The success of Baldur’s Gate 3 came as a surprise to many people. This includes developer Larian Studios, with concurrent player counts surpassing 800,000 players on Steam. It also seemed to surprise another big name in the industry, Microsoft.
Despite Baldur’s Gate 3 generating hype from its early access period, Microsoft may not have thought much of it, according to Polygon. In one part of the Xbox leak emerging from the FTC case, expectations for Baldur’s Gate 3 seemed lower than they would turn out.
Xbox chief Phil Spencer started an email chain in May 2022 to discuss the ramifications of delaying Starfield before publicly announcing it. Spencer acknowledged this was a disaster situation as this left a gap for Xbox’s 2022 releases. He instructed executives like Matt Booty and Sarah Bond to fill in the gap left by the empty release schedule.
Among these emails are lists of 3rd party games to potentially add to Game Pass along with the projected cost. These titles ranged from Dying Light 2, evaluated at around $50 million, and Suicide Squad at around $250 million. Baldur’s Gate 3 comparatively was called a “second-run Stadia PC RPG” and evaluated at $5 million.
Some have pointed out that the term “second-run” may refer to is Baldur’s Gate 3 initially launching on Google’s Stadia platform, even if some think it sounds like an insult. Yet Baldur’s Gate 3 was a big deal for the now-dead platform. Its announcement even occurred at the 2019 Google Stadia conference event.
Bizarre how there’s a ton of stories about MS calling BG3 a second-run Stadia RPG as if that’s somehow an insult. It was supposed to launch on Stadia first, ppl. They didn’t say second-rate, they said second-run. In context of what are probably v old
Read more on destructoid.com