• Codex
    link
    English
    525 months ago

    It’s a ridiculous metric anyway. There are dozens of ancient MMOS that still manage to crawl along because a few hundred subscribers is enough to fund one or two developers in maintenance mode effectively forever. See also indie studios like Spiderweb Software who’ve been sustainably selling games to their fans for decades. See also indie roguelike devs who manage to make their one game a job by having a patreon and a few hundred fans. See also retrogaming. See also the boomer shooter renaissance.

    Games on the whole have never been less dead, unless their studio intentionally smothers them by shutting down servers and locking off access.

  • @thejoker954
    link
    English
    415 months ago

    Wut? It literally just got a major update a month or 2 ago. And it’s got great reviews.

    How the hell would it be considered “dead” by any metric?

    Stupid clickbate ‘journalism’

    • @[email protected]OP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      215 months ago

      The article points out how other sites and articles are calling it a dead game due to the fact it doesn’t have the 1.5 million concurrent players now (it did in Feb). Not that’s it’s been abandoned by the developer, but that is not getting the daily player counts that games as a services expect and how this game is bucking that trend and it’s a good thing.

      Its not clickbait journalism.

      • @thejoker954
        link
        English
        125 months ago

        I wasn’t aware Palword was supposed to be a game as a service.

        To me game as a service are games like world or warcraft or apex legends.
        Their whole point is to get money by microtransactions and recurring payments using constant new content to keep players engaged.

        • @redhorsejacket
          link
          English
          55 months ago

          You’re making the same points as the article (and the devs), hence OP stating that what he posted is not the “clickbait journalism” that you appeared to accuse it of being originally.

          If you were saying the other articles referred to in the headline are clickbait journalism, then I’m pretty sure we’re all on the same page. Your phrasing was just a little ambiguous at first.

      • @cryptiod137
        link
        English
        25 months ago

        It’s not a games as a service under any definition of the phrase, so the comparison is garbage

    • @scutiger
      link
      English
      35 months ago

      It’s still in Early Access, it hasn’t even officially released yet, how can it be a dead game already?

  • @yamanii
    link
    English
    325 months ago

    It’s a sold game not a live service, as long as they deliverer all updates who cares, the media also had this discussion with Manor Lords decaying numbers, after it sold millions…

    • mesamune
      link
      English
      85 months ago

      Also they already succeeded according to their own metrics.

  • @Limonene
    link
    English
    255 months ago

    No, it’s not dead. The number of players is irrelevant.

    A “dead game” is a game that needs work but is not under any development. It could be in Early Access, and incomplete. Or, it could be released, but still incomplete (looking at you, 7 Days to Die). Or, it could be an MMO that needs ongoing server maintenance, but they shut the servers down.

    A game that is being worked on and making good progress isn’t dead. A game that is complete and relatively bug-free, but not being worked on, is not dead. An MMO getting no new content, but just enough labor to keep the lights on and the servers up, is not dead.

    I guess an MMO or multiplayer game that has mandatory multiplayer aspects could be considered Dead if there aren’t enough players available to reasonably play the game. But Palworld is a single player game, or co-op with friends, not really an MMO.

  • @Katana314
    link
    English
    55 months ago

    I feel this way about Back 4 Blood too. It got a taste of backlash for not living up to the hopes of Left 4 Dead players - but, it has plenty of its own enjoyable elements (Left 4 Dead doesn’t really let you run a “build” that “specializes” in one thing and accepts a set of weaknesses). The developers announced they were going to stop updating it - but that only means it doesn’t file into the category of junky “Live service” noncompetitive games, which to me is fine. People shouldn’t necessarily avoid it on sale, the servers are up and it’s still fun.

  • @GeneralEmergency
    link
    English
    -15 months ago

    Palworld is a dead game because the fad is over. All the media outlets and YouTubers made their edgy Ash with the Glock thumbnails.

    And outside of that what more is there to talk about. It’s just your generic crafting survival early access title.

  • @BroBot9000
    link
    English
    -85 months ago

    Well how about you give server tools to players and don’t kill the game off once it’s no longer profitable.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      265 months ago

      Palworld has a dedicated server accessible through steam tools, no license required. I use it myself for my family’s instance. The game is still in early access as well, and small improvements keep rolling out.

      • @ProjectPatatoe
        link
        English
        65 months ago

        My biggest pause for getting on this is linux server support… but actually i just checked and it seems to have come out! Neat.

      • @BroBot9000
        link
        English
        -12
        edit-2
        5 months ago

        Wow, that a first for a corporation to allow.

        Normally they just kill off games and release a pointless sequel.

        • atocci
          link
          English
          95 months ago

          Palworld isn’t exactly an indie game, but the developer, Pocketpair, is an independent and privately owned company.