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Live service games still a focus for Platinum Games, despite Babylon Fall's poor reception



Earlier this year, Platinum Games made the decision to cease all updates to its beleaguered live service game Babylons Fall, and announced it would be “terminating the games service” on Tuesday, 28th February 2023. The game itself had received a poor reception across the board, with criticisms ranging from its monetisation model to its £60 price tag.

However, despite the fall of Babylons Fall, the developer is not taking its eyes off any future live service games.

In an interview with VGC, Platinum Games boss Atsushi Inaba said the team has “learned from this experience [with Babylons Fall]” and it had not “changed [its] future plans or outlook” because of it.


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Inaba continued, “live service games are definitely something we do want to do and put our effort in moving forward… There are two pillars, so to speak, that we can look at internally for our development teams, that being the people within the same company.

“The first is just the sheer fun of the core game mechanics that you have in the live service game and secondly, performing the live service itself. I think these two pillars are values that need to be strongly connected internally, and need to be viewed, treasured, and valued by the same people, on the same team, at the very same company.”

Inaba concluded, “if one of these is valued over the other or if theyre not connected, things usually dont turn out the way we would have wanted them to. We want to focus on keeping that connection and that balance between those two pillars moving forward.”

In addition to addressing the companys plans about its future approach to live service games, Inaba also touched on Babylons Fall itself, and players reactions to the game.

Inaba told the publication the games closure was an “unfortunate conclusion”, and one that likely triggered both “disappointment” and “anger” for its fans. This, the developer stated, Platinum Games feels “extremely sorry” about, saying “providing any sentiment other than enjoyment and fun in our creations to players is something that were not very happy about at all.”

On its initial launch in March, Babylons Fall welcomed less than 1000 Steam players online worldwide at launch. Platinum Games initially had hoped that it could turn things around for its flailing addition to the worlds gaming library, but this was not to be the case.

Rather, it saw player numbers fall down to as low as 10 on PC the month after launch, and down further to just one player the month after that.

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