Hero shooter

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A hero shooter is a subgenre of shooter games that cover both the first-person shooter and third-person shooter genres. These games emphasize "hero" characters that have distinctive abilities and/or weapons that are specific to them.

Hero shooters have been considered to have strong potential as an esport, as a large degree of skill and coordination arises from the importance of teamwork.

Game design[]

Hero shooters are a variation of multiplayer first- or third-person shooters, where players form into two or more teams and select from pre-designed "hero" characters that each possess distinctive attributes, skills, weapons, and other passive and active abilities. Hero shooters strongly encourage teamwork between players on a team, guiding players to select effective combinations of hero characters and coordinate the use of hero abilities during a match.[1]

Hero shooters take many of their design elements from older class-based shooter, multiplayer online battle arena (MOBA) and fighting games. Some incorporate the role-playing elements from MOBAs, where as a match progresses, the player can opt to buy or improve predefined skills for their selected hero, adapting these to the dynamics of the match. In other hero shooters, players have freedom to change to a new hero at respawn points as to alter team composition to better challenge their opponents.[1]

Because of the focus on heroes as distinctive characters, hero shooters will often feature more narrative elements than traditional team-based shooters, providing backstories for each character and an emphasis on the story and world in which the games are set.[1][2]

History[]

Origins[]

The origins of hero shooters can be traced back to early tactical shooters that featured class-based playable characters in multiplayer modes. Games like Battlefield 1942 and Team Fortress Classic featured specific roles that a player could select that would come with their own unique abilities and sometimes specific weapons that were not available to the other classes. While the majority of tactical shooters were the main games that featured some form of class based mechanics, other shooters also featured the same gameplay style and had their own take on the system such as Star Wars: Battlefront[3] & Conker: Live & Reloaded.[4]

Valve's Team Fortress 2 in 2007 created the main framework and inspiration for the subgenre. While Team Fortress 2 featured the same class-based system as its predecessor, each specific class was now its own unique "character," which came with a specific personality and appearance. This made the roles more fleshed out and feel more like a real person rather than just a nameless playable character.[5] As Valve continued to expand the game, the company released additional media, including a line of "Meet the Team" videos that helped to build out each character class and their backstory.[6]

Mainstream popularity: 2016–present[]

The subgenre had a substantial rise in popularity with the announcement of Battleborn and Overwatch in 2014, with both games later releasing nearly at the same time in 2016.[5] Battleborn, by Gearbox Software, was the first game to use "hero shooter" in their press material in September 2014.[7] Gearbox made the comparison of Battleborn as a hero shooter to how their Borderlands games were "shooter-looters". Gearbox considered a hero shooter, distinct from MOBAs as it was a first-person shooter first and foremost, but similar to "character-centric games [and] fighting games, hence the ‘hero’ in hero-shooter".[8] Overwatch, announced by Blizzard Entertainment a few months after Battleborn's announcement, was heavily inspired by Team Fortress 2 and MOBAs.[5] Overwatch had evolved out from Blizzard's cancelled Titan, a class-based team shooter which the team had devised a large number of classes, which had caused scope creep and led Blizzard to cancel the project and cut the team. To save what they could, the remaining developers revised the classes into individual heroes with detailed backstories and personalities to make a team-focused hero shooter.[1] Overwatch proved more popular of the two games, and by January 2021, Gearbox opted to shutter Battleborn's servers.[9] The rise in popularity of Overwatch was followed by a flood of similar games like LawBreakers (2017) and Gigantic (2017).[10][11]

Modern popular hero shooters include Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six Siege (2015), Overwatch (2016), Paladins (2018), Apex Legends (2019), Valorant (2020), and Rogue Company (2020).

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d Wood, Austin (October 25, 2016). "What the strange evolution of the hero shooter tells us about the genre's future". PC Gamer. Retrieved July 6, 2021.
  2. ^ "Hero Shooters and You - The Birth of a Genre". TrueAchievements. Retrieved 2020-12-20.
  3. ^ "Star Wars: Battlefront Review". GameSpot. Retrieved 2020-12-20.
  4. ^ "Conker: Live and Reloaded Review". GameSpot. Retrieved 2020-12-20.
  5. ^ a b c Wawro, Alex (6 May 2016). "Hero Shooters: Charting the (re)birth of a genre". www.gamasutra.com. Retrieved 2020-12-20.
  6. ^ Tolito, Stephan (May 31, 2009). "Valve Dreams Of Team Fortress 2 Movie, Divulges 'Meet The Team' Origins". Kotaku. Archived from the original on June 2, 2009. Retrieved May 31, 2009.
  7. ^ Molina, Brett (September 18, 2014). "Preview: 'Battleborn' introduces the 'hero shooter'". USA Today. Retrieved July 6, 2021.
  8. ^ Wilson, Jason (July 8, 2014). "Battleborn is 2K's new 'hero shooter' from Borderlands 2 developer Gearbox Software — it's not a MOBA". Venture Beat. Retrieved July 4, 2021.
  9. ^ Vincent, Brittany (January 31, 2021). "Hero Shooter Battleborn Shuts Down for Good". PC Magazine. Retrieved January 31, 2021.
  10. ^ "We look at how Lawbreakers is taking the genre Overwatch nearly mastered and refining it further". Red Bull. Retrieved 2021-07-10.
  11. ^ Marks, Tom (2016-09-03). "How will Gigantic stand out in a world ruled by Overwatch?". PC Gamer. Retrieved 2021-07-10.
Retrieved from ""