After years of waiting, Capcom is finally offering Monster Hunter Wilds as another groundbreaking next-generation experience for the franchise. Innovating on the franchise while keeping the core gameplay intact, Monster Hunter Wilds will offer a fresh experience for beginners and veteran hunters alike. The franchise has come a long way since its humble origins with the PlayStation 2, but some criticisms seem to keep coming back regardless of the generation.
Although Monster Hunter World was the first game in the series to offer expansive maps without loading screens between areas, Wilds has taken this even further with its seamless travel between areas and the Gathering Hub. On top of the immersive gameplay design, many of Wild's combat mechanics have been improved from previous games, resulting in incredibly positive praise from pre-release reviews. While it seems like Monster Hunter Wilds is bound to be another smashing success for the series, there's one common complaint spread across most of Wilds' initial .
Early Reviews Say Monster Hunter Wilds Is Too Easy
Not Providing Enough Challenge To Satisfy Veteran Hunters
While the information embargo has prevented too many details from being revealed, multiple acclaimed reviewers seem to agree that Monster Hunter Wilds doesn't offer as much of a challenge as previous entries, even for beginners. While it's completely fair to be disappointed by an apparent lack of challenge, it's important to consider that much of the challenge regarding a new Monster Hunter title is understanding how the franchise's mechanics work.
There's still some room for improvement with post-launch updates.
Even for easier sections of Monster Hunter titles, there's plenty of room for making common mistakes in Monster Hunter Wilds and even veteran hunters alike, with the game progressing in difficulty as more DLC is added. Given that general audiences have even more experience with the game after playing Monster Hunter World and possibly Rise, it's understandable that the early sections of Wilds might not seem nearly as challenging at first to veteran players.

Monster Hunter Wilds Review: Heading In A Bold New Direction, With One Or Two Missteps
Monster Hunter Wilds is a lushly beautiful and ceaselessly thrilling entry in the series, but its performance and on-rails story can be distracting.
The complaint about Wilds' difficulty isn't the only criticism facing the game, either. Several performance issues remain in the full release that weren't entirely ironed out in the beta. While Monster Hunter Wilds has undergone significant improvements, including combat changes, bug fixes, and performance issues, based on from the beta to solve its worst problems, there's still room for improvement that can be achieved via future patches.
Claims That Monster Hunter Games Are Too Easy Is A Franchise Long Trend
Monster Hunter Entries Have Always Had Mixed Reactions At Launch
Even if the claims that Monster Hunter Wilds is too easy for general audiences rather than just veteran hunters used to the franchise turn out to be true, I'm still not worried based on the series' track record. You can search for practically any game in the Monster Hunter franchise and find many threads or social media posts complaining about the game being too easy, with Reddit Agar_Zos highlighting some of them. While it's true that Monster Hunter Wilds makes the series more accessible than ever, its claims of being too easy might be overblown in reality.
With each new entry in the Monster Hunter franchise offering new tools to use against monsters, it's understandable that the beginning stages seem simpler compared to the past, forcing hunters to overcome enemies primarily on their merit alone.
This perceived difference in difficulty likely comes from knowing how to use Wilds mechanics against monsters effectively, with future monsters being better balanced around the new mechanics. From providing deadly new threats to iconic monsters returning in Wilds, Capcom has plenty of room to raise the difficulty cap with post-game content additions aimed towards challenging experienced hunters.
Monster Hunter Wilds Post-Game Will Add Plenty Of New Challenges To Face
Providing Years Of Worthwhile Content To Experience
It seems that some of the criticism is based around the plethora of tools provided to players when it comes to hunting monsters, with many being very susceptible to Wilds' powerful wound systems and environmental hazards. Future monsters will likely be able to resist these hazards more, with powerful Elder Dragons entirely immune to traps while unleashing powerful AoE attacks to easily wipe out a team of naive hunters. Thankfully, even if you find Monster Hunter Wilds too easy to beat on its own, Capcom always saves its most difficult challenges for its Master Rank DLC.

After Gore Magala, Another Elder Dragon Would Be Perfect For Monster Hunter Wilds
Monster Hunter Wilds has been stingy with information about Elder Dragons, but one addition would be perfect after the Gore Magala's announcement.
Roughly a year after the release of a Monster Hunter game like Wilds, Capcom tends to release a massive expansion that adds an entirely new rank of monsters and gear to the game while unleashing many deadlier monsters to provide a tougher challenge. Even before sinking your teeth into master rank, Capcom still has plans for a flow of challenging content with new monsters, and event quests as a part of its evolving 2025 roap.
There's still plenty of room for challenging encounters in Monster Hunter Wilds.
While it can be frustrating to wait for additional updates after completing the main story for more challenges, some of the best content in the franchise has been added as a part of free updates to its base game and respective expansions. If Arkveld's grueling combat encounter in the second open beta is anything to go by, it seems there's still plenty of room for challenging encounters in Monster Hunter Wilds, with Capcom potentially saving exciting some surprises for the future.
Source: Agar_Zos/Reddit











Monster Hunter Wilds
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- Top Critic Avg: 89/100 Critics Rec: 95%
- Franchise
- Monster Hunter
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