science was effectively shut down and placed into a permanent testing cycle by GLaDOS.

Is there a real Aperture Science?

Aperture Science, Inc., often simply referred to as Aperture Science or simply Aperture, is an American scientific research corporation whose laboratories and administration are located in Cleveland, Ohio, USA.

How far down is Aperture Science?

The salt mine is composed of nine vertical shafts, each at least 2500 meters deep and hundreds of meters in length.



Aperture Science Logos (1950-Now)




Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Ron Lach, Ricardo Esquivel, Joe, Antony Trivet