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Decay received a weak but overall positive reception from the video games industry's critics.
Writing for GameSpot, Doug Radcliffe argued that Decay was " impressive ", praising the design of puzzles required players to work together, as well as the way in which the ranking system discouraged players from competing against each other.
GameSpy reviewer David Hodgson was more reserved in his views of the game ; although describing it as " great fun ", he noted that it could become " tedious, with one member waiting for minutes at a time, while the other scratches their head, then completes an objective ".
In addition, Hodgson felt that the more puzzle-orientated nature of Decay left the action elements " a little muted compared to Gordon's single player quest ".
The site Allgame described Decay as an " added bonus " for the PlayStation 2 version of Half-Life, but noted that as the game was designed for two players, it significantly suffered when a single player attempts to play it by switching between two characters, a point that both GameSpy and GameSpot agreed on.
In his review for IGN, critic Doug Perry felt that Decay was " neat in its own limited way ", but that it was more of a distraction from the main game, " a complementary cup of vegetable soup than a piping hot main dish of New York steak ".
While The Electric Playground reviewer Steve Smith stated that the control scheme for the PlayStation 2 version of Half-Life " is about the best we have seen on the PS2 or any console ", he concluded that although Decay was a " nice add-on ", it was " no reason to buy this port ".

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