Ai August 24, 2024

Black Myth: Wukong is already one of the fastest-selling games of all time, moving almost as many units in one week as Elden Ring and Cyberpunk did in their first months


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Black Myth: Wukong is already one of the fastest-selling games of all time, moving almost as many units in one week as Elden Ring and Cyberpunk did in their first months

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Black Myth: Wukong’s first week of sales numbers are in, and they firmly inhabit “Don’t take a big sip of coffee before you look at them” territory. 10 million units sold, which, as industry analyst Daniel Ahmad pointed out on X, “The Everything App,” is a record-breaking performance that leaves some of the biggest releases of the past few years in the dust.

For perspective, here are some comparative numbers:

The only game that comes close is Palworld’s 19 million players in two weeks, a mark that Black Myth: Wukong seems on track to surpass. It’s a sales figure that lines up with Wukong having leapfrogged the competition to be the #2 most-played game in Steam’s history by concurrent players. Before that, it was also the most wishlisted game on the platform after The Day Before met its ignominious end.

But Wukong is clearly a much better game than the previous wishlist champ. PC Gamer associate editor Tyler Colp awarded it an 87% in our review of Black Myth: Wukong, praising it as a more approachable interpretation of Souls-style combat, differentiating itself from FromSoftware instead of slavishly imitating the king of the genre. The sense of whimsy and magic is what has me really curious to try it, though, with some of the situations Tyler describes in the game sounding like the best kind of Witcher quests where Geralt has to hash things out with a troll or forest sprite or something.

The primary driver of Wukong’s sales success is its popularity in China, where developer Game Science is based. Games industry analyst firm Niko has an in-depth article by Daniel Ahmad breaking this down. 93% of Wukong’s Steam reviews are in simplified Chinese, and Steam shattered its previous download bandwidth record (set during Cyberpunk’s launch) by a whopping 28 terabytes per second on Wukong’s August 20 launch⁠—82% of that traffic originated in East Asia. Gameplay videos and previews of Wukong have also been dominating Chinese social networks like bilibili.

We can likely expect similar success stories as the Chinese games industry experiments with more big-budget releases like Wukong. There’s even another one right around the corner: Although it’s a very different style of game⁠—a live service multiplayer shooter and not a cinematic single player campaign⁠—Mecha Break is bringing some serious flash and production values to its Gundam-inspired take on hero shooters.

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Blockbuster Chinese video game tried to police players - and divided the internet

Getty Images Black Myth: Wukong sold more than 4.5 million more copies within 24 hours

An anthropomorphic monkey and a campaign against “feminist propaganda” set the video gaming community alight this week, following the release of the most successful Chinese title of all time. Many players were furious after the company behind Black Myth: Wukong sent them a list of topics to avoid while livestreaming the game, including “feminist propaganda, fetishisation, and other content that instigates negative discourse”. Still, within 24 hours of its release on Tuesday, it became the second most-played game ever on streaming platform Steam, garnering more than 2.1 million concurrent players and selling more than 4.5 million copies. The game, based on the classic 16th-century Chinese novel Journey to the West, is being seen as a rare example of popular media broadcasting Chinese stories on an international stage.

What is Black Myth about?

Black Myth: Wukong is a single-player action game where players take on the role of “the Destined One”- an anthropomorphic monkey with supernatural powers. The Destined One is based on the character of Sun Wukong, or the Monkey King, a key character in Journey to the West. That novel, considered one of the greats of Chinese literature, draws heavily from Chinese mythology as well as Confucianism, Taoist and Buddhist folklore. It has inspired hundreds of international films, TV shows and cartoons, including the popular Japanese anime series Dragon Ball Z and the 2008 Chinese-American fantasy film The Forbidden Kingdom.

Getty Images The big-budget game is based on the classic 16th-century Chinese novel Journey to the West

Why is Black Myth such a huge hit?

