Sponsored
Displayed for 0 seconds
Displayed for 0 seconds
Displayed for 0 seconds
Displayed for 0 seconds
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
Tech News, Magazine & Review WordPress Theme 2017
  • Home
  • Review
    ElliQ is a surprisingly helpful companion robot for older adults

    ElliQ is a surprisingly helpful companion robot for older adults

    Turtle Beach made a good SteelSeries headset clone that’s $50 less

    Turtle Beach made a good SteelSeries headset clone thats $50 less

    The Razr Fold is stuck in the middle

    The Razr Fold is stuck in the middle

    Insta360’s new viewfinder turns the action cam into a retro shooter

    Insta360s new viewfinder turns the action cam into a retro shooter

    The Apple Studio Display could have been so much more

    The Apple Studio Display could have been so much more

    Cricut’s $99 craft cutting machine helped me feel creative again

    Cricuts $99 craft cutting machine helped me feel creative again

  • Gaming
    LG will release the first 1000Hz, 1080p gaming monitor this year

    LG will release the first 1000Hz, 1080p gaming monitor this year

    PlayStation exclusives aren’t coming to PC anymore

    PlayStation exclusives aren’t coming to PC anymore

    Sony is raising short-subscription prices for PlayStation Plus

    Sony is raising short-subscription prices for PlayStation Plus

    Disco Elysium’s spiritual successor can’t escape its phantoms

    Disco Elysiums spiritual successor can’t escape its phantoms

    Mixtape is a musical portrait of teenage life

    Mixtape is a musical portrait of teenage life

    The Analogue 3D is finally getting save states

    The Analogue 3D is finally getting save states

  • Gear
    • All
    • Audio
    • Camera
    • Laptop
    • Smartphone
    Fujifilm’s X Half is even more whimsical with a $300 price cut

    Fujifilms X Half is even more whimsical with a $300 price cut

    Sony tries to explain that its AI Camera Assistant doesn’t suck

    Sony tries to explain that its AI Camera Assistant doesnt suck

    Dell and RAMageddon are watering down the Alienware brand

    Dell and RAMageddon are watering down the Alienware brand

    Sony ups its new A7R VI to 66.8 megapixels and jumps the price to $4,500

    Sony ups its new A7R VI to 66.8 megapixels and jumps the price to $4,500

    Canon’s latest EOS R6 camera goes V for video

    Canons latest EOS R6 camera goes V for video

    Google announces its Chromebook successor: the Googlebook

    Google announces its Chromebook successor: the Googlebook

    Trending Tags

    • Best iPhone 7 deals
    • Apple Watch 2
    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • iOS 10
    • iPhone 7
    • Sillicon Valley
  • Computers

    To regain advertiser trust, Facebook is tracking ads by the millisecond

    Google has been asked to take down over a million websites

    Watch Dogs 2 Update Coming This Week, Here’s What It Does

    Fujifilm X-T2 review: The definition of a great camera

    Shopify CEO attempts to defend continued hosting of Breitbart’s online store

    SpaceX targets February 18 for Dragon resupply mission to ISS

  • Applications
    Revamped Siri will reportedly offer auto-deleting chats

    Revamped Siri will reportedly offer auto-deleting chats

    iOS 27 might add a lot more customization to the Camera app

    iOS 27 might add a lot more customization to the Camera app

    Apple brings encrypted RCS chats to iPhone

    Apple brings encrypted RCS chats to iPhone

    Apple reportedly has a deal to use Intel-made chips again

    Apple reportedly has a deal to use Intel-made chips again

    Everyone should follow Logitech and put extra USB ports on iPad keyboard cases

    Everyone should follow Logitech and put extra USB ports on iPad keyboard cases

    Apple’s education discount now requires proof that you’re a student

    Apples education discount now requires proof that youre a student

  • Security

    To regain advertiser trust, Facebook is tracking ads by the millisecond

    National Academy of Sciences endorses embryonic engineering

    Google has been asked to take down over a million websites

    Watch Dogs 2 Update Coming This Week, Here’s What It Does

    The Warby Parker of hair color, Madison Reed, scores new funding and a CMO

    Shopify CEO attempts to defend continued hosting of Breitbart’s online store

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Review
    ElliQ is a surprisingly helpful companion robot for older adults

