Quasi 10 years later, Monster Hunter Wilds espanderà finalmente uno dei tipi di mostri più belli e rari dell'intera serie
Capcom fired out a fresh batch of Monster Hunter Wilds info via a PlayStation stream earlier today, and while the headliner is the long-awaited Monster Hunter Wilds open beta, I’m personally more excited by one of the newly revealed monsters. A beta was inevitable, but a new octopus boss is a welcome surprise.
The Monster Hunter Wilds lineup now includes the oily brute wyvern Rompopolo, the ape-like fanged beast Ajarakan, and – most interestingly – a fiery octopus known to the locals as the Black Flame. While technically unnamed and unclassified, the Black Flame is clearly a fire-spewing, oil-coated cephalopod. This automatically puts it in one of the smallest groups of monsters in the entire series, and it’s the most octopus-like one of the bunch by some distance.
We’ve seen plenty of tendrils and tentacles in Monster Hunter, but true cephalopods are in short supply. The standouts are Yama Tsukami, an octopus-ish Elder Dragon from Monster Hunter 2, and Nakarkos, an armored squid which was introduced in 2015’s Monster Hunter Generations and which is also, somehow, an Elder Dragon. As a reminder, one of the Elder Dragons is a horse. Guardi, Capcom’s been playing fast and loose with the label for years – if it’s weird and powerful, it’s probably an Elder Dragon.
Il punto è, we finally have a new cephalopod after nearly 10 years, and this Black Flame looks mighty cool. It’s currently positioned as the alpha monster of the Oilwell Basin, which suggests it’s not an Elder Dragon since those are typically defined by their status outside normal ecosystems. In other words, this could be an all-new classification of monster, assuming Capcom finally codifies cephalopods. That, or it could get lumped in with leviathans. In entrambi i casi, the fact that Monster Hunter Wilds can support monsters that are built and animated like this is encouraging, as it opens the door for yet more imaginative designs to come.