Tribes 3: Rivals got everyone excited with an excellent Steam Next Fest demo this February that suggested, maybe this time, the revival would stick. The game launched into early access on March 12, 2024, promising a «rebirth» of the beloved first-person sport-slash-shooter with a simple business model: $20 upfront price, and no microtransactions.
It hasn't gone well. Per SteamDB, there are currently 27 players in Tribes 3: Rivals. The greatest number of simultaneous players the game has had was at launch: 890.
Now there's a strangely titled post on the Tribes 3: Rivals Steam page that appears to be even worse news for players: «Giving Back to Tribes 3 & Starsiege: Deadzone Players.» The note is addressed to the community and is essentially a way of saying the loud part very quietly.
Developer Prophecy says it's «offering credits to all players who made purchases in Starsiege: Deadzone or Tribes 3 in the past.» Starsiege: Deadzone is an extraction shooter that launched in July last year, made by the same developer. Prophecy says these credits will be issued towards its new game, Ultra Strikers, a cartoony 3vs3 sports shooter that doesn't currently have a release date.
Basically any money people have spent on those games can now be used 1:1 towards buying Ultra Strikers which is… better than nothing, I guess, but a million miles away from a refund. And it's part of what makes this announcement so weird, because essentially what Prophecy is here to say is: look, it hasn't worked out, and we can't keep supporting Tribes 3. Instead this is couched in terms of the studio gifting players credits for money spent on Tribes.
Rather a mess, in other words, and Tribes 3's Steam reviews are being hit as we speak (though they weren't great to begin with, mainly due to the difficulty of finding other players).
Towards the end of the announcement Prophecy almost-but-not-quite says that Tribes 3 is done. «We’re doing our best to support Tribes 3 with limited updates (along with an
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