First announced via a hugely popular teaser trailer in August 2020, Black Myth launched on Tuesday after four years of anticipation. It is the Chinese video game industry’s first AAA release – a title typically given to big-budget games from major companies. High-end graphics, sophisticated game design and hot-blooded hype have all contributed to its success - as well as the size of China’s gaming community, which is the largest in the world. “It’s not just a Chinese game targeting the Chinese market or the Chinese-speaking world,” Haiqing Yu, a professor at Australia’s RMIT University, whose research specialises in the sociopolitical and economic impact of China’s digital media, told the BBC. “Players all over the world [are playing] a game that has a Chinese cultural factor.” This has become a huge source of national pride in the country. The Department of Culture and Tourism in Shanxi Province, an area that includes many locations and set pieces featured in the game, released a video on Tuesday that showcased the real-world attractions, triggering a surge in tourism dubbed “Wukong Travel”. Videos posted on TikTok in the wake of Black Myth’s release show tourists flooding temples and shrines featured in the game, in what one X user characterised as a “successful example of cultural rediscovery”. Niko Partners, a company that researches and analyses video games markets and consumers in Asia, similarly pointed out that Black Myth “helps showcase Chinese mythology, traditions, culture and real-life locations in China to the world”.

Why has it sparked controversy?

Ahead of Black Myth’s release, some content creators and streamers revealed that a company affiliated with its developer had sent them a list of topics to avoid talking about while livestreaming the game: including “feminist propaganda, fetishisation, and other content that instigates negative discourse”.

Getty Images Black Myth was concurrently played by a record 2.1 million people on the day of its release

While it is not clear what was precisely meant by “feminist propaganda”, a widely circulated report by video game publication IGN in November alleged a history of sexist and inappropriate behaviour from employees of Game Science, the studio behind Black Myth. Other topics designated as “Don’ts” in the document, which has been widely shared on social media and YouTube, included politics, Covid-19, and China’s video game industry policies. The directive, which was sent out by co-publisher Hero Games, has stoked controversy outside China. Multiple content creators refused to review the game, claiming its developers were trying to censor discussion and stifle freedom of speech.

Others chose to directly defy the warnings. One creator with the username Moonmoon launched a Twitch stream of Black Myth titled “Covid-19 Isolation Taiwan (Is a Real Country) Feminism Propaganda”. Another streamer, Rui Zhong, discussed China’s one-child policy on camera while playing the game. On Thursday, Chinese social media platform Weibo banned 138 users who were deemed to be violating its guidelines when discussing Black Myth. According to an article on the state-run Global Times news site, a number of the banned Weibo users were “deviating from discussing the game itself but instead using it as a platform for spreading ‘gender opposition,’ ‘personal attacks’, and other irrational comments”.

Has this affected the game’s success?

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I’ve never been so utterly blown away, yet simultaneously so unbelievably frustrated by a game as I have been with Black Myth: Wukong. This is, undoubtedly, one of the most ambitious and impressive action games I’ve played. It’s stunningly gorgeous; its combat is fantastic; it’s incredibly challenging, but always satisfying to overcome; and the setting is refreshingly unique and steeped in rich Chinese culture, just to sing a few of its praises. Despite all of that, it often feels like it’s barely holding it all together. I suffered numerous crashes on PC (the PlayStation 5 version wasn’t made available for this review), despite having a top-of-the-line setup with a GeForce RTX 4090, not to mention the multiple times I fell through the ground and died just as I was on the verge of defeating a particularly tough boss, or the way characters would randomly switch from English to Chinese, or the way the dialogue audio would drop out all together and leave me completely in the dark during an important cutscene. It’s a rickety roller coaster for sure, and there were definitely spots during the ride where I was not having a great time, but taken as a whole this is one adventure where the bumps are worth it.

Black Myth: Wukong’s story is somewhat of a follow up to the classic novel Journey to the West by Wu Cheng’en, a book that I only personally know thanks to very loose adaptations like Dragon Ball and Enslaved: Odyssey to the West. That surface-level familiarity didn’t help much though, as the interpretation that the developers at GameScience have crafted here is laden with references to characters and events from the novel without doing a great job of bringing you up to speed on who Sun Wukong is or what he encountered on his titular journey. I had to look online to understand who Zhu Bhajie was, what his history with Wukong is, and what the significance of certain encounters were, because otherwise I’d have been completely lost at times.

Black Myth: Wukong Gameplay Screenshots 51 Images

IGN’s Twenty Questions - Guess the game! IGN’s Twenty Questions - Guess the game! 💡 Hint To start: …try asking a question that can be answered with a “Yes” or “No”. 000/250 Ask

You play as The Destined One, a literal monkey who wakes up one morning and decides to set out on a roughly 40-hour journey to locate the six relics of Wukong. While the moment-to-moment storytelling is fairly unremarkable – largely due to a mute protagonist and side characters that aren’t given enough screen time to develop – each of the six self-contained chapters culminates with a stunningly gorgeous animated vignette that tells a short story about that story’s main antagonist. Each one is done in a completely different art style, with one drawn to look like a storybook, another using stop-motion animation, and another done in the style of an anime. Every single one of them is beautiful and poignant, and I couldn’t help but wish that the main story managed to move me in similar ways.

