gamingbolt.com
With the release of Monster Hunter Wilds being just over the horizon, developers of the title have been revealing more and more details about the upcoming game. In an interview with IGN, director Yuya Tokuda has revealed that the monsters in Wilds will feature larger health pools and higher flinch thresholds than weve seen in World.According to Tokuda, this is because the studio wants players to make frequent use of the games new Focus Strikes mechanic, which essentially allows players to do massive damage to monsters by exploiting the wounds they accrue throughout a fight. Owing to this mechanic, despite monsters having more health, the duration of hunts wont be too different from what players are used to from previous titles.Its not as if that was our intention from the start, but health did end up being a little bit higher than World once we thought about maintaining appropriate playtimes and player satisfaction, compared to past titles, explained Tokuda. Elements like flinch resistance are also higher, but this doesnt mean that hunts will be tedious. Part of the purpose of Focus Mode is to allow players to feel more accomplished through shorter loops. We tried to design it so that the time they spend hunting is even more concentrated than before.Tokuda spoke quite a bit about Focus Strikes, explaining that the studio wanted to make sure that each weapon type feels unique with the mechanic. This led to the studio making unique Focus Strike animations for each weapon. He did, however, admit that Focus Strikes may have been a bit too strong from the beta tests back in November.For Focus Strikes, we wanted to have animations that show each weapons uniqueness, said Tokuda. But I admit that this also created a variation between weapons during the open beta test where some were far too strong, while feeling the strengths of others was difficult. Though we do allow differences between weapons in order to give them personality, we dont want the disparity between weapons to be too extreme, and so were tuning them to be more standardized for the official release of the game.Earlier this month, Tokuda had also spoken about how Capcom decides which old monster to bring back for its new title, and how much of the roster should consist of new monsters. Ultimately, rather than having some sort of quota, the studio instead focuses on what would be an ideal experience for the player, as well as how a monster would fit into the ecology of the world created in the new game.Tokuda also explained that it designed new monsters by taking into account how it would affect the ecology of the zones it is being designed for. Providing the example of Monster Hunter Wilds cover monster Arkveld, Tokuda mentioned that the developers had to consider things like where the monster would sit in the hierarchy of monsters that would be predators and prey, among many other things.Monster Hunter Wilds is coming to PC, PS5 and Xbox Series X/S on February 28.