Mecha BREAK’s First Season ‘Pulse of the Indigo Stone‘ Goes Live

More guns, more mechs, more reasons to drop in.

mecha break season 1 pulse of the indigo key art

Free-to-play mech shooter Mecha BREAK officially kicked off its inaugural season earlier this week, titled Pulse of the Indigo Stone. The online mech shooters first seasonal update brings two new Strikers—HEL and ALPHARD—along with balance updates, new weapons, and quality-of-life improvements.

HEL is built for long-range sniping and deception, using optical camouflage and decoy drones to sabotage foes from a distance. ALPHARD plays more aggressively, combining speed and firepower with thrusters that allow swift assaults and pushing through frontline defenses.

Season 1 also introduces eight new seasonal weapons, exclusive skins, improved tutorials, and upgrades to the Battle Pass system (Matrix Selections & Matrix Contract) to make earning rewards more flexible. Added daily, weekly, and monthly missions offer more opportunities to earn Supply Crates and cosmetic rewards.

Though Mecha BREAK saw strong interest when it launched in July with a concurrent peak of 132,816 players, its live player base has naturally and gradually dipped. Recent figures from SteamDB show average daily concurrent users of around 5,000 players, with a 24-hour peak near 9,000. Though this still represents a rebound from its recent low, the numbers remain far below its all-time high.

For players attending Tokyo Game Show 2025 next weekend, the devs are offering a hands-on experience of Pulse of the Indigo Stone: live matches, cosplay performances, exhibition esports matches, and the debut sale of the Purple FALCON Mecha Action Figure. Giveaways and other booth events are also planned.


MARC MARASIGAN
MARC MARASIGAN (Editor-in-Chief)

Marc Marasigan is the founder and Editor-in-Chief of PC Gaming Spot. He's a seasoned gaming journalist who spent years covering MMOs and RPGs at MMOs.com. When he's not losing sleep over tactical shooters, obsessing about Final Fantasy, or getting eaten by dinosaurs in survival-crafting games, he's busy writing YA novels about teenagers with magical disasters and spinning beats as a professional DJ. Yes, it's a weird combo, but it makes for great conversation at parties.

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