A first-person, single-player AAA shooter could be exactly my cuppa. However, there’d be zero chance I’m buying a game from EA so there’s that.
Honestly fuck EA.
Depends on if the game has almost no bugs, and EA lets the studio have full creative direction. Also if it is good. Like “It Takes Two,” and “A Way Out.”
Last first person I played through was “Trepang².” Currently playing through a third person called “Quantum Break.”
If it has EA as only the publisher, I might buy it later on sale. But if it’s first-party within EA, nah. Take-Two is actually the same for me these days. I won’t touch Blizzard-Activision anymore either (which is sad because I bought Warcraft and Starcraft when they came out originally and would play over modem with my buddies).
Well Immortals has a demo and -60% off on steam currently. And if you want to add to your library dead island might still be free, with 9 items free in the steam points shop.
trying to make a AAA single-player shooter in today’s market was a truly awful idea, especially since it was a new IP that was also trying to leverage Unreal Engine 5. What ended up launching was a bloated, repetitive campaign that was far too long.
See, it’s the last part of that quote that’s the problem. Not the concept of a AAA sp fps.
Or the game wasn’t that good, so people didn’t buy it?
“we made a mid game and released it at a bad time, we couldn’t possibly be the reason it failed, clearly the world just doesn’t want single player shooters!”
I’d not even heard of the game until now. Maybe they chose a bad launch window.
It’s also EA so I doubt people that did hear of it were particularly excited, especially given the milquetoast title of the game.
Single-player shooters are my thing (ain’t got time for multiplayer and the dedication needed for it), and EA games aren’t my thing.
I guess Doom 2016 and Doom eternal bombed and no one told me.
I’m not saying making and marketing a single player AAA shooter is an easy thing, but id software and Bethesda proved that it’s possible
It was just really bland.
A magic FPS sounds great. I want more of them. I didn’t completely hate the demo. But there were three spells for the part I played and none of them felt good. And all the reviews implied there really wasn’t much more.
Spending all that money on a mediocre game is the bad idea. And spending 40 million on marketing and having no one know what your game is is just kind of funny.
So many gamers won’t touch EA on general principles. Every new game they make there’s more
It takes two did well
EA 8 years ago: Ya.
These days they are managing to publish some good stuff. But two things: 1. I’m waiting on player reviews. 2. If I never hear about the game - you failed to make sure the market was aware.
First time I’m hearing of this game. I think big publishers are going to realize soon that while the gaming market is big, the attention span of gamers is narrow. They just don’t have it in them to buy 4 or 5 big games a year when every game seems to be a live service, battlepass infused time sink.
This seems exactly like the type of game I’d buy and play… if I had heard about it.
Yea, I found about this yesterday and went “wow, that kinda sounds awsome”
Never heard about it before though
I was looking forward to this game. The market didn’t fail them, they failed the market.
Just in general, how DO single purchase games make money unless they are huge hits? Lets say they make about 50$ per copy sold (Steam, Xbox and PS take their 30% of course). If the game cost 125 M to make this would mean they need to sell 2,5 Million copies at full price to break even.
2.5 million people just isn’t a big hit when you’re spending 40 million on ads.
It’s huge for an indie, but that’s because they’re not spending big bucks on development and advertising, and are mostly inherently targeting smaller audiences.