My initial read on Wukong was that it was a soulslike, given the checkpoint system, the stamina bar that governs your actions in combat, and the dodge-heavy fighting style. But as it turns out, Wukong has more in common with traditional action games like what you might expect from Bayonetta developer PlatinumGames than it does with anything FromSoftware has made. Most of the usual soulslike conventions are missing: There is no penalty for death outside of respawning at the nearest checkpoint (no corpse run is required to regain your loot); you don’t use a shared currency to level up your stats and purchase items or upgrades; and while there is gear and stats to consider, you largely just go and swap out the old equipment with the new as opposed to making choices as to what kind of weapon or piece of armor you want to hold on to and upgrade.

“ It’s more forgiving, but that doesn’t mean it’s any less difficult.

And even though I’m a big fan of soulslikes, ditching those mechanics feels like the right move for the game that Wukong is trying to be. It’s far more forgiving, focused on keeping you in the action rather than poring over menus or retracing your steps to regain your lost currency after dying, and Wukong is a better, more distinctive game for it.

To be clear, though, when I say it’s more forgiving I don’t mean that it’s any less difficult than a From-style game. In fact, I’d go so far as to say that between this and Elden Ring: Shadow of the Erdtree, I had more difficulty getting through Wukong’s toughest challenges (and, no, there aren’t any difficult options). But at the same time those challenges never felt unfair, and overcoming some of the tougher boss fights was always a satisfying combination of learning their attack patterns, figuring out where I could maximize my punishment windows, and tweaking my loadout in ways that made the best use of my chosen powers.

Combat in Black Myth: Wukong is simple and elegant, thanks in part to some tools that are really fun to play around with. Success hinges on a delicate balance of twitch reflex-style gameplay mixed with careful resource management that largely revolves around a Focus Meter which builds up when you land hits and perfectly dodge enemy attacks. You gain a Focus point whenever that meter fills up, which you could then spend in the middle of a light attack combo for a “varied combo,” or you can just use a heavy attack on its own for a powerful strike that can be charged even further if two, three, or even four Focus points are consumed all at once.

Do you enjoy the Corpse Run mechanic, where you have to get back to where you died to pick up lost items/XP/money? Yes, it’s tense and fun! Battles are more fun if there are high stakes. It works if I’m not dying too often. No, I want to get right back in and try that fight again. It really depends on the game. Other - tell us in the comments. Answer See Results

You also have access to a small handful of spells, governed by a mana meter, that are versatile enough to be useful in a wide array of situations. The Immobilize spell, for instance, freezes enemies for a short time, allowing you to get in some quick hits and potentially stagger them to allow for even more free damage; Cloud Step turns you invisible and creates a decoy for your enemies to focus on while you break away, heal up, and then hit your foe with a surprise attack that can crit; Rock Solid briefly turns you into a statue that will cause an enemy’s attack to bounce right off of you, giving you an opportunity for a counter-attack; Ring of Fire creates a barrier around you that will initially repel enemies, and grant you some health restoration and enhances any stat altering drinks you may use while standing inside of it; and finally there’s my personal favorite, a Pluck of Many, which lets you make multiple clones of yourself to all gang up on an enemy.

Separate from that you’ve also got transformations, which allow you to morph into powerful creatures that you’ve already bested in battle. What’s really cool about these is that they don’t cost any mana (they’re tied to a very lengthy cooldown instead) and they turn you into a totally different character, complete with an all new moveset, special moves that use your focus meter, and more. For example, one of the first bosses you fight is a wolf with a fiery dualblade that has a lightning fast dash attack. When you defeat him, you’ll gain his transformation and be able to do that very same dash attack to your enemies, and once you build up his focus meter, you’ll even get to do a hugely powerful leaping strike that can ignite foes and deal damage over time to them.

“ There is an excellent blend of different combat options.

And finally there are Spirit Skills, which are earned by defeating certain more powerful versions of enemies and absorbing their essence into your gourd. These are effectively transformations that only last for one attack and are also tied to a fairly lengthy cooldown, but it’s great to be able to, for example, use the Wandering Wight’s powerful headbutt attack to get an extra stagger after immobilizing an enemy. These Spirit Skills can also be leveled up, which makes it so that even early game Spirits never lose their strength as the campaign rolls on.

