Combat in Gundam Breaker 2 is built around a risk-reward loop. Enemy Gunpla are highly durable, but specific limb targeting can cripple their functionality: destroying legs reduces mobility, destroying arms disarms their primary weapon, and destroying the head disables their radar and targeting assist.
Gundam Breaker 2 intentionally employs a thin narrative frame: the player is a newcomer to a Gunpla battle tournament, guided by a cast of archetypal rivals and mentors. The story serves only as a mission delivery system. This is not a flaw but a deliberate design choice. By stripping away the political melodrama of traditional Gundam , the game focuses all emotional investment onto the player’s creation. The "protagonist" is not a named character but the Gunpla itself—a reflection of the player’s aesthetic and tactical choices. This aligns the game more closely with Armored Core or Custom Robo than with Super Robot Wars . Gundam Breaker 2
Gundam Breaker 2 , developed by Crafts & Meister and published by Bandai Namco Entertainment in 2014 for the PlayStation 3 and PlayStation Vita, represents a pivotal evolution in the "Gunpla" (Gundam plastic model) action gaming subgenre. Departing from the narrative-driven structure of traditional Gundam titles, Gundam Breaker 2 prioritizes creative assembly and mechanical deconstruction. This paper analyzes the game’s core design pillars: its modular part-collection system, the dynamic synthesis of action-RPG combat with model kit physics, and the philosophical shift toward player-defined progression. It argues that Gundam Breaker 2 serves as a seminal text in "hobbyist game design," successfully translating the tactile, iterative joy of physical model customization into a digital loot-driven framework, while addressing criticisms of its predecessor and laying the groundwork for future entries. Combat in Gundam Breaker 2 is built around