    ElliQ is a surprisingly helpful companion robot for older adults

    Turtle Beach made a good SteelSeries headset clone that’s $50 less

    Turtle Beach made a good SteelSeries headset clone thats $50 less

    The Razr Fold is stuck in the middle

    The Razr Fold is stuck in the middle

    Insta360’s new viewfinder turns the action cam into a retro shooter

    Insta360s new viewfinder turns the action cam into a retro shooter

    The Apple Studio Display could have been so much more

    The Apple Studio Display could have been so much more

    Cricut’s $99 craft cutting machine helped me feel creative again

    Cricuts $99 craft cutting machine helped me feel creative again

  • Gaming
    LG will release the first 1000Hz, 1080p gaming monitor this year

    LG will release the first 1000Hz, 1080p gaming monitor this year

    PlayStation exclusives aren’t coming to PC anymore

    PlayStation exclusives aren’t coming to PC anymore

    Sony is raising short-subscription prices for PlayStation Plus

    Sony is raising short-subscription prices for PlayStation Plus

    Disco Elysium’s spiritual successor can’t escape its phantoms

    Disco Elysiums spiritual successor can’t escape its phantoms

    Mixtape is a musical portrait of teenage life

    Mixtape is a musical portrait of teenage life

    The Analogue 3D is finally getting save states

    The Analogue 3D is finally getting save states

  • Gear
    • All
    • Audio
    • Camera
    • Laptop
    • Smartphone
    Fujifilm’s X Half is even more whimsical with a $300 price cut

    Fujifilms X Half is even more whimsical with a $300 price cut

    Sony tries to explain that its AI Camera Assistant doesn’t suck

    Sony tries to explain that its AI Camera Assistant doesnt suck

    Dell and RAMageddon are watering down the Alienware brand

    Dell and RAMageddon are watering down the Alienware brand

    Sony ups its new A7R VI to 66.8 megapixels and jumps the price to $4,500

    Sony ups its new A7R VI to 66.8 megapixels and jumps the price to $4,500

    Canon’s latest EOS R6 camera goes V for video

    Canons latest EOS R6 camera goes V for video

    Google announces its Chromebook successor: the Googlebook

    Google announces its Chromebook successor: the Googlebook

    Trending Tags

    • Best iPhone 7 deals
    • Apple Watch 2
    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • iOS 10
    • iPhone 7
    • Sillicon Valley
  • Computers

    To regain advertiser trust, Facebook is tracking ads by the millisecond

    Google has been asked to take down over a million websites

    Watch Dogs 2 Update Coming This Week, Here’s What It Does

    Fujifilm X-T2 review: The definition of a great camera

    Shopify CEO attempts to defend continued hosting of Breitbart’s online store

    SpaceX targets February 18 for Dragon resupply mission to ISS

  • Applications
    Revamped Siri will reportedly offer auto-deleting chats

    Revamped Siri will reportedly offer auto-deleting chats

    iOS 27 might add a lot more customization to the Camera app

    iOS 27 might add a lot more customization to the Camera app

    Apple brings encrypted RCS chats to iPhone

    Apple brings encrypted RCS chats to iPhone

    Apple reportedly has a deal to use Intel-made chips again

    Apple reportedly has a deal to use Intel-made chips again

    Everyone should follow Logitech and put extra USB ports on iPad keyboard cases

    Everyone should follow Logitech and put extra USB ports on iPad keyboard cases

    Apple’s education discount now requires proof that you’re a student

    Apples education discount now requires proof that youre a student

  • Security

    To regain advertiser trust, Facebook is tracking ads by the millisecond

    National Academy of Sciences endorses embryonic engineering

    Google has been asked to take down over a million websites

    Watch Dogs 2 Update Coming This Week, Here’s What It Does

    The Warby Parker of hair color, Madison Reed, scores new funding and a CMO

    Shopify CEO attempts to defend continued hosting of Breitbart’s online store

No Result
View All Result
The Latest Tech News | Breaking Bews In Thchnology
No Result
View All Result
Home Gaming

