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We haven't entirely nailed down what element it is yet, but I'll tell you this: It's a lively one, and it does NOT like the human skeleton.
— Cave Johnson
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Gels are a gameplay mechanic officially introduced in Portal 2. They are paint-like liquids that impart different effects when applied to surfaces and objects.
Gels
Repulsion Gel
Repulsion Gel is a light blue substance that repels objects. A player or an object that hits a surface coated with the Gel bounces off. Due to the effect, the height from which a player falls before landing on a Gel-covered surface affects the height of a jump. Players can also use the Gel to move back and forth between two parallel surface rather than merely be propelled up and down. Objects such as Storage Cubes and Turrets can be covered in Repulsion Gel which causes them to bounce around erratically.
Propulsion Gel
Propulsion Gel is an orange substance that greatly increases object velocity and reduces the friction of objects moving on the surface(s) it is applied to. Objects covered in Propulsion Gel similarly have their friction reduced, causing them to slide around.
Conversion Gel
Conversion Gel is a portal-conducting white substance made from ground moon rocks. It enables the player to place portals on surfaces that are not normally portal-conductive.
Unused Adhesion Gel
The purple "sticky" or "adhesion" gel was found on accident in the Portal 2 authoring tools. It turns out that the purple gel was initially going to behave like the blue stick paint in Tag: The Power of Paint, the game off of which Portal 2's gel mechanics are based. The adhesion gel would have been in the game along with the repulsion, propulsion, and conversion gels in Portal 2 now. But some play testers got too disoriented when they had to think with portals while walking on walls and ceilings, so Valve ended up removing the gel before it was completed.
Unused Reflection Gel
The Reflection Gel replaced the Adhesion Gel in the authoring tools after Portal 2 major update of their first DLC. The gel uses the Conversion Gel texture when hits the floors, and causes the Thermal Discouragement Beam to reflect, similar to the Discouragement Redirection Cube. When this gel hits the player it shows the screen effect of the Propulsion Gel.
Water
Also known as Cleansing Gel, water washes other types of gels off of surfaces and objects. It has no special properties in regard to gameplay, and as such, does not stick to surfaces.
Slime
Slime or Sewage was found only in Portal during Chell's escape, and is not often considered a gel due to the fact it has no emitter, is not used to solve chambers, and the player cannot "paint" with it like with the official gels introduced in Portal 2. Regardless, it does have some properties similar to some gels in Portal 2, such as the slippery effect of running on Propulsion gel and an adhesion effect that keeps the player stuck on the ground.
Related achievements
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Vertically Unchallenged Master the Repulsion Gel
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White Out Complete the first Conversion Gel test
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Stranger Than Friction Master the Propulsion Gel
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Schrodinger's Catch Catch a blue-painted box before it touches the ground
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Gallery
Gels |
| A Weighted Storage Cube covered in Repulsion Gel
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| A Weighted Storage Cube covered in Propulsion Gel
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| A turret covered in Propulsion Gel
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| A turret covered in Repulsion Gel
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Trivia
- The gel mechanic is a borrowed concept from TAG: The Power of Paint.
- A fourth gel, "Sticky Gel", was also borrowed from TAG and was tested within Portal 2. It would have allowed players to "stick to a surface so you can walk up a wall like Fred Astaire in Royal Wedding"[1]; however, it was removed early on during development due to making play-testers motion-sick.[2] Its emitter is still in the game's files, however, but does not have any sticky properties or a texture.[3]
- Repulsion Gel was Aperture Science's first attempt at creating a dietetic pudding substitute.
See also
References