Negotiations aren't the only thing that are breaking down; Overwatch 2's competitive rank system is also broken , according to many players. Many have complained that they are being de-ranked in an unfair manner due to the new system, which seems to be wildly inconsist
Free-to-play games have changed so much since Overwatch 2 events|Https://overwatch2tactics.com/ launched in 2016 that the sequel not only has to adapt to going free but also has to navigate the modern world to find its place if it hopes to earn back its cultural cachet. A big part of gaming that’s changed in the last six years is in how developers approach cosmetics - it’s all about crossovers, baby. Fortnite’s got Star Wars, Indiana Jones, and Uncharted, and is even rumoured to be roping in Doctor Who , while PUBG has joined in on the fun with Spider-Man and NieR. The biggest free-to-play games are all about IP - just look at MultiVersus - but Overwatch never needed that and still doesn’t, and earning back its presence doesn’t mean copying the new kids on the bl
"I made a support ticket with [Blizzard] and told them I was missing my [Widowmaker] Noire skin with proof of preorder and old pics," said one player on Reddit. "All they said was they’re working on it and to check back later. One month later, still missing." It looks like Blizzard still hasn't figured out this is
Fortnite used to have that sense of style and visual identity, but it was lost after each and every crossover proved more popular than the last. Its earlier skins were Epic through and through, with its own designs like a lowly knight and glowing huntress kicking off the battle pass, but now you’ll find the Mandalorian front and centre. Overwatch 2 is off to a good start, however, with a completely unique battle pass full of its own cosmetics and brand-new legendary skins for heroes that are all about t
It’s going to take awhile before we really understand what all of the changes in Overwatch 2 add up to. Even as someone with more than 600 hours played, I’m still trying to figure out what the transition to 5v5 actually means. Right away it was clear that Overwatch 2 is a much faster game. Fewer shields and abilities that CC means more movement, more big plays, and more snowballs. Skilled players have a much better chance of carrying games now, which means heroes with low TTK are even more valuable than ever before. This is the sense I got right away, but what solidified this belief was the design of the three new characters. Sojourn, Junker Queen, and especially Kiriko represent a commitment Overwatch 2 has to independence and personal performance. I’m still undecided on whether that will be better or worse for the game in the long run, but it’s clear Blizzard has rebuilt the game with a focus on the individual over the t
What I love most of all, though, is Junkrat’s ultimate ability: the RIP-Tire. At first, I thought this ability turned him into the explosive tire that goes screeching at the opposing team before blowing them into teeny tiny pieces. A friend very kindly pointed out that Junkrat is still very much on the map, so it’s important I make sure he’s safe before I trigger it. You can’t just run in the open and whip it out - positioning is key. Driving it up a wall and sending it crashing down on unexpecting foes pushing the objective, wiping them all out was my crowning achievement during my first day playing, and hearing my teammates shout "that was huge!" is a memory of the game that will stick with me for a long t
Challenges also incentivize deviant play, which creates a negative game experience. In team games, this means pursuing goals that are different from the rest of your team. The stated objective of the game - get the most kills, score the most goals, capture the most objectives, ect. - may not align with the goals of each individual player. We’ve all seen (and been) the player ignoring the objective while trying to sniper headshots because we had a challenge for it. Both teams suffer when players are asked to do something different than the game’s objective, but the person messing up the game for everyone else is getting rewarded for
Does anyone actually enjoy doing daily challenges in games? I for one resent logging in to play and finding a list of chores to do. Even trivial challenges - something I would accomplish through normal play - rub me the wrong way. I don’t know what I’m more upset about: that someone invented such an anti-player progression system, or that every developer in the world took one look at it and said "Yep, that’s good enough for
There’s already talk of wanting to cash in on the IP hype, and that train of thought could easily lead to Overwatch muddying its personality. Its VP called Fortnite’s collabs "awesome," but looking up to the number one isn’t the right move. It’s become gaming’s toybox, and others like Fall Guys and the aforementioned PUBG have been playing a big game of catch-up to try and reach similar heights, but they won’t. They can’t. Fortnite is on top and that goes above and beyond skins. It hosts concerts, has tie-in comics directly with Marvel, and advertises the newest games and even movies. It brought PlayStation and Xbox-exclusive characters into the fold. Chasing that level of success in mish-mashing IPs is asking for fail