Horizon Forbidden West has been out long enough now that the gameâs artists are free to post their work on sites like ArtStation, so tonight weâre going to be taking a look at all kinds of stuff that went into the gameâs creation.
As usual when we take a look at big game round-ups like this, I wonât be posting everything from everyone involved in the gameâs development, because I can only fit so many images on this website before it breaks. What I will be doing, though, is providing a handy cross-section of pieces that will give you an insight into the creation of Forbidden Westâs visual identity.
Setting aside the high-minded sci-fi hijinks, Horizon Forbidden West is at its core about the extent to which characters will go to find faith and meaning. In her newfound âsaviorâ statusâagain, still weirdâAloy finds herself fielding many of these evidence-free assertions. People go on and on about âland godsâ and âdivinersâ and âlegaciesâ and blah blah blah. At every turn, Aloy reacts to these whims with curled-lip bemusement. They claim to see god. Aloy knows the truth; she literally sees it.
By the end of the game, I found myself reacting to Horizon Forbidden West itself with a similar curled-lip bemusement.
And if youâd like to step further back in time, or just missed it the first time around when I posted it in 2017, you can head here for a similar roundup of Horizon Zero Dawnâs art
The art below is in no particular order, and includes pieces from both Guerrillaâs own internal team and contracted artists as well. Youâll find links to each artistâs portfolio in their names.
Felix Riga van den Bergh




Miguel Martinez






Lloyd Allan







Erik van Helvoirt




Glenn van Driel




Ilya Golitsyn







Oscar Römer






Niek Schlosser



Choro Choi







Lisa Plokker



Tom Kolbeek


Patrick van Rooijen




Tom Delboo



