Second Horizon Hunters Gathering Playtest Set for This Month: Streamlined Onboarding and Harder Challenges
Breaking: Second Playtest Announced for Horizon Hunters Gathering
Horizon Hunters Gathering will host a second playtest later this month, developer Guerrilla Games confirmed today. The test focuses on improved onboarding for newcomers and heightened difficulty for veteran players.

Registration opens immediately, with limited spots available. The playtest follows the first public trial earlier this year, which received mixed feedback on complexity and accessibility.
Background
Horizon Hunters Gathering is an upcoming multiplayer title set in a new corner of the Horizon universe. Unlike the single-player adventures of Aloy, this game emphasizes cooperative monster hunting and crafting.
The first playtest revealed sharp learning curves and uneven challenge scaling. Players struggled with tutorial clarity, while seasoned hunters found early content too easy. The team has since redesigned the onboarding system and recalibrated combat encounters.
Better Onboarding
Lead Designer Maria Chen explained the changes: We've overhauled the tutorial to be more contextual and less intrusive. New players will learn by doing, not reading.
The system now includes guided tasks, tooltip highlights, and a gradual introduction of mechanics.
Community Manager Tomás Rivera added: We listened to the feedback. The first test felt overwhelming for some. This time, we want everyone to feel welcome from the start.

Tougher Challenges
For veteran players, the second playtest introduces Elite Hunts—scaled-up versions of classic monsters with new attack patterns and environmental hazards. Rivera said: We want master hunters to sweat. Expect longer fights and smarter AI.
Game analyst Dr. Fiona Keane noted: Adjusting difficulty for both new and veteran players is tricky. This dual-focused update shows Guerrilla is serious about balancing accessibility with depth.
What This Means
The second playtest signals Guerrilla Games' commitment to feedback-driven development. By targeting onboarding and challenge pain points, the studio aims to broaden the game's appeal without alienating core fans.
If successful, Horizon Hunters Gathering could carve a niche as a more approachable yet demanding monster-hunter. The test's outcome may also influence the game's release timeline—still unannounced but expected late next year.
Players interested in participating can sign up via the official registration page. The test will run for a limited period, exact dates to be revealed shortly.
We will continue to monitor developments and bring you updates as they happen.
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