It’s an excellent blend of options, especially when mixed with some truly incredible boss fights, and Wukong introduces all of these elements at a thoughtfully measured pace so that I never felt overwhelmed. Make no mistake: The Destined One is extremely powerful, and being in control of him is definitely a heck of a power trip – even beyond the many powers and abilities he has at his disposal, nothing beats the feeling of just slamming a 50-foot bo staff down onto an enemy’s head – but I still had to be smart with how I used my spells due to the fact that mana restoration is actually very difficult.

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This is where the resource management aspect of combat comes into play: I had to carefully consider what spells were actually worth the mana cost, whether I should save them for a more difficult second phase of a fight, and whether or not I could capitalize on the opportunity if I were to spend the mana in the first place. For instance, even though its my most powerful spell, I often had to hold off on casting my Pluck of Many spell that duplicates my monkey since it has an extremely high mana cost – if i cast it at a bad time, the boss could simply wipe all of my clones out with an AOE attack before they even got a chance to get some damage in. Sometimes the adjustment I had to make when I was stuck on a boss was a simple change in how I used my abilities, and the act of coming up with a new strategy and having it pay off was always extremely satisfying.

While boss battles are where Wukong is at its best, there’s also a highly respectable amount of enemy variety in its regular fights. Level design is of the “wide-linear” variety, usually with a clear main path that leads you from checkpoint to checkpoint, but plenty of opportunities to venture off that path to discover optional goodies. The rewards for exploration are great, too: I’ve found rare crafting materials to make new weapons or armor, special enemies that drop a new Spirit Skill, Curio items that I could equip to enhance my build, and treasure chests that might permanently increase my max health, mana, or stamina, all of which made the time I took to find them feel well spent.

“ Wukong is one of the most gorgeous games I’ve ever played.

On top of that, there are several secret boss fights to discover, key items with mysterious uses that I still haven’t figured out, and plenty more reasons to stray from the beaten path and keep an eye constantly scanning the environment. The main one being that Wukong is one of the most gorgeous games I’ve ever played – every environment is brimming with detail, from the chipped pieces of bark on the trees in the forest, to the real-time deformation of the snow as The Destined One moves through it while dragging his staff along. Not only that, but the animation is incredible too, with wonderful touches and flourishes like the way your character will do a little hop step while locked on to an enemy, then change to strafing around them as opposed to just straight on running while keeping their head turned. The music and sound design is fantastic as well, with epic drum-thumping battle themes and melodic flutes and chimes adding to the air of wonder and mystery as you explore the unknown.

All that said, this game would have benefitted from a map, plain and simple. The lands you explore in Wukong are beautiful, no doubt, but they’re far too big and too crammed with secrets to not give you some sort of navigational help, especially the second and third chapters. This, along with the fact that it’s aggravatingly hard to tell what obstacles can actually be climbed over and what’s an invisible wall, can make exploration quite cumbersome. It’s a good thing the rewards are worth it.

However, it’s hard not to feel like all of Wukong’s splendor and detail came at a great cost. I experienced numerous crashes, with one particular heartbreaker happening right after defeating an extremely tough boss that I then had to defeat again. Several others were more minor and would typically happen as I was loading up a new chapter or fast traveling to another level, but they eventually add up to a lot of frustration.

In addition to that, several times during important cutscenes, all dialogue audio and subtitles would drop out completely, leaving me without any clue as to what was being talked about and no way to rewatch the cutscene; characters would occasionally switch to speaking in Chinese all of a sudden despite me having the audio set to English; the lipflaps of the English dub do not even remotely match what’s being spoken; and most of the journal entries you find along the way haven’t even been localized yet into English.

“ I would love to be able to recommend it without the technical caveats.

The worst, though, was one particular fight in which the boss would plunge me down through the ground during the transition to its final phase, only to have me fall through the world once I regained control of my character. This kept on happening to the point where I thought my game was unavoidably bugged and I wouldn’t be able to reach the end, but my insanity of trying the same thing over and over again eventually yielded a different result for no discernible reason.

These are the kinds of technical problems that GameScience will hopefully look to address in post-launch patches – and it’s not outside of the realm of possibility, as even Cyberpunk 2077 was eventually whipped into shape after its own buggy launch (another game that conspicuously didn’t let anyone try its console version before release). I hope those fixes come swiftly, because while I still wholeheartedly think the things Black Myth: Wukong does so right are worth dealing with those problems, I would love to be able to recommend it without those caveats.


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