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Meet the Artist Who Brought the Game ‘Hotline Miami’ Out of 2D

Niklas Åkerblad discusses hooking up with Dennaton, his work since, and finding a "calm limbo" for Jacket.

The character Beard, from 'Hotline Miami 2,' who also happens to be Åkerblad, basically

"I wanna just explore art. That is my mission in life."

Niklas Åkerblad, a.k.a. El Huervo, has been creating all his life. He went to school for it, sure, but it's not like a formal education necessarily mattered. "I mostly did what was expected of me at art college," the Gothenburg-based artist and musician tells me over email. "I enjoyed playing video games and drawing weird characters instead. Then I studied computer game art in college, but I did mostly the same there. Drank lots of beer."

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It was in 2010 that Åkerblad's life was taken in a new direction, one that'd ultimately lead to his work being seen by millions across the world. Hotline Miami, by Jonatan Söderström and Dennis Wedin (under the banner of Dennaton Games), was a couple of years shy of completion, but the core concept was blossoming. "I met Jonatan at No More Sweden, a sort of game jam thing, in 2010," Åkerblad says. "We didn't really hang out at the thing much, but on the way back home on the train, he showed how to eat instant noodles raw, and that was kind of the deal breaker for me. I like classy moves like that."

Soon enough, Åkerblad was hanging out with the pair. "They started doing (entirely out-of-its-mind indie game–cum-music video nightmare) Keyboard Drumset Fucking Werewolf. Wedin thought I was like some kinda Zen person back then. Which I'm not, but it was flattering." The Dennaton pair took such a shine to Åkerblad that it's not just his art—and music, as El Huervo—that's in the original Hotline Miami and its 2015 sequel, Wrong Number. The character of Beard, that's him, plastered all over the art for the second game.

Cover art detail from 'Hotline Miami'

"They basically had their mind set on everything after fiddling around with a prototype, so there wasn't much I could do except hang around sometimes and cook nutrient-rich food—I can't survive on tofu and fish sticks. Obviously, that must've done something, because after hearing my song "Daisuke," they decided to put me in the game. And it was real honorable, like, because Beard is the coolest character, I think. He's the only ray of 'hope' for (the original game's protagonist) Jacket."

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But Wedin and Söderström didn't immediately ask Åkerblad to provide what would become some seriously iconic imagery for their game. "They wanted a cover in a VHS kinda style, and initially looked for artists online," he recalls. "But I thought I should do it, so they ultimately left it in my hands. It was cool because all the characters just existed from a top-down perspective in super low-res sprites, so aside from verbal things like 'sleazy Russians' and 'pig mask,' I could do whatever with it. That's how the 'B' on Jacket's, uh, jacket came to be. I just figured he had some random American football jacket with a team's logo. Like the Boston Bruins. Which, I found out, was a hockey team. Goes to show how much I know about sports."

Åkerblad also took inspiration from older video games, from an era when stylized graphics were the norm, with realistic character design a good few console generations away from being realized.

Article continues after the video below

"The cover was supposed to fill in the blanks that come from the obvious abstraction of 8bit-ish graphics. Just like back in the old days. Strider on the Mega Drive has a real Aryan-looking dude on the cover. Like he's Lawrence of Arabia. It's super cheesy, and he's waving his sword in an awful pose. But in the game he looks like some manga dude, onion-shaped brown hair blowing in the wind, and drawing his sword faster than any Kurosawa samurai could ever dream of. I find that kinda stuff interesting. It creates a dissonance in the player.

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"So I actually tried to do the characters the total opposite of how I saw them in the game. And be as generic as I could with the posing, like they did back in the 1980s (which is when the game's set). I also figured nobody would try to copy the style in his or her own fan art if I did it this way. Obviously, it would suck if everybody tried to copy the cover, and not follow their own visions. Nobody wants to copy the cheesy white guy on the Strider cover. You wanna draw manga-hero Strider, being bad ass."

Two of Åkerblad's sketches for the new 'Hotline Miami' cover art, plus one image that served as inspiration, from Marvel's Transformers comic series of the 1980s

As El Huervo, Åkerblad is an essential part of the sound of Hotline Miami, with three tracks on the game's soundtrack, beside contributions from artists including Sun Araw, Jasper Byrne, and Scattle. "Dennis said 'it all came together' when they put 'Daisuke' in the game. And with the track 'Turf,' I was just being inspired by what the guys were doing and wanted to honor it. They thought the song would be perfect for the last boss battle. (Spoiler link.) It was just one of those moments when the various elements all click together."

Wrong Number received a triple-vinyl soundtrack release as part of its special edition, via iam8bit, with Åkerblad providing the artwork. "I tried to incorporate the feel of the music in the second game's triple-sleeve 12 inch. I could have just gone all 'Daisuke' and 'Rust' over it, but that would have been too murky; plus I always felt the more disco stuff is what most players identify with. Now we have a Kickstarter though, for a triple-sleeve 12-inch soundtrack for the first game, and for that the colors and motifs have gone more spiritual, as well as subtler."

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As Åkerblad says, there's currently a Kickstarter running for a triple-vinyl release of the Hotline Miami soundtrack. With well over three weeks to go, it's already smashed its target of $58,000, which is evidence enough of the massive attraction of owning these sounds on a physical format. Of course, it helps that the release will come with bonus tracks and all-new sleeve art, depicting Jacket in a state of mid-obliteration.

The 'Hotline Miami' collector's edition vinyl, currently on Kickstarter

"I wanted the new art to be more low key and spiritual. The idea was to kill Jacket, and I wanted to place him in sort of a calm limbo. To me that is what 'Daisuke' is: the calm limbo."

Åkerblad isn't simply an artist for hire whenever a new Hotline project comes up—he's worked on sleeves for his own material, and considers the cover and art book of his Vandereer album (as seen, and heard, on Bandcamp) to be "a fucking monument for me." Doing Hotline Miami didn't hurt getting commissions from other games-makers, too.

"I gotta say, I think Hotline has been invaluable for whatever attention I've gained. At least for that push that helps when trying to get your mental masturbations attention. I've actually done other games, like else Heart.Break() and Kometen. Those have helped me reach out. But, of course, if your face is on the top page of Steam for a week, that also tends to help." Mission successful, you might say.

Stream the Hotline Miami soundtrack below (minus the new bonus tracks)


Check out the Hotline Miami vinyl Kickstarter here, if you like. Head to the Dennaton website for everything else Hotline-shaped.

Follow Mike on Twitter.