Skip to main content

Interview: How an elite team of hardcore gamers helped shape Halo 5 Guardians

halo 5 guardians interview multiplayer beta truth scouts
Image used with permission by copyright holder

“I call it our 343 Avengers.”

That’s Quinn DelHoyo, multiplayer designer on Halo 5 Guardians for developer 343 Industries. He’s referring to the studio’s small group of pro players, superhuman Halo fans assembled for the express purpose of fine-tuning the competitive component in Master Chief’s next grand adventure.

“We wanted to bring in ‘The Team’ to really solidify our plans and help us make an eSports game,” DelHoyo explains. “So we basically put feelers out there and talked to them because we know them personally. It was a recruiting process, trying to figure that out.”

“We’re detecting skill levels better, we’re tracking it over time better, we’re presenting it to players better.”

The core team of four pros includes known names like Sean “Dersky” Swidersky, Mason “Neighbor” Cobb, and Michael “Strongside” Cavanaugh. All are established competitors that have earned Halo accolades. They’ve got one mandate from 343: Play our game and don’t mince words when it comes to feedback. It’s something they’re all comfortable with, as passionate fans.

“They’re integrated into the team, but we try really hard not to have them be truly converted to ‘game developer’ because we want them to be that vocal fan,” DelHoyo says. “So if we have something in the game that can be exploited, they’re gonna use it because it’s in the game. And then we get to make the decision, ‘Is that a bad exploit or is that kinda turned into a feature? What do we do with that?’”

“They find that stuff for us way faster than we could have done without them. They are dedicated. It is their job, not just to break the game and test it, but to really put it through its paces. How deep is this game? How high can players go?”

The trick for 343 is balancing the desire to build a multiplayer experience worthy of eSports with the need to deliver fun for as wide an audience as possible. The key to that is Halo 5 Guardians‘ new Combat Skill Rating, a matchmaking algorithm that measures player skill levels in a way that is meant to ensure fair, competitive matches, which is something of a holy grail for multiplayer-focused games.

Halo-5-Guardians-Multiplayer-Beta-Empire-Monster-Hunter
Image used with permission by copyright holder

“We’re detecting that skill better, we’re tracking it over time better, we’re presenting it to players better, and that’s going to result in better matchmaking and better competition in the matches.” That’s 343’s Chris Lee, director of production on Halo 5 Guardians.

“I think the pro team has really helped bring back the high end of some of [Halo’s] gameplay, and really makes sure there is that skill gap. We need to preserve a skill gap. Our game still has to be really accessible and playable for everyone so we can make sure that players of all skill levels can have fun,” he says.

DelHoyo adds, “We have people, their whole job — and we didn’t have this on Halo 4 — their job is to make that [CSR] system, and to make matchmaking better than it’s ever been.”

“Our game still has to be really accessible and playable for everyone.”

There’s still a wildcard that needs to be addressed, however. Assuming it works as advertised, CSR promises to create more evenly balanced competitive matches for individual players. But what happens when an Xbox party enters the arena? How does CSR account for a group of people spanning multiple recorded skill levels?

343 isn’t saying yet. It’s not really a secret; the team just hasn’t worked it out. Data gathered from the beta is a critical missing piece when it comes to answering questions like that.

“We’re collecting all that data from matches, how fair and competitive the matches are,” Lee says. “And there’s an algorithm that we’re going to tune over time to make sure that we do solve that problem. There’s a couple different ways we could approach that, but we really haven’t decided the final implementation [and won’t] until we see how we do in beta.”

“This is the advantage of having [the beta] so early,” he adds. “We want to collect all that stuff, and then we want to actually use that in active development to tune as we go. I think we’re gonna have a much better matchmaking experience and much better gameplay, tuning, all that stuff. We’re gonna take a hard look at all of those things and make sure we have everything dialed in.”

Adam Rosenberg
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Previously, Adam worked in the games press as a freelance writer and critic for a range of outlets, including Digital Trends…
PlayStation had a better 2024 than it should have. Now it needs to focus
Astro Bot climbs on a DualSense controller.

This time last year, PlayStation had given us a roadmap for the brand's direction moving forward. It made grand commitments to live-service titles, put heavy investments in a mobile initiative, and continued to launch new hardware. If one were to judge PlayStation's 2024 on the rubric it set for itself, it would have been a failure. But that doesn't tell the full story.

PlayStation's 2024 felt like a restructuring phase. On the software side, we saw PlayStation embracing young players again, a decision that netted it a big Game of the Year win. Behind the games, we saw even bigger changes, specifically with the appointment of two new co-CEOs, Herman Hulst and Hideaki Nishino, that may have radical implications for the brand going forward. All of this sets the stage for a needed pivot for a brand that flirted with disaster in 2024. The only problem? That new vision hasn't been communicated yet, and fans' good will may be in short supply after a year of ups and downs.
Shifting strategy
Sony had a lot of pots on the stove this year, which made it a rollercoaster ride for fans. If there was one message PlayStation wanted to communicate as clearly as possible in 2023, it was the commitment to finding a live service hit. At the time, 12 such titles were reportedly in development and scheduled to be released between 2024 and 2026. So far, that effort has struggled to get off the starting blocks. Naughty Dog made the wise decision to cancel its Last of Us Online project to focus on single-player IPs such as the upcoming Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet, but the real casualty was Concord.

Read more
At the end of 2024, Xbox finds itself as a crossroads
The Mental Wellness Awareness Xbox design.

At the end of 2024, Xbox finds itself at a crossroads that many fans wouldn’t have anticipated at the start of the year.

Finally bearing the fruits of its pricey Activision Blizzard acqusition, Xbox has had one of its most consistent years in terms of game output. Game Pass received a healthy number of day-one games throughout the year, and Microsoft delivered a new first-party title to the service every month between September and December.

Read more
Wordle Today: Wordle answer and hints for December 4
Someone playing Wordle on a smartphone.

We have the solution to Wordle on July 16, as well as some helpful hints to help you figure out the answer yourself, right here. We've placed the answer at the bottom of the page, so we don't ruin the surprise before you've had a chance to work through the clues. So let's dive in, starting with a reminder of yesterday's answer.
Yesterday's Wordle answer
Let's start by first reminding ourselves of yesterday's Wordle answer for those new to the game or who don't play it daily, which was "SAUNA." So we can say that the Wordle answer today definitely isn't that. Now, with that in mind, perhaps take another stab at it using one of these Wordle starting words and circle back if you have no luck.
Hints for today's Wordle
Still can't figure it out? We have today's Wordle answer right here, below. But first, one more thing: Let's take a look at three hints that could help you find the solution, without giving it away, so there's no need to feel guilty about keeping your streak alive -- you put in some work, after all! Or just keep scrolling for the answer.

Today’s Wordle includes the letter G.
Today’s Wordle uses three vowels.
Today's Wordle is a word for a bird of prey.

Read more