Tactical Breach Wizards | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Suspicious Developments |
Publisher(s) | Suspicious Developments |
Engine | Unity[1] |
Platform(s) | Windows |
Release |
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Genre(s) | Turn-based tactics |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Tactical Breach Wizards is a 2024 turn-based tactics video game by Suspicious Developments. Players control a team of wizards who fight against a theocracy. The missions are humorous and involve espionage thriller elements. It is available for Windows and became a best-seller on Steam on release.
Gameplay
Players control a group of outcast wizards who are fighting against a theocracy and private military companies in an urban fantasy setting.[2] Up to six wizards can be on the team. Each wizard has a unique set of skills. For example, a weather witch can summon lightning bolts that can push opponents around, and a necromedic can heal people if they are already dead. Further skills can be unlocked as they complete missions and become more experienced.[3]
Before breaching a door, the team engages in banter. Breaching results in turn-based, tactical combat. During combat, the team's seer can briefly glimpse the future, resulting in players seeing how their choices will play out. If players dislike the result, they can undo their action and try a different tactic. This is possible up until players end their turn. Each level has both required and optional objectives. The optional objectives, such as knocking someone out of a window or defeating all enemies within two turns, raise team members' confidence. This unlocks specialty outfits.[3]
Missions can be replayed, but they do not give additional experience points.[4] After completing a mission, there are cutscenes, further conversations, and anxiety dreams, all of which can advance the plot. The anxiety dreams, which are optional, feature special challenges that, when completed, unlock new special abilities. After winning the game, players can continue through post-game challenges. There is also a harder difficulty mode, and Tactical Breach Wizards includes a level editor.[3]
Development
Developer Tom Francis was previously a game journalist. The idea of making a turn-based tactical game came from issues he had with XCOM 2. Although one of his favorite games, Francis felt it had "big, serious problems" that could improved upon, such as reducing frustration by making the level design simpler. His issues became the design document for a new game. The concept of Call of Duty-style militarized wizards came from a joke among the writers at PC Gamer. Rainbow Six: Vegas 2 inspired the SWAT tactics, and Douglas Adams influenced the writing.[5]
The ability to test out tactics and see the results came from Francis' frustration with losing team members in XCOM for what seemed like arbitrary reasons. Francis discussed this with the developers of Into the Breach, which relies on its user interface to inform players how actions will play out. Francis initially thought it would be better to forgo using UI elements, but players did not like repeatedly testing tactics without UI feedback.[6]
The protagonist, Jen, was originally designed to be an ex-cop. The George Floyd protests in 2020 caused Francis to consider whether it was a good idea to have an ex-cop leading SWAT-style raids. He tried rewriting Jen's background to incorporate commentary on police violence, but feedback from friends convinced him it was a bad idea. The topic was too big to tackle in a character's background, and his efforts were tonally off from the dry, comedic take on everything else. Instead, Francis made Jen a private investigator.[6]
Suspicious Developments released Tactical Breach Wizards for Windows on August 22, 2024.[2] The special edition includes developer commentary, which itself can be used as weapon in-game and thrown at opponents.[7]
Reception
