Following the cancellation of Hyenas, the studio goes back to its main genre.
By George Yang on
It looks like Creative Assembly is going back to creating games in the real-time strategy genre after the cancellation of its multiplayer shooter, Hyenas.
During a financial briefing, Sega president Haruki Satomi said, «To put it simply, Creative Assembly was good at offline games in the RTS genre, but they took on the challenge of developing Hyenas, an online game in the FPS genre.»
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Now Playing: HYENAS — Official Gameplay Trailer
During the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, Sega tried to accelerate growth by having studios focus on areas where they historically haven't experienced it. However, some studios were able to adapt, and others didn't, so now Sega is going back to having them focus on their core strengths.
Satomi continued, saying, “As part of the process of structural reform centered on Creative Assembly, we intend to optimize the workflow and concentrate their resources on the development of their specialty genres.”
Hyenas was officially canceled back in September as part of a restructuring at Sega. Additionally, some other unannounced titles were canceled too. The game was reportedly Sega's biggest budget game ever, and its development was reportedly hampered by a lack of clear direction. It was also reportedly a premium game before shifting to a free-to-play model with microtransactions.
Creative Assembly is best known for the real-time strategy Total War series, and its latest entry, Total War: Pharoah, was
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