America’s Army: Proving Grounds, the free-to-play first-person shooter developed and published by the United States Army, will shut down online features on May 5, the Army announced on Monday. The closure ends a 20-year run for an Army recruiting tool whose tone and purpose was frequently criticized.
America’s Army: Proving Grounds is currently available for PlayStation 4 on the PlayStation Network, and for Windows PC via Steam. The shutdown ends player stat-tracking and removes access to the game’s Play Online mode. Offline features are expected to function; the Windows version also had a mission editor and private server support. Those are expected to continue, the Army said.
The shutdown also means the end of the America’s Army website, and any login created to access features there. America’s Army: Proving Grounds was part of a public affairs mission designed to get a recruiting audience to create accounts and list their contact information in them. More than 13 million did so, according to reports at the time of Proving Grounds’ launch in August 2013.
“Thank you to everyone who played AA:PG, and thank you to those who still enjoy it,” the Army said on Monday. “While support and servers are still active, we encourage you to dive into matches with your battle buddies and continue the mission.”
America’s Army launched for Windows PC on July 4, 2002, before the war in Iraq and barely one year into the Afghanistan campaign, the Army’s longest-ever conflict. It was intended as a virtual experience, mainly targeting potential recruits and helping them understand if becoming a soldier fit their interests and abilities. America’s Army later branched into other applications, including a traveling booth that made appearances
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