Apex Legends season a pair of date, battle pass, map changes, and more.

It took a brief time to urge there, however, Apex Legends’ competitive season has evidenced to be an interesting one. currently, we've future season to seem forward to, and it’s returning prior you may assume. With official news on the horizon, here’s everything we tend to all understand Apex Legends season a pair of.


Apex Legends season 2 release date 

No formal date has been declared, however consistent with IGN, Semitic deity and Respawn are going to be saying details at this year’s E3 in June. The Semitic deity Play conference is going to be streamed live to tell the tale June seven. it might be a bit weird if a unleash date was all they gave North American nation, and Apex Legends has rocketed into quality on the far side what even Semitic deity or Respawn expected, therefore we’re expecting a reasonably meaty slate of details.

EA also says that Apex season 2 will likely start around the end of the financial quarter, somewhere around June 30. That’s only a few weeks after E3, so it’s certainly not too far off.

The season one battle pass prices 950 in-game “Apex Coins,” that comes bent regarding $9.99 U.S. There’s conjointly the battle pass bundle, that prices a pair of,800 Apex Coins, somewhere around $25, and unlocks the primary twenty-five levels (and all their rewards) instantly, kind of like Fortnite’s business model.

We expect those worth points to remain constant, or a minimum of not dramatically modification. Apex Legends, like Fortnite, could be a free-to-play game, therefore nobody is needed to buy the battle pass, however, it's Respawn’s primary method of creating cash off the sport, therefore it does not exploit anytime shortly.


Apex Legends season 2 characters

Jumping off of that info on the battle pass, remember that EA CEO Andrew Wilson mentioned “new legends” in his comment above. So who could it be? Our best guess? Maybe Wattson, the electricity-wielding woman who’s been previously teased, datamined and theorized to no end.

With Octane being the first post-release character, uh, released into the game, there’s plenty of reason to believe that Wattson will be next. She appears in video footage near Octane, she’s referenced throughout other promotional footage, and she’s been the biggest source of datamined info besides Octane.

The question is: Will she release during the remainder of season 1 or will she be a new treat for season 2? Keep in mind that we still have, at the time of this writing, most of May and all of June to get through until EA says it’ll launch season 2. It’s a little hard to think that Apex Legends will go without any significant additions for another month-and-a-half, but it’s certainly possible for reasons we’ll get into below.

Apex Legends season 2 map changes
There’s no information on what changes to the map, if any, will come to Apex Legends. But again, in that single quote from EA CEO Andrew Wilson said the company is looking forward to “evolutions to the in-game environment.”

There’s much fodder for changes to the Apex Legends map. Fan-favorite locations like Skulltown or the Bunker are ripe for change, although Respawn may want to renovate a less-trafficked area to get its feet wet. While the map generally looks like a well-made game environment, some fans have criticized it for a repetitive architectural style, with numerous buildings using the same frames and general style. Respawn may have an interest in diversifying the map’s look further, although the factory-issue housing theme does have a thematic tie-in to Titanfall, Respawn’s other franchise, which exists in the same universe as Apex Legends.


Apex Legends season updates

Here’s the big thing to consider: Respawn is taking things very, very different than a team like Epic Games over at Fortnite. Respawn Entertainment CEO Vince Zampella attended the GamesBeat Summit, where he had some measured words to share about balancing the needs of the players and the game with the needs of the Respawn team. In a blog post, Respawn Executive Producer Drew McCoy echoed Zampella, detailing the company’s intentions further.

“We know that additionally to addressing issues with the sport, most are hungry for us to feature new content,” McCoy wrote. “The studio culture that we’ve worked hard to cultivate, and therefore the health of our team is vital. We take those things under consideration once we discuss our content roadmap, the assembly schedule, and therefore the frequency during which we will update the sport. Our long-term goal is to make sure Apex Legends always feels alive and thriving, with attention on the quality of content over novelty or speed of release. At an equivalent time, we would like to take care of our culture as a development team and avoid crunch which will quickly cause burnout or worse.”

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Zampella also touched on the issue of crunch, or the practice of dramatically overworking your employees, in the same GamesBeat Summit talk.

“The thought was, ‘Hey, we kinda have something that’s blowing up here, do we want to start trying to drop more content?’” Zampella said. “But you look at the quality of life for the team. We don’t want to overwork the team and drop the quality of the assets that we’re putting out. We want to try to raise that.”

You should take all that to mean that Respawn, at least publicly, doesn’t have any intention of driving its employees as hard as Epic Games does for Fortnite’s nearly continuous updates. A recent report from Polygon alleged that Epic Games has cultivated a culture of crunch on the Fortnite team, pressuring employees to put in far more hours than would be healthy to make sure the game meets ongoing deadlines for new content. Of course, that means the updates to Apex Legends won’t come nearly as consistently or dramatically, but it sounds like a healthy long-term decision by the Respawn team (which is also working on Jedi: Fallen Order and the Titanfall franchise).


Apex Legends mobile

During the same earnings call, EA gave us the news that Apex Legends will be coming to mobile.“We are in advanced negotiations to bring Apex Legends to China and mobile, and that we will update you on time frames when those negotiations are concluded,” EA said during the decision.Judging from those comments, I wouldn’t expect to see mobile for Apex Legends in time for season 2, or even soon at all. It’s a very different game from Fortnite, and if it’s at all tied into its strategy to expand the brand into China, then we’ll be waiting a long time thanks to China’s heavily restricted approval process for video game content.It’s also unclear if Apex Legends will take a note from Fortnite and allow players to play on all platforms with the same account.