1. Hyper Light Breaker
  2. News

Hyper Light Breaker News

Hyper Light Breaker creator on reimagining the series as a 3D roguelike: 'I don't think that you could really release Drifter today and get the same sort of success'




"They're games of their time," Heart Machine head and Hyper Light series creator Alx Preston told me of the two games in the series, 2016's Drifter and the upcoming open world roguelike, Hyper Light Breaker. "I don't think that you could really release Drifter today and get the same sort of success it had."..
Read more.

Hyper Light Breaker trailer shows off first gameplay in 'infinite open worlds'




Developer Heart Machine has unveiled its first official gameplay trailer for Hyper Light Breaker, a follow-up to 2016's beloved indie Zelda-like Hyper Light Drifter. While Breaker is a huge gameplay departure for the series, its distinctive soundscapes and visual identity seem very much intact...
Read more.

Hyper Light Breaker goes into Steam Early Access this fall, first gameplay trailer released

The first gameplay trailer for Hyper Light Breaker, the Hyper Light 3D co-op rogue-lite adventure from Heart Machine, has been released.

The new co-op rogue-lite adventure is set in the Hyper Light Drifter universe, but set decades prior to Drifter. In this, you take on the role of a Breaker to help establish a settlement in a new frontier.

Using a combination of hack-and-slash combat, ranged weaponry and gadgets, you will fight through and explore a varitey of procedurally-generated open worlds. Try to not only protect the Settlement, but uncover the dark truths of the Crowns, The Abyss King, and the brutal landscape.

Read more

Hyper Light Breaker: Pangea

Creating A Multiplayer Rogue-lite With Endless Open Worlds

We’ve shared extensively about our tech art strategies and proc gen processes in both a recent Heart to Heart with Len White and Christian Sparks as well as on our dev blog. We’ve also discussed our environment art works in progress in a different Heart to Heart with Will Tate and on our blog as well.

That was all months ago; often, a few months can mean a lifetime in game development.

Original Vision

Years ago now, when (Alx) was ideating on the design pillars of the game, the question that came to mind was “what would you do in an open world you’d never seed again if you die?”

With that in mind, we made decisions in the early days of our game to try for a more reasonable approach of this idea as we built our systems, since it seemed insurmountable. So, we created an adjacent version, something that captured parts of this design ideal. We had a large, open biomes, but they were segmented in a stage-by-stage format to make it more feasible for us to build.

Over the course of development, we found that, as we continued to build the technology needed for these smaller open-biomes, that we could actually leverage the tools to make the original vision a reality. Thus, we shifted away from the more limiting and (ironically) more complex version of a stage-to-stage progression, and started on a “Pangaea Shift”.

The Shift



Pangaea is used as a code name, as we were essentially merging all of our stages into one larger map to create an open world.

This shift meant that we would mean that we lose some time up front reconfiguring some parts of the game to function in the ne structure, but gain time on the backend and a much more exciting game format to dive into. We were excited and scared, all at once.

This shift yields us:
  • Highly differentiated points of interest on a global scale, resulting in entirely new biomes to explore instead of sub-variations of the same biomes
  • Reduced per-level workload for Houdini, focusing on simpler, bolder biome elements since the context of other biomes being present shifted the dynamics of play so significantly
  • The ability to generate dynamic, global components that affect the whole run / playthrough, rather than just stage or biome-specific elements, opening up tons of exciting mechanics
  • A truly open world, procedurally generated, with biomes juxtaposed seamlessly on the same map
An open world you’ll only see once

It’s a thought that leads to a lot of questions and exciting ideas. How much do I explore this world?
How much time do I invest, knowing I could die at any turn? What are the pressures driving me forward in this world? What’s new, exciting, different this time? What’s coming next?

These are all questions we ask and answer for development, and ones we are excited for you all to see the conclusions of for yourselves in Early Access and beyond!

Wrap Up

What do you think of our process shift? Share your feedback!

See you next time, Breakers!

-The Heart Machine Team

Hyper Light Breaker: Production Process

Check out our latest stream about our production process behind Hyper Light Breaker, with Senior Producer Lesley Mathieson.

[previewyoutube][/previewyoutube]
Some takeaways from the December 9th Heart to Heart stream:
  • Our approach to production tools and process has ever been “I want people to feel it's pretty to use, it's obvious, and they don't have to think about it too much.” - Lesley Mathieson.
  • “The least amount of friction is the most important thing when it comes to getting people to use tools consistently. Even if it's a janky system, what we really need is for people to consistently look at what's going on.” - Alx Preston
  • Some of the tools we use are:
  • Tom’s Planner, an online Gantt chart maker
  • HacknPlan, a game design project management tool
  • MantisHub, a bug and issue tracker