Skip to main content

Take a first look at Gears of War creator Cliff Bleszinski’s arena shooter

boss key bluestreak first footage project
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Boss Key Productions, the independent studio founded in 2014 by Gears of War and Unreal Tournament co-creator Cliff Bleszinski, has released the first footage of its upcoming arena shooter, codenamed BlueStreak.

The early, pre-alpha footage shows off a fly-through of one of the game’s levels. The environment features a mixture of traditional Japanese imagery and science fiction: think samurai outfits, jade dragon statues, and souped-up assault rifles. It draws from a long tradition of Japanophilic sci-fi, tracing back to the early ’80s with films like Blade Runner tying the rise of dystopian sci-fi to paranoia about Japan becoming the global economic power.

Recommended Videos

Bleszinski previously revealed details about Bluestreak during a Reddit AMA in October 2014. The game is free-to-play, but he was insistent that optional in-game fees wouldn’t give an advantage to players with money to spend. Maple Story publisher Nexon will publish, providing its expertise in that sector of the market.

Boss Key's "Project BlueStreak" Pre-Alpha Teaser
Boss Key, the independent studio founded in 2014 by Gears of War creator Cliff Bleszinski, has released the first footage of its upcoming arena shooter, codenamed Bluestreak.

The game does not feature much conventional narrative, but it has a rich foundation of lore and world-building, possibly expanding into other media as the game develops.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

“There will be an emphasis on story, but not in the traditional sense,” Bleszinski explained. “Weapons will have manufacturing corporations, players will have lore/history, and the world will feel there and lived in. We also want to make live-action shorts quarterly to help tell more about the universe outside of the game. If you’re doing a sci-fi IP you need as much of the fiction to come through in other mediums (and with lore) so people care about Plasma Rifle 3 or Player X.”

The facility shown in the footage could be one of these weapons manufacturers, based in Japan. The footage also reveals in a final splash screen that the game is being built in Unreal Engine 4, tying BlueStreak back to the beginning of Bleszinzki’s career at Epic Games.

Will Fulton
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Will Fulton is a New York-based writer and theater-maker. In 2011 he co-founded mythic theater company AntiMatter Collective…
If you didn’t become a VR gamer in 2024, you probably never will
A Meta render gives you an idea of what you'll experience in VR with a Quest 3S.

Like many humiliated tech writers, I have been guilty of writing those seven little words that can haunt you for the rest of your career: “This was the year VR took off.”

Yes, a lot of us wide-eyed armchair analysts have fallen victim to this optimism trap over VR’s long lifespan. Half-Life: Alyx finally brings a complete gaming experience to a headset? VR has taken off. PlayStation introduces its own plug-and-play device? We’re off to the races. Meta invests heavily in games and releases a wireless device that makes them easy to play? It’s all happening! Of course, all of those lofty predictions tend to look like deflated balloons six months later.

Read more
Revenge of the Savage Planet spins Google Stadia trauma into comedy gold
Two astronauts frolic as bugs fly overhead in Revenge of the Savage Planet.

The gaming news cycle is so hectic these days that it’s easy to completely forget about a ridiculous industry saga. I was reminded of that while demoing Revenge of the Savage Planet, the latest game from Racoon Logic. When I sat down to try a demo of it ahead of The Game Awards last week, I was greeted by a satirical introduction as a corporate orientation video cheerfully explained that I was an employee on a dangerous mission. As it played, the developer showing me the demo made a crack about Google. I didn’t really understand why, so I laughed and moved on.

It wasn’t until a few minutes later that a long-forgotten thought came back to me. In 2019, Google acquired Typhoon Studios. They were folded into what was supposed to be Google’s first-party game studio, Stadia Games and Entertainment. Two years later, the entire project was shut down and Typhoon Games was spat back out. It formed Racoon Logic later that year, putting the team back to where it started as an indie team.

Read more
Project Century: everything we know so far
Project Century trailer.

Ryu Ga Gotoku Studio (aka RGG) is working overtime on upcoming video games. Not only is it releasing Like a Dragon: Pirate Yakuza in Hawaii in 2025, but it also revealed that it is working on Virtua Fighter 6. If that wasn't enough, we also learned about a new IP from the studio currently being called Project Century. This game looks to be a return to the classic Yakuza games in terms of gameplay, but in a completely unique setting and featuring a new protagonist. Let's rewind the clock and see what we can uncover about this mysterious new game.

For a comprehensive look at all the upcoming PlayStation 5 games, upcoming Xbox Series X games, upcoming PC games, and upcoming Switch games, see our specific lists to find what you're looking for.
Release speculation

Read more