Key Takeaways
- Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League will receive one final update in January.
- In an announcement shared Monday, Episode 8 will bring to an end support for the game, though its online functionality will remain.
- The game was one of 2024’s biggest stories, with it reportedly resulting in a $200 million loss for Warner Bros.
Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League will be receiving one major final update in January, which will also spell the end for support for Rocksteady’s live-service looter shooter. As part of an announcement detailing Season 4, Rocksteady revealed that the game will officially see its support end with Episode 8, though all online features will continue to be available.
The announcement follows recent news of Deathstroke being the game’s Season 4 DLC addition, as well as confirmation that the long-awaited offline mode will also be coming to the game. With the updates, it brings to an end one of the biggest stories in gaming in 2024.
Related
The Pandemic Tricked Publishers Into Thinking Live Service Games Were A Good Idea
The success of titles like Among Us and Valheim during the early pandemic did not accurately represent the long-term appetite for games as a service.
Suicide Squad Was A Major Miss
Originally released on February 2, Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League did not launch to critical acclaim. Our own Stacey Henley gave it a 2.5/5, writing in part, “This might be the most rinse and repeat a game of this stature has ever rinsed and repeated.”
In the months following, Suicide Squad continued to round out its post-launch support with the addition of The Joker, Mrs. Freeze, Lawless and now Deathstroke. Neither DLC addition was particularly well-received, with many criticizing their individual origins, as well as the plot twists that were folded into the game.
At the same time, Warner Bros. reported that the live-service venture resulted in a $200 million loss. All the while, the game’s player base continued to dwindle, with fewer than 250 players during Season 3’s initial launch. Recently, the game did experience a slight uptick in player count, though that likely had to do with the game’s massive discounts.
Prior to Monday’s announcement, Warner Bros. remained mum on future support of the title beyond its outlined Year 1 roadmap. In a statement to IGN, a Warner Bros. spokesperson said, “We are not yet discussing anything that is not announced.” Evidently, there was nothing left to announce, as the game will see its support end a month before its one-year anniversary.
Next
Black Ops 6 Using Generative AI Is Inexcusable
Necroclaus is just one example of Activision Blizzard apparently using the tech to cut corners.
Source link
Leave a Reply