Live-service games are a mess

admin by admin
March 15, 2026
Live-service games are a mess
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

This is The Stepback, a weekly newsletter breaking down one essential story from the tech world. For more on the slow-motion disaster of live-service games, follow Andrew Webster. The Stepback arrives in our subscribers’ inboxes at 8AM ET. Opt in for The Stepback here.

Two years ago, I stood at the top of the iconic red stairs in Times Square to experience the weirdest concert of my life. As glowing butterflies flitted about the various screens, a crowd steadily grew, knowing something was happening, but unsure of what. Then a countdown started, and a minute later one of the screens opened up, revealing Ice Spice and, later, Snoop Dogg, both of whom performed brief sets for the New York crowd. The really weird part is that it was a promotional event for Fortnite.

Epic Games’ battle royale is the poster child for a new type of entertainment experience: the live-service game, a never-ending treadmill of content that can become as much a habit as a game. When successful, these titles are massively lucrative and, unlike other types of games, they’re enduring. The Fortnite concert in New York showed just how culturally pervasive a live-service game can be at the very peak. It’s not every game that can manage a complete takeover of Times Square.

Plenty of other game developers and publishers have chased that same high. And while a handful have been successful, the live-service gold rush has turned into a graveyard stuffed with failures and casualties. Fortnite still reigns supreme, but much of the live-service games space is a complete mess.

Of course, live-service games failing isn’t an entirely new phenomenon. There are countless titles that were canceled over the last few years because they couldn’t drum up the user base required to keep running: Sega’s Hyenas, Ubisoft’s Hyper Scape, Amazon’s Crucible, Valve’s Artifact, and WB’s MultiVersus, just to name a few. And that’s not even counting the games that were in development but never actually launched, like live-service takes on The Last of Us and God of War from Sony. And it’s not just games that closed down; there’s a human cost as well, with underperforming titles leading to pervasive layoffs and studio closures.

What has changed is the speed at which games are deemed failures. The most infamous example is Concord, another Sony production, a 2024 sci-fi shooter that was in development for eight years but was ultimately canceled less than a month after launch, with its development studio shuttered alongside it. And just this week, Highguard — a squad shooter from a new studio made up of veterans from games like Apex Legends — shut down less than two months after it first went live. This came not long after League of Legends developer Riot laid off staff from its just-launched fighting game spinoff 2XKO because “overall momentum hasn’t reached the level needed to support a team of this size long term.” It’s not clear what, exactly, the expectations were for these games, but it seems like they weren’t close to realistic. They’re trying to compete with Fortnite, but are being given almost no time to do so.

It may sound like madness, but the appeal of live-service games is obvious for developers and publishers. Some of these games are free to download, others are paid, but all of them offer additional things to buy — characters, weapons, or seasonal battle passes — that aim to keep players spending. A hit live-service game is not only lucrative at launch but also a consistent form of revenue for companies.

But the same things that make these games so appealing from a business perspective are also what make the space so hard to break into. For starters, there’s player behavior. With a normal video game, players buy it, finish it, and then move on to something else. That’s not how live-service games operate; they aim to suck up as much of your time and attention as possible in order to increase the chances you’ll spend some cash.

Since time is a finite resource, only so many of these games can reasonably exist with a large player base. So once a game like Fortnite or League of Legends becomes established, it’s hard to sway players away because they’ve already spent so much time and money. You only need to look at the Steam player charts to see this concept in action: Aside from whatever the hot game of the moment is (currently Slay the Spire II), the charts are dominated by years-old titles like Apex Legends, PUBG, and Counter-Strike.

