- cross-posted to:
- games@sh.itjust.works
- cross-posted to:
- games@sh.itjust.works
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ninja/post/22013
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ninja/post/22012
BattleBit Remastered, a 254-player FPS game, is currently stealing the limelight on Steam despite being launched in the already crowded market of first-person shooters. Developed by a team of only four people, the $15 indie game quickly became a top seller on the platform. Its success is especially notable since it competes against numerous free, well-supported shooters, yet still manages to outperform even popular titles like Call of Duty.
What’s particularly appealing about BattleBit, however, isn’t just its gameplay, but its pricing model. Instead of following a free-to-play model, BattleBit costs $15 upfront. But this purchase comes with the assurance that players will receive a fully-featured game with no extra hidden costs. The game currently includes six classes, 39 unlockable guns, dozens of class-specific gadgets, 17 destructible maps, and community server support, among other things, making it a great value for its price.
This model stands in stark contrast to the typical free-to-play games that tend to start with a modest offering and then add more content over time. These games often feel like they are always looking at the player as a potential target for further monetization, with constant reminders about battle pass buy-ins and overpriced skin bundles. This approach can lead to players feeling like they’re being asked to invest financially and emotionally in the game’s future potential, rather than simply enjoying what the game offers in the present.
BattleBit, with its upfront price and a promise of no further monetary strings, is refreshingly different. It’s fun, well-balanced, and surprisingly intense for a game with blocky characters and low-detail environments. The robust proximity chat feature also adds an additional layer of immersion and social interaction, with players often role-playing and communicating with genuine conviction during the game.
Despite its minor shortcomings, like the lackluster sound effects for its guns, BattleBit’s previous anonymity has worked in its favor, much like Eric Barone’s Stardew Valley. Gamers come in with zero expectations and are often pleasantly surprised by the depth and quality of the game. Even if future updates don’t materialize, many players feel they have already received their money’s worth from the initial purchase. The game’s focus on present value, rather than speculative future updates, appears to be a winning strategy in the eyes of its growing fanbase.
It’s not a boomer shooter, though. It is heavily inspired by, and aims to compete with, the Battlefield series of shooters.
Love the game.
Came here to say this, just because it has voxel style graphics doesn’t make it a boomer shooter. I would say it’s definitely a regular FPS in the style of Battlefield or modern CoD vs a boomer shooter like Wolfenstein or modern examples like Warhammer 40k: Boltgun or Ultrakill.
I agree, it is a very fun game and captures the classic chaotiveness that I got from playing Battlefield 2 back in the day.
What’s a boomer shooter?
I mean its just a shooter that follows in the footsteps of wolfenstein/doom with very maze like designs with a reliance of colored key(cards), secrets in walls, where you are typically holding your whole arsenal at once. I wouldn’t really call BF1942 a boomer shooter or any of the older BF games part of the genre, which is mostly mirroring.
battlefield is no competition xD
Using FACEit anti cheat and dropping Linux is a bad look. The game also doesn’t have any sound effects except for bullets. The moderation is also very strict, beware.
What’s so bad about faceit, I’m genuinely curious. The sound effect thing is a bit harsh because there are more sound effects than bullets like walking, driving things breaking and a bit more
Faceit anticheat is very intrusive and requires disabling virtualization in bios. Also means no Linux support.
Oof no way I’d disable one of my computer’s core functions just to prove I’m not cheating in a first person shooter
Reading FaceIT page it seems virtualisation is allowed as long as TPM 2.0 and SecureBoot is enabled.
Still sucks though.
Wdym by “moderation is very strict”?
So the game has proximity chat functionality but you get banned if you say the littlest of cusses or abusive words
Idk, I’ve been playing it a fair bit and I haven’t had that experience. I’ve seen people get banned but only because they said bigoted shit.
Does anyone else feel like this game is getting super heavily marketed / talked about out of nowhere? Did they pay some big streamer to play it or something ?
It’s a remake of a game from 2017/2018 that had ~100 peak players, and now it has 40K average players? just seems a little weird.
The game has been very popular with the people who knew about it while it was in testing. Combine that with the last battlefield game not doing great (and even some trouble brewing with Squad) it seemed like a hit waiting to happen .
The playtests were streamed/vod’ed. Its only 15 bucks and there is no secret monetization. Its just a return of simplicity. Once people got the ball rolling, its a bit hard to stop. This isn’t to say its not a flawed game since honestly the progression sucks and there needs to be a bit more balancing since its tiring to see the same 4 or 5 guns over and over again.
The market may be crowded but this one finds a very specific niche blend of mechanics that a lot of shooters don’t get quite right. Also you can play it on a potato
Boomer shooter? Wtf is wrong with people.
This isn’t even close to being a boomer shooter, wtf. Anyway this game is extremely well made, intentionally low poly designs but high quality in the action and the fun. It scratches the itch that many dissatisfied Battlefield fans were craving, and it does a good job at that.
It’s a great game but definitely not a boomer shooter, what do you think boomer shooter means?
I wrote n article on it. Go read it. I also mentioned in comments in several places… But I’ll give you a hint… Why do you think the title ends in a question mark?