Astro Bot almost went open-world, but opted for 80 planets instead because that led to "the most control over the game's variety"

Authored by gamesradar.com and submitted by TheLostQuest
image for Astro Bot almost went open-world, but opted for 80 planets instead because that led to "the most control over the game's variety"

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.