These games also cost a fortune to maintain. Once a game is out, it requires constant upkeep in form of bug fixes, content updates, and whatever else the developers can think of to keep players coming back. Many of these games operate on a seasonal structure, with major updates every few months. Hell, Fortnite completely resets itself every few years to keep things fresh. That’s a lot of work, and it doesn’t always pay off. That’s part of the reason companies are pulling the plug at the first sign that a game doesn’t have the momentum to be a hit.

These problems plague even seemingly successful games. Last year, EA made a major push into the space with Battlefield 6, a shooter so big it required four of the publisher’s studios to develop and maintain. Days after it debuted the company bragged that it was the “biggest launch in franchise history.” And yet, this week all four studios were hit with an unspecified number of layoffs to “better align our teams around what matters most to our community,” according to EA.

As alluring as the rewards around a successful live-service game are, hopefully these shifts are a sign that companies are realizing that the costs of developing a hit don’t outweigh the very real costs of failure, which is a much more likely outcome. After all, one of the most consistently successful companies in the industry, Nintendo, has done just fine selling games the old-fashioned way and only dabbling into live-service games and subscriptions.

Fortnite is a battle royale, in which 100 players are dropped onto an island until only one remains. The live-service game space isn’t quite so cutthroat — but it’s not far off, either.

  • One of the more disappointing attempts at a live-service shooter was FBC: Firebreak from Control developer Remedy, a studio renowned for its single-player action games. Firebreak flopped so hard that Remedy’s CEO eventually stepped down.
  • While Sony pivoted hard to live-service games, it still does occasionally make some great cinematic adventures. Last year’s Ghost of Yōtei was excellent.
  • Bloomberg has an eye-opening look at just what went down inside of Highguard developer Wildlight Entertainment.
  • It may be facing challenging odds, but there’s something special about Marathon, as Aftermath explains.
  • One studio that’s managed to thrive while largely avoiding the live-service space is Capcom. Here’s IGN’s deep dive on the Resident Evil and Monster Hunter developer.
Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.

  • Andrew Webster

    Andrew Webster

    Andrew Webster

    Senior entertainment editor

    Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All by Andrew Webster

  • Column

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Column

  • Gaming

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All Gaming

  • The Stepback

    Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

    See All The Stepback

Tags: Gaming Industry IssuesLive Service Problems
admin

admin

Next Post
Samsung’s Galaxy Buds 4 Pro are the choice — if you have a Galaxy phone

Samsungs Galaxy Buds 4 Pro are the choice — if you have a Galaxy phone

Recommended.

Woot is offering over 20 percent off Switch 2 controllers and games today

Woot is offering over 20 percent off Switch 2 controllers and games today

March 26, 2026
Activision silences trusted Call of Duty leaker

Activision silences trusted Call of Duty leaker

March 4, 2026

Trending.

Subnautica 2 is having a huge launch on Steam

Subnautica 2 is having a huge launch on Steam

May 14, 2026
Microsoft starts canceling Claude Code licenses

Microsoft starts canceling Claude Code licenses

May 14, 2026
Leaked images show Microsoft’s new Xbox Cloud Gaming controller

Leaked images show Microsofts new Xbox Cloud Gaming controller

May 14, 2026
Metroid Prime 4: Beyond got its first big discount

Metroid Prime 4: Beyond got its first big discount

May 15, 2026
Razer’s Blade 18 is getting a $500 price hike and a new Intel chip

Razers Blade 18 is getting a $500 price hike and a new Intel chip

May 14, 2026
earmpro tech news

Stay ahead of the tech curve. Our website delivers clear, concise updates on the latest gadgets, AI breakthroughs, and software, empowering your digital future.

Follow Us

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

© 2025 | Website Made By earmpro.com.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Review
  • Apple
  • Applications
  • Computers
  • Gaming
  • Gear
    • Audio
    • Camera
    • Smartphone
  • Microsoft
  • Photography
  • Security

© 2025 | Website Made By earmpro.com.