The Bethesda launcher debuted in 2016 as the home for games from Bethesda and its studios, including id Software and Arkane. It was functional but bare-bones: As we said in 2018, «Bethesda's launcher seems to be designed more as a pretty interface to purchase Bethesda's games than a way of managing them.» Not having to give Valve a 30% cut of sales was no doubt nice, but the launcher apparently hasn't paid off in quite the way Bethesda hoped, because in April it's going away entirely in favor of a full recommitment to Steam.
Solid dates haven't been announced yet, but users with games on Bethesda's launcher will be able to transfer them to Steam beginning sometime in early April. Detailed instructions will be provided when the time comes, but the process will include all the games in your library and your launcher wallet—«You will not lose anything from your Bethesda.net account,» Bethesda said.
Most saved games will also transfer to Steam (one exception, for reasons unexplained, being Wolfenstein: Youngblood), although some will require manual transfers—details on that will also be provided later. Friends lists in games that use them through the Bethesda launcher will also be merged into Steam.
Despite the shift back onto Steam, existing Bethesda.net accounts aren't going away: They will continue to exist and be used for logging into games and services that require it, like Fallout 76. Speaking of which, Bethesda confirmed in a separate FAQ that Fallout 76 players will not lose anything as a result of the move.
«We’re taking every precaution to ensure your Fallout 76 characters, progression, Atoms, Season progress, cosmetics, rewards, your friends list, and even the Perfectly Preserved Pies you’ve been hoarding, make
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