PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds is in pursuit of a more formally narrative-based experience. — AFP Relaxnews
Influential battle royale PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds is expanding its remit to include narrative experiences, setting up a new studio with Call Of Duty and Dead Space lead Glen Schofield.
The ex-vice president of Visceral Games (Dead Space) and co-founder of Sledgehammer (Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare 3, CoD: WWII) is heading up a new studio tasked with developing a PUBG experience "beyond [the] battle royale" genre.
PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds emerged in 2017 as the spearhead of the 100-player, last-person-standing Battle Royale genre, a continuation of its lead designer's familiarity with the concept as derived from cult Japanese movie Battle Royale and survival elements seen in the Hunger Games adaptations.
It is known for intense multiplayer battles in which unique stories emerge from players' experiences, while the PUBG arenas remain largely unchanged from match to match.
The success of PUBG paved the way for Fortnite to become a worldwide hit across computer, console, and mobile.
Big franchises such as Call Of Duty, Battlefield, and Titanfall (via Apex Legends) also pursued the format, as less well studios likewise took a shot at fame and fortune with their twists on the approach.
Now the co-founder of a Call Of Duty franchise studio, Sledgehammer Games, is helping PUBG Corp develop "an original narrative experience within the PUBG universe".
The project will present the opportunity to "explore the PUBG universe" in a manner that goes "beyond battle royale", Glen Schofield explained.
The move recalls the diversification of Minecraft, even as it reigned supreme over its original genre, first with choice and consequence adventure Minecraft: Story Mode and then as the upcoming augmented reality real-world exploration Minecraft Earth and multiplayer action game Minecraft: Dungeons. – AFP Relaxnews
