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Weekly strikes in Destiny will get matchmaking after all

Making weekly content accessible to more players is a big step in the right direction.

Photo of Dennis Scimeca

Dennis Scimeca

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When a game doesn’t offer a whole lot to do, walling off major portions from dedicated players is not the best idea.

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That could be why Bungie is now adding matchmaking to Weekly Heroic Strike activities in Destiny update 1.1.1. Weekly Heroics are the best way to accrue one of the game’s most important currencies, called Strange Coins, which are essential to upgrading gear to access high-level content. Weekly Heroics are also very difficult to complete solo, and not everyone may find it simple to enlist the help of two partners. The addition of matchmaking to Weekly Heroic Strikes will be a huge win for some Destiny players.

Strikes are mini-adventures that take Destiny players through a gaggle of foot soldiers and mini-bosses. They end with a tough fight against a powerful boss character. Strikes take about 20 minutes to finish, generate the experience players need to level up their gear, and randomly reward players with high-level weapons and armor. Strike playlists, or an endless cycle of running Strikes chosen randomly from the list of potential missions, are a staple activities in Destiny.

Weekly Heroic Strikes are a once-a-week activities that draw from the same pool of potential missions, adding various difficulty modifiers that appreciably change the experience. Enemies might be more plentiful than usual, or less likely to take cover in the face of enemy fire, or more resistant to certain types of damage.

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Regular Strikes currently have matchmaking. Weekly Heroic Strikes do not. That means some players are currently gated from completing the Weekly Heroics if they can’t find buddies to team up with. Update 1.1.1 will fix that and effectively unlock one of the most important pieces of Destiny content for what must be an appreciable swath of the player base.

The flip side is that players will no longer be able to run Weekly Heroic Strikes solo even if they want to once update 1.1.1 hits. The jury will likely be out for a while after the update is live as to whether this tradeoff is worth it.

Now the question is whether Bungie will add matchmaking to the punishingly difficult Weekly Nightfall Strikes, or to the high-end content Raids that are supposed to require six players to complete. Bungie has said it will not add matchmaking to Raids because they are designed to be difficult enough to require tight coordination between six players, such that random matchmaking would not produce groups coordinated enough to finish a Raid.

Then again, some Destiny players can beat Raids solo. It’s possible that matchmade groups of six could handle a Destiny raid once everyone knows how to beat it. Thanks to YouTube, that’s easier than ever to figure out.

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Bungie has not announced a release date for update 1.1.1.

H/T Eurogamer | Illustration via Activision

 
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