Tactical Breach Wizards received positive reviews on Metacritic.[8] PC Gamer said it avoids being "XCOM in a robe and wizard hat" by focusing on many short combats that have many tactical options without focusing on having a single puzzle game-like solution.[3] GameSpot and Eurogamer likewise praised the freedom granted by the ability to take back moves, allowing players to experiment and find their own solutions.[9][10] Rock Paper Shotgun, GameSpot, and Eurogamer all praised its ability to appeal to both hardcore and casual fans of tactics games.[9][11][10]
PC Gamer enjoyed completing the optional objectives, many of which encouraged them to figure out fun combos.[3] Rock Paper Shotgun compared the challenges to the stylistic stunts in John Wick and praised Tactical Breach Wizards' ability to challenge players without ever becoming frustratingly difficult.[11] Near the end of the game, PC Gamer said the characters become enjoyably overpowered,[3] and IGN said it remains fun despite being somewhat easy.[4] Rock Paper Shotgun said one skill was so overpowered, they used it almost exclusively.[11] GameSpot, however, found there to be occasional difficulty spikes.[9]
Commenting on the story, PC Gamer said it is both "very funny" and "unfailingly sincere", which they felt elevated it beyond being a good tactical game into "something memorable".[3] Rock Paper Shotgun said they found even the menus to have profundity and said it has "brilliant, laugh-out-loud funny writing".[11] GameSpot said the deconstruction of Tom Clancy-style thrillers made the campaign "a joy",[9] and The Guardian praised its ability to turn its silly premise into a "a genuinely intriguing espionage thriller" while avoiding that genre's questionable ethics.[12] GameSpot felt the game as a whole was "both funny and endearing", featuring a self-awareness that they said was earned.[9] IGN felt the story was "solid enough" but said the dialogue is "absolutely stellar throughout".[4]
After release,Tactical Breach Wizards became the third-bestselling item on Steam behind Black Myth: Wukong and the Steam Deck,[13] and the user reviews were 98% positive as of August 2024.[14] GameSpot included it in its list of the best games of 2024,[15] and Rock Paper Shotgun labeled it a "bestest best".[11]
References
- ^ Saver, Michael (2024-08-29). "Games made with Unity: August 2024 in Review". Unity Technologies. Retrieved 2024-09-21.
- ^ a b "Tactical Breach Wizards PC". Gamepressure. 2024-08-22. Retrieved 2024-09-21.
- ^ a b c d e f g Randall, Harvey (2024-08-19). "Tactical Breach Wizards review". PC Gamer. Retrieved 2024-09-21.
- ^ a b c Green, Jarrett (2024-08-19). "Tactical Breach Wizards Review". IGN. Retrieved 2024-09-21.
- ^ Peel, Jeremy (2020-09-10). "XCOM 2's problems inspired a whole other tactics game". PC Gamer. Retrieved 2024-09-21.
- ^ a b Francis, Bryant (2024-08-19). "Tactical Breach Wizards shows how strategy games can tickle the funny bone". Game Developer. Retrieved 2024-09-21.
- ^ Reuben, Nic (2024-08-23). "Even Tactical Breach Wizards' developer commentary can be used to knock people out of windows". Rock Paper Shotgun. Retrieved 2024-09-21.
- ^ "Tactical Breach Wizards". Metacritic. Retrieved 2024-09-21.
- ^ a b c d e Barbosa, Alessandro (2024-08-19). "Tactical Breach Wizards Review - Breach And Cast". GameSpot. Retrieved 2024-09-21.
- ^ a b Wales, Matt (2024-08-23). "Tactical Breach Wizards review - whip-smart design with a generous spirit". Eurogamer. Retrieved 2024-09-21.
- ^ a b c d e Reuben, Nic (2024-08-19). "Tactical Breach Wizards review: humour, heart, smarts and playfulness conjure up an instant genre classic". Rock Paper Shotgun. Retrieved 2024-09-21.
- ^ Lane, Rick (2024-08-20). "Tactical Breach Wizards review – hilarious, quietly radical strategy game is the best since XCOM 2". The Guardian. Retrieved 2024-09-21.
- ^ Koselke, Anna (2024-08-23). "Dev behind turn-based strategy hit Tactical Breach Wizards shocked to slot in behind Black Myth: Wukong and the Steam Deck: "Basically number one"". GamesRadar. Retrieved 2024-09-21.
- ^ Hore, Jamie (2024-08-28). "New strategy game Tactical Breach Wizards wows with 98% Steam rating". PCGamesN. Retrieved 2024-09-21.
- ^ "The Best PC Games To Play In 2024". GameSpot. 2024-09-09. Retrieved 2024-09-21.