I can’t be the only person getting tired of hearing about all these live service games. Call me selfish, but I really wish it’d just stop.
Trends come and go. In the past every game seemed to have a stealth section. Or a tower defence mini-game. These were annoying, but had very little impact on the industry itself. Nobody was imploding because their content pipeline wasn’t filled to the rafters.
And yet live service has fundamentally changed the way many people play games. It’s not enough for a title to hit shelves, it’s then deemed a massive disappointment if it doesn’t have monthly content to dig into.
This is nothing new with purely multiplayer games, and in some ways this has had a positive impact. I’m not unhappy to see map packs go the way of the dodo. I remember all too well being segregated from the Call of Duty community just because I hadn’t bought the latest set of levels yet.
And if that’s where it stopped, I wouldn’t have a massive problem. Yes, I hate what Overwatch has become. But it’s easy to just not play it. That’s something I never thought would happen during the heyday of the original game.
But everybody is chasing the live service dream. Sony have 12 – yes 12 – live service games in development. And six have been delayed beyond 2026. That means the bulk of their output for the next 2+ years is going to be trying to be the next big thing.
Call me old fashioned, but I think the last big thing is the place to be. Not the “too big to fail” blockbusters, because it’s not sustainable. But that PS3/PS4 level of engagement where there was occasionally room for a Gravity Rush or something.
The problem with traditional single player games is that they end. Kat destroys all the gravity monsters and floats
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