It’s easy to forget there was life before No Man’s Sky at Hello Games. The studio, which is still small now, started out tiny: “four people in a room” as co-founder Sean Murray puts it, somewhat wistfully, when the original team started work on the PS3’s Joe Danger. Speaking to Murray and Steven Burgess, who’s taking the lead on The Last Campfire, the curiously mournful puzzle-adventure that arrived via surprise release yesterday, the focus is very much on that kind of independent spirit.
There’s some nostalgia there, when Murray talks over the studio’s history, starting with the now-familiar story of the humble Joe Danger roots and how the team quickly ballooned to “15 or 16” people on No Man’s Sky at the peak, before settling on the 25 that make up the internal Hello Games team now. But the core team’s not the one working on The Last Campfire. Burgess, alongside Chris Symonds and James Chilcott, make up the entirety of The Last Campfire team. The main bulk of the Hello Games team is on something else entirely.
The setup now is all a bit full-circle. Burgess and Symonds were on “a smallish team” of about 18 people within a much larger one at Frontier Developments when their previous game, 2008’s LostWinds, was in progress. After that, it was more or less solely Burgess that headed up the work on porting Hello Game’s own small-team game Joe Danger to iOS (“We worked on that together, but Stevie did all the work,” Murray half-jokes).
“The kind of thing the devil would come to you at midnight with…”
Sean Murray, on No Man’s Sky’s runaway success.
Joe Danger came out on consoles and PC of course but “really found its success,” Murray says, on iOS with Joe Danger Touch. And now they’re back, “an even smaller team within an even smaller team,” as Burgess puts it, making The Last Campfire. Murray himself is keen to play that symmetry up, talking with some nostalgia of the micro-studio indie days and the intention to try and replicate it “as much as possible. We want people to have that experience and I think that’s important and hopefully does feel different” to working in a larger team.