Monster Hunter Wilds won't add a 15th main weapon but the devs talk about one all the time – one problem is the 14 weapons we have are a hard act to follow
The Monster Hunter team hasn't written off a new weapon type
The mainline Monster Hunter games haven't added a new weapon type since the introduction of charge blade and insect glaive in Monster Hunter 4 in 2013, and Monster Hunter Wilds won't be changing that when it launches February 28, 2025. However, Wilds executive art director Kaname Fujioka and series producer Ryozo Tsujimoto say the development team talks about new weapon ideas regularly.
Speaking with Italian site Multiplayer.it (machine translated via Google and DeepL for this article), Fujioka affirms that the idea of adding a 15th main weapon was never abandoned, and as a result, a lot of potential ideas have piled up. The important context here is that Monster Hunter technically has 18 weapons, it's just that the tonfa, magnet spike, and accel axe have only appeared in a few spin-off games, while the hilariously named medium bowgun was only seen in Monster Hunter 3.
Monster Hunter Wilds continues the approach of games like Monster Hunter Rise and Monster Hunter World, Fujioka adds, by refining the 14 existing weapons and taking them in new directions with added moves and features. Wilds, in particular, has given most if not all weapons some sort of counterattack or perfect-timing mechanic.
Tsujimoto says that matching the level of depth and care in current weapons makes it that much harder to choose and flesh out a 15th. He points back to the charge blade and insect glaive, which have evolved dramatically since their release despite being the newest of the bunch. Classics like the greatsword and longsword, meanwhile, are almost unrecognizable compared to their primitive counterparts.
It's also a question of development priorities, Tsujimoto notes. Even if the team had a solid idea and also had the resources available to make a 15th weapon, Tsujimoto says they have to ask whether that's actually the best use of those resources, or if the series and its fans would be better served by investing them elsewhere – again, perhaps by improving the current weapons even further, or simply prioritizing the main themes and goals of the next game.
12DOVE spoke to Wilds director Yuya Tokuda earlier this year about how our weapons are evolving, especially since we can bring two of them on a hunt now and swap via our Seikret bird mount, and he reasoned that it comes down to filling in perceived gaps.
"As we improve each weapon and consider how it's going to be approached for each title," he explained, "like if it's got a gap in its move set that is filled by something that could be usable as a parry - but also these moves are generally usable at any time, it isn't something you can only pull off if you do it at this timing - it's more [about] maybe this weapon lacked something to counter the verticality that's now in the game with these three-dimensional maps. I would've added a move that could be used that way."
Sign up to the 12DOVE Newsletter
Weekly digests, tales from the communities you love, and more
Austin freelanced for the likes of PC Gamer, Eurogamer, IGN, Sports Illustrated, and more while finishing his journalism degree, and he's been with 12DOVE since 2019. They've yet to realize that his position as a senior writer is just a cover up for his career-spanning Destiny column, and he's kept the ruse going with a focus on news and the occasional feature, all while playing as many roguelikes as possible.
Putting beta feedback into action, Monster Hunter Wilds devs show off improved hitstop and reworked weapons that feel how you remember them
Final Fantasy 14 devs would love to do a Monster Hunter Wilds collab: "There are many fans of the Monster Hunter series within the FF14 team, and I am one of them"