Astro Bot serves as a kind of "new beginning" for the platforming mascot that won everyone over while pat-patting around our controllers in PS5 pack-in game Astro's Playroom. But while trying to reintroduce the loveable hero in a much-larger, full-priced adventure, the developers at Team Asobi almost went down an open-world route.
Speaking to Edge Magazine in its 400th Issue, which features a whopping ten unique covers with different cosplaying Astro Bots on each, creative director Nicholas Doucet said the team "did consider, at first: should this be an open-world game?" The only reason that Astro Bot eventually "went for a level-based approach" was "because that was the one that gave us the most control over the game's variety."
Astro Bot, as it is now, looks to be more like a Super Mario Odyssey type of situation. Our Astro Bot gets into a nasty crash and needs to travel between 80 different planets to fix his ship, and along the way he'll be saving around 150 "VIP bots" - the bots cosplaying as PlayStation game characters, from Sly Cooper and Bloodborne's hatted cover guy, to my favorite good boy in games, The Last Guardian's Trico.
For a while during development, the game's galaxy-spanning structure was still up in the air, though. "The way we work at Team Asobi is that we do a lot of prototyping of gameplay mechanics, without necessarily knowing what game we're making yet," Doucet continued. "So we created a lot of these demos, trying to come up with new, expressive ways to use the DualSense, and [then asked] how these could translate into power-ups."
While Astro's previous romp had us twisting our controllers side to side to climb up mountains in a monkey suit or hop horizontally as a spring, Astro Bot's announcement trailer showed off all-new power-ups like a doggy-jetpack, boxing gloves that double as a grappling hook, and a contraption that pauses time. "With platforming, getting good gameplay, good controls, precision while still being accessible, it's always a difficult thing," Doucet notes, though the team seems to have scored big time if our glowing Astro Bot preview is any indication.
Astro Bot was the most-wishlisted game from Summer Game Fest, beating Doom: The Dark Ages and Gears of War: E-Day.
snowbaby_wet on July 15th, 2024 at 09:34 UTC »
This is great news for someone who thinks 90% of open world games should be closed.
toes_sky on July 15th, 2024 at 08:23 UTC »
Thank God. I'm more excited for this game.
Strangely, I'm excited for these games.
I wanted the biggest, most realistic game as a kid. But now all I want is a game with fun graphics, gameplay, and development that doesn't take 10 years and 100 million dollars.
koehlersen on July 15th, 2024 at 08:14 UTC »
I'm glad. Not all games must be open world. Linear or mission-based games are great.
Platformers benefit most from not being open world. Let's explore, problem-solve, and secret-hunt in a realistic I'd rather find these things myself than read about them in two weeks in a gaming article about something only 0.1% of players find through normal play.