
Here’s what they propose: Loot Crate Changes Being Made in Star Wars: Battlefront II It includes improvements to the loot crate balance, duplicates, currencies and many other issues brought to the table. These are just a few examples of how your feedback is helping to shape the game.Īccording to the press release, the Battlefront 2 developer has these lists of improvements to focus on before the official release of the game. We are also looking into more ways to allow players to stay and play together as a team – for launch, we’ll have a new feature for you that rewards all players in a spawn wave.

Oh, and the First Order Flametrooper needs some work – we agree he could use a little more… firepower. We’re taking a look at some of the most discussed topics, from Crates and progression to Strike mode (which we’re considering changing to a best of three), the Specialist’s Infiltration ability (which might be a little too overpowered) and more. Rest assured, we’re continuing to listen to you coming out of Beta. There is more player choice in multiplayer through a deeper progression system and an evolving, event-driven live service that keeps the community together by moving away from Season Pass and having all new gameplay content free for all Star Wars Battlefront II players. Yes, there’s more content (new locations, heroes, modes, and the all-new single-player campaign), but we heard your feedback loud and clear after the first game. The Beta was just a small piece of what we’re making. On the brighter side, however, it seems as though the developers are willing and ready to listen: In the latest press release from Star Wars: Battlefront 2 developer EA, the crew responds to the general concerns from the beta that recently ended, and one of them being loot crates.Įnd of match loot box systems can be a bit tricky to get right, but concerns have already popped up regarding the unbalanced probabilities (a.k.a RNG) of getting more powerful items and the possibility that feeds into a pay-to-win scenario. Given the fact that betas are disclosed as unfinished products, there will be plenty of feedback from people with high expectations, or simple ideas for improvement.


When a game as highly anticipated as the sequel to Star Wars: Battlefront, it can be rather nerve-wracking for developers to open up a beta to the public.
