Optional Boss Fights? Hell Yes

The upcoming Axiom Verge 2 is letting players skip boss fights if they want

Illustration for article titled Optional Boss Fights? Hell Yes
Image: Axion Verge 2

There’s a big feature on the upcoming Axion Verge 2 over on the PlayStation Blog, and while the whole thing will be of interest to fans of the first game, there’s one passage in particular that really stood out to me.

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Written by the series’ creator Tom Happ, it talks about how he’s approaching the tough question of difficulty when it comes to designing games, and the novel solution (well, solutions) he’s come up with for Axion Verge 2:

Although I try to put on my blinders with respect to other people’s opinions about my games and stay true to my original vision, one common theme came up when I watched people play. There were some people who wished the game were a lot harder, and there were those who wanted it to be easier. Some loved the exploration but just got to a boss they couldn’t get past. That’s happened to me. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve had to stop playing a game because of a choke point.

I addressed the difficulty issue in two ways. First, I’m letting players adjust their own difficulty settings. Rather than choosing among an Easy, Normal, and Hard Mode, players can adjust both how much damage they do and how much enemies damage you. Second, bosses are optional. You will be rewarded for defeating them, but gone are the days where they stood in between you and the rest of the game.

Without (obviously) seeing how they work in practice, in theory these ideas both sound fantastic. Sometimes boss fights are challenging and rewarding experiences, and other times they’re just tedious roadblocks standing between you and the actual fun parts of a game, so sure, why not give players the option to turn them off if they want.

And damage sliders? Even better! General difficulty settings do their job in the most overriding sense, but the option to fine-tune things—like, say, leaving yourself as vulnerable as higher difficulty settings but also increasing the damage you do—sounds great.

Look at Control, for example, which has a one-shot “cheat” mode that, while obviously making the game easier, also makes it incredibly satisfying, to the point where I went from turning it on as a novelty to just leaving it on because it felt so badass.

Happ’s ideas aren’t the only ones in this area, of course, nor might they even be the first, but seeing them both mentioned together like that is great to see published somewhere like the PlayStation Blog, because they’re a much more nuanced and practical way of approaching difficulty than the tired “we need a story mode” vs “git gud” argument.

Luke Plunkett is a Senior Editor based in Canberra, Australia. He has written a book on cosplay, designed a game about airplanes, and also runs cosplay.kotaku.com.

DISCUSSION

signofthenine
signofthenine

You will be rewarded for defeating them, but gone are the days where they stood in between you and the rest of the game.

This is really cool. As someone who plays on story mode, and wants to experience a game and then move onto the next one, I applaud this.

And before I get told to “get gud”, this is totally optional. The way I play the game doesn’t affect the way you play the game at all.