We might be in Chapter 6, but Fortnite Chapter 1 remains the definitive version of the game. It’s these early ten seasons which still get held up as the most iconic and popular out of the game’s entire run. We’ve had Chapters and Chapters of new content since, but for a lot of the players, all they want to do is return to the simpler days of the original Fortnite.
What’s behind the appeal of those first seasons? While it was these early years that made Fortnite the powerhouse it is today, it’s become a bit of a fixation.
Fortnite has returned to its roots, first for a mini-season, and now with a permanent separate nostalgia mode. That’s without mentioning all the OG content that comes back to the main game regularly. The majority of maps have featured a classic POI. Fortnite Chapter 1 is by far the most popular — what is it that’s made it have such a long-lasting appeal?
The Eternal Appeal of Fortnite Chapter 1
For a lot of players, Fortnite Chapter 1 is when they began with the game. It’s definitely when the title was at its most culturally influential. A juggernaut that was known by pretty much everyone. For many fans, a big part of the appeal might purely be nostalgia.
The time when the game was brand new. When you could jump in with a squad and have tons of fun, not having played anything like this before. Sure, there were other Battle Royales, but none embraced the fun of Fortnite. None had mechanics like building to give you an edge over competitors. The first few years of Fortnite were some of the most entertaining out of all Fortnite seasons, although they were also the least polished.
It’s not just positive memories that those early chapters got right though. If you look at how the game was designed back then, there are a few factors which made the original seasons such a success.
Simpler Weapons
Part of the appeal of Fortnite Chapter 1 might be the simplicity. There weren’t crazy weapons with laser beams, or attachment systems, or mythics. It was just simple guns.
The loot pool back then was simple but very well designed. You had a great shotgun, a fantastic AR — everything was built to suit the building mechanics. There wasn’t anything too complex to get your head around. At least until players figured out you could ride on rockets. Since all guns were available in general loot, it was just a matter of coping with what you found. Rather than today’s complex system of Boss loot, vaults, and extra looting mechanics.
The simpler loot pool is something a lot of players miss. Now that OG is back, very few people have complained about its weapons! While Fortnite doesn’t seem to be going back to the simpler weapons anytime soon, Chapter 1 did something right.
Iconic World
One factor in the early game’s success that’s definitively still visible is the world, map, and style. The POIs from the first season are some of the best remembered in the game’s life. Places like Tilted Towers pop up in the game constantly — it’s basically synonymous with Fortnite.
Beyond the specific places, the map had a defined style. The skins fit in too, with its own cartoony aesthetic. Modern Fortnite with its mishmash of characters and more realistic map just doesn’t have the same appeal as a world seemingly built just for Fortnite.
Player’s Skill and the Drawbacks of Nostalgia
The pull of the classic Fortnite era has been so strong that we’ve re-visited more than once, but every time we go back, something is missing. The players, and their skills specifically.
Fortnite changed over the years. A lot of players got very good at it. Good enough at it that a lot of casual players have to stick to a mode without builds since they can’t keep up with the ever-increasing skill level. Whenever we head back to Chapter 1, we find the weapons and maps are the same, but the player base has developed. Getting stomped by sweats is much more common than it was back in the original days!
While Fortnite Chapter 1 clearly has a lot of appeal, you can’t go home again. Even when re-visiting the same seasons, it feels a bit different now that the game’s average player skill is heating up. It’s still fun to go back to where the game was at its most fun, but no recreation can bring back Chapter 1’s community.