Death from above

Unfortunately its drop in popularity was just as sudden, and almost as immediate. Eighteen months later, Ubisoft have announced they’re ending development and shutting the game down on April 28th.

“We have made the difficult decision to end development of Hyper Scape and shut the game down as of April 28th,” readsthe extremely brief post. “We set out to create a vertical, close-quarters, and fast-paced shooter experience and we are extremely grateful to our community for joining us on our journey. We will be taking key learnings from this game into future products.”

To its credit, Hyper Scape tried to do something different within thebattle royale genre. Matt Coxcompared it to Quake, owing to its rapid pace. “No quietly stalking through fields, or merrily yet slowly looting your way up to a deadly loadout. This is all guns all the time, baby - when it’s not all skyward leaps, groundpounds, teleports and bouncing metallic bubble shields.”

It didn’t click with players, however, and three months after launchUbisoft wrote thatthey “were not able to achieve the high expectations we set for ourselves,” particularly around its August launch on console. They set about making changes by adding new game modes, with plans to make it easier for new players.

I guess these changes didn’t produce the results Ubisoft hoped for. The publishersaid last yearthat the time was right for “high-end free-to-play games” across all their many series, but so far their attempts at live services games have mostly produced duds, includingGhost Recon Frontlinewhich was shoved back in the oven even before its first closed beta.

Elsewhere, whennot launching NFTs, Ubisoft continue to be accused by employees ofnot doing enough in response to an alleged workplace culture of harassment and abuse.