That said if you had the ability to manipulate gravity (which I believe shows up in some of the elevators/etc. in the Halo series) you could hypothetically survive an impact with only a minimal suit that didn't provide any real protection. That basic method would be:
1) Fall and reach your terminal velocity of ~200 km/h
2) ~300 ft before you hit the ground the suit kicks in and flips you so that your head is pointing downwards
3) Create a 7g gravity well attached just below your feet. (resulting in a net 6g force upwards, but to you it would feel like 8g)
4) 1 second later touch down light as a feather.
The flipping to be head down is important, the body can withstand some tremendous g forces downwards, but is really bad at resisting them upwards. By flipping you upside down we can run you through what would feel like an 8g force for you body, which modern pilots in high-g suits can withstand pretty easily.
If you don't want to deal with the (highly speculative) field of gravity manipulation you could hypothetically pull off a similar thing by using a monopole (the existence of which is, to quote Joseph Polchinski, "one of the safest bets that one can make about physics not yet seen") in combination with the magnetic field of whatever you are landing on to generate the upwards force. (Though then you would want to be feet down instead of up).
Of course what you are essentially doing in both of these cases is attaching a rocket to the bottom of your feet to "push" (or "pull" in the case of the gravity manipulation) you upwards and slow the collision, but in a method that doesn't deal with all of those burning flames or visual effects.
Edit: Woah, 9 new replies while I was typing that.