Before it was picked up by , free-to-play early access arena shooter BattleCore Arena—which (re)launched —was a three-person project. There was one problem: none of the three friends, who met at work, were 3D animators.
The plan: just make the characters round.
"We found ourselves without a 3D animator," said lead programmer Romain Bienkowski in a dev diary, translated from French. "And we said to ourselves, 'How do we make a videogame without animating characters?' That's when we said, 'Actually, we can simply maybe make spheres.'"
Spheres were "perfect" for their concept, anyhow, said Bienkowski, because BattleCore is an arena shooter whose focus is squarely—or roundly, I guess—on movement and physics. The team battles take place on floating arenas, and eliminations are Smash Bros style: Shoot another player to deplete their health, then hit them again to launch them out of bounds for a point.
Players can save themselves from elimination with double jumps and air dashes. The trickiest movement ability to come to grips with—Ubisoft let me play a couple rounds last week—is like a gravity multiplier that makes your sphere drop out of the air and (you hope) onto solid footing, where you're not [[link]] as easy a target. Some pretty fancy maneuvering is possible with all the abilities combined, though I was just doing everything I could to avoid rolling off the map of my own accord. The main thing I noticed was that teamwork feels essential: It's really hard to eliminate another player on your own.
BattleCore currently includes a 3v3 mode, a free-for-all mode, and "competitive team-based Q-Ball Mode, where catching and passing as long as possible the quantum ball will lead you to victory."
This is technically a re-release, since the first version of BattleCore came out on Steam in 2017. That version got its last update in 2019, and the new Ubisoft version of the game has switched to a free-to-play model—BattleCore will now make its money with cosmetics.
It seems Ubisoft is relaxing its old Ubisoft Store and Epic Games Store exclusivity policy, because BattleCore's relaunch includes a release, as did the early access the company just published.
It's always tough to say how these niche multiplayer games are going to do. They can be brilliant, and still not make it very far. We loved Knockout City, for instance, but its servers closed up after just a couple years (though the for fan servers, which was nice). I'm also reminded of , a free 2020 arena shooter on the Epic Games Store—it also happens to involve round characters, and never gained much traction, but its developer recently announced that it's giving the concept .
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