Firestorm*, Battlefield V’s long-awaited foray into the world of battle royale, is coming on March 25. We spoke with several developers on Firestorm about how they came together to create something both true to the Battlefield franchise but also new to the genre.
With one life to live, the stakes in Firestorm battle royale are high. No respawns, a destructive ring of fire, and the anxious feeling that the next encounter might be your last builds the tension of battle at every step. Still, the one life to live means everyone has a fair shot at being the last one standing using the bevy of weapons, reinforcements, and combat vehicles at their disposal.
Battlefield V is already an intense shooter, where a well-placed round can stop you in your tracks. Criterion Games, the team behind Firestorm was eager to ramp up the pressure even more with the new game mode.
With one life to live, the stakes in Firestorm battle royale are high. No respawns, a destructive ring of fire, and the anxious feeling that the next encounter might be your last builds the tension of battle at every step. Still, the one life to live means everyone has a fair shot at being the last one standing using the bevy of weapons, reinforcements, and combat vehicles at their disposal.
Battlefield V is already an intense shooter, where a well-placed round can stop you in your tracks. Criterion Games, the team behind Firestorm was eager to ramp up the pressure even more with the new game mode.
“If you are playing solo and you’re on your own in these huge landscapes, we want players to feel scared or intimidated,” said Steve Uphill, Studio Art Director at Criterion Games.
“Combat can vary widely, with moments of intense action and moments where you are in more open spaces which feel lonely with just you and your squad and the tension is dialed up to 10," Stanley said. "Then, when combat starts, like an explosion or an artillery strike, it really pierces the senses.”
In building this tense, dangerous world of Firestorm, the Criterion team didn’t take anything for granted. Even elements that could be considered standard within a battle royale game, like the ever-encroaching ring, were given special consideration here.
Similar to many battle royale games, Firestorm has a “ring” that slowly encroaches around the map, forcing teams into conflict. With Firestorm, even the ring increases the tension.
“The Ring of Fire is a huge gameplay element,” Uphill said. “At first, we tried putting in some quite gamey-looking walls, but we wanted something that was a bit threatening and would double down on the tension.”
“The wall looks visually impressive, sounds awesome, but it also destroys everything. If you’re in a house or caught in a building it’s not just, ‘okay, I’m going to start taking damage.’ Everything around you starts to fall apart,” Stanley said.
Even with these larger-than-life moments, the Battlefield franchise always strives to bring a sense of realism to their portrayal of conflicts. Pairing that mission with the battle royale genre posed a unique obstacle to the teams.
“One of the core tenets of Battlefield is believability and authenticity and we knew that was going to be a challenge for us with royale,” Uphill said. “We were conscious of not building a theme park world or something too gamey that wouldn’t sit well with the main game. So we had to balance what works well from a gameplay perspective with the authenticity of Battlefield.”
A varied environment was key for the Battlefield team to create enough unique and differentiated areas for players. The rich and varied landscape of Norway offered the perfect setting for the team, allowing for the team to be authentic to a real world setting while also maintaining diversity across maps.
“We didn’t want to do a traditional battle royale map that had one biome that was just desert, or lush green or just snow. We wanted variety in there, like open worlds you see in other games,” Uphill said. “Norway turned out to be pretty good because you have snowy areas, a lot of coastline, and you have drier barren areas. “
“We did a whole lot of research on Norway to make the place more believable,” Art Director Christian Bense said. “In a lot of battle royale games you see a theme park here or a castle there, but we try to make it feel like a little corner of Norway.”
Vehicles are another marquee feature of the Battlefield franchise. For both combat and transportation, there are plans to include a variety of vehicles in Firestorm as well.
“In each section there are a lot of different vehicle types for players to experiment with,” Bense said. “We even have a Schwimmwagen, an amphibious vehicle – the name translates literally as “swimming car” – with a mounted machine gun..”
For more dangerous vehicles like the Panzer IV, players will have to go through some extra obstacles to access them.
“We put those more powerful combat vehicles in bunkers around the map, down into the ground that have two blast doors you have to open,” Stanley said. “As you open a bunker’s doors, alarms go off, and you know with royale you don’t want to telegraph your location. So opening both doors as quickly as possible is essential.”
From the historic vehicles to the deliberate attention to detail, it’s clear that Firestorm has Battlefield’s DNA running deeply through it. With how grounded and serious this mode plans to be, it raises the question: why tractors?
“We actually have a number of vehicles in Firestorm that aren’t in the main game, you couldn’t just have loads of army vehicles. And a tractor which we feel adds a bit of lightness to what is an intense experience,” Uphill said. “So when you do find the tractor there’s a kind of slight comedic relief, you can hook an Anti-Aircraft or Anti-Tank to it and you and your buddies can drive around in it which is quite funny.”
SOURCE : PLAYSTATION BLOG
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