forbes.com

Switorik, to games in After Initial Success, Helldiver’s 2 Has Lost 90% Of Its Players With No Signs Of Recovery

I’ll put my two cents in. I never bought the game because of the invasive anti cheat. I was still tempted until they required PlayStation account linking.

I didn’t get it initially because it looked very repetitive and cheesy (in a bad way). Some of my friends played it which made me look into it and by the time I may have gave in and tried it they introduced account linking and I full noped out of it.

MelastSB,

Sony didn’t go through with account linking in the end. However you cannot purchase the game in the (numerous) countries where PSN isn’t allowed. If you had already bought it (and didn’t refund), you can keep it.

Your other points still stand, though

NeryK, to games in After Initial Success, Helldiver’s 2 Has Lost 90% Of Its Players With No Signs Of Recovery
@NeryK@sh.itjust.works avatar

Like every PvE game which does not have hundreds of people working to churn out content, its playerbase will dwindle until only those who do not get bored by its gameplay stick around. Whether it’s Left 4 Dead, Payday, Deep Rock Galactic or Vermintide, those types of games follow this pattern…

And I for one, see no fucking issue with that. It’s a great game, people play it until they have had their fill and then move on. Helldivers 2 is only an outlier because of how hard it hit at launch. It absolutely does not have the content pipeline to keep a large playerbase engaged, so yeah it will not keep printing a lot of money, just a little bit every now and then.

Now excuse me as I go and spread some managed democracy.

loganb,

This message was approved by your local democracy officer.

sentient_loom,
@sentient_loom@sh.itjust.works avatar

That’s a good point. An online game can be successful while having a limited shelf life. Make your money and shut it down (or just ramp it down for the smaller audience if it’s worth the effort)

Irremarkable,
@Irremarkable@fedia.io avatar

Basically this. Anyone who is surprised by this has been paying literally zero attention to how these things usually go. The majority of the time when a game explodes that much, this happens. Sometimes to a lesser extent, sometimes to a greater one. A good chunk of the people who buy the game in the first place buy it to play with their friends, and when their friends move on to another game, they will too.

While you will have games that are the exception, such as PUBG which has had massive a player count for forever. they are indeed the exception.

AlexisFR,
@AlexisFR@jlai.lu avatar

Yeah but that’s the problem isn’t it? Why are more toxic games like the PvP centric ones some much more successful with sometimes even less content?

Passerby6497,

Because PvP is basically infinite free content for people who like the game loop. I’ve had friends who love that sort of thing and they can play forever because they’re putting their skills against real people who aren’t just basic AIs.

ampersandrew,
@ampersandrew@lemmy.world avatar

They’re not. This same curve happens with PvP games. The ones that don’t follow this trend are the exception, not the rule.

AngryMob,

Chess has been played for ages with no dlc. Competition against another person is engaging on its own. And chess is a good deep game on its own.

Combine competition with a good game and you get a successful infinite live service game in theory.

Only one or the other and you get a flash in the pan.

Blackmist,

Yeah, most players will play a game for a bit and then move on. It’s rare to get attached to a game and play it forever, and if you do, you likely only have one game like that. There’ll be people who play Helldivers 2 for years, but it doesn’t seem set up like an MMO so is unlikely to get the same long term traction.

chemical_cutthroat, to games in After Initial Success, Helldiver’s 2 Has Lost 90% Of Its Players With No Signs Of Recovery
@chemical_cutthroat@lemmy.world avatar

Without any real sense of progression, I just couldn’t find a reason to play unless I had a friend who was already online and playing. Unlocking new weapons and whatnot is fun until its not, and when I don’t have the minutia that comes with an MMO or the randomness that comes with a rogue-like, I don’t have anything to look forward to from the next run. There was no surprise to the game, and the initial luster faded pretty quickly when I realised what the treadmill was going to be. If there had been a more single player focused bit to it, I may have lasted longer, but being so heavily reliant on a party meant it was a group of friends, or some randos that are going to waste my time.

ShadowRam,

This is essentially it.

The core gameplay is great. Pulled us all in.

The core gameloop is missing. I figured they would expand the game more and quicker.

Like are we still only on Terminids and Automatons only?

PhlubbaDubba, to games in After Initial Success, Helldiver’s 2 Has Lost 90% Of Its Players With No Signs Of Recovery

More accurate to say that the initial success surge has calmed down to their core audience.

That 10% or fewer depending on if it’s still shrinking will be the rock and stoners that keep this game running well into the future.

You’ll probably see a similar spike then fall off then consolidation when The Forever Winter releases. That core community revenue is probably going to be what FunDog is planning on using for future projects and to cover the maintenance costs of TFW. I mean either that or they’ll power the servers by kidnapping the playerbase and harvesting their organs and bioelectricity but it was really their own fault for not being able to get out of sight before nightfall.

Chozo, to games in After Initial Success, Helldiver’s 2 Has Lost 90% Of Its Players With No Signs Of Recovery

Naturally there is always going to be a certain amount of player decline over time, but I have to wonder how much of this could have been saved had Sony not created a PR nightmare for the game with the required PSN account linking.

That said, I'm sure there's going to be a sharp spike in players very soon, as Arrowhead should be releasing a new enemy faction into the game very shortly, which is going to bring a lot of players back again for a while. Hopefully they'll find a way to keep those players interested again.

halcyoncmdr,
@halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world avatar

All games like this have massive daily player drop offs a few months after release.

To be honest despite the publicity, most players don’t actually give a shit. Most players don’t read gaming news. And many players don’t care, either because they already have a PSN account, or they just don’t care about making another account to play the game.

I wouldn’t be surprised if over half the players had never even heard of the PSN controversy at all. The SteamDB player chart actually indicates when those shenanigans were compared to player numbers, and the daily player numbers had already been declining at that same pace for a month up to that point and continued at about the same rate after.

steamdb.info/app/553850/charts/

TSG_Asmodeus,
@TSG_Asmodeus@lemmy.world avatar

All games like this have massive daily player drop offs a few months after release.

This makes me feel super old, because I must have played Quake 1 daily for 8 straight years. Same with Counter-Strike. I’m still not used to people changing games every few months.

AlexisFR,
@AlexisFR@jlai.lu avatar

PvP centric games tend to have way more consistent player bases than PVE games, sadly.

pyre,

it is still unplayable in over 100 countries. i bet some of those people heard, you know, when they couldn’t log in.

halcyoncmdr,
@halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world avatar

Of course. I’m not an idiot, clearly there are people affected.

But even if EVERY Helldivers 2 sale were affected, of the 1.85 BILLION estimated PC gamers in the world, we would be looking at around 0.6% people affected. It’s a tiny sliver, despite Helldivers having over 12 million sales (and that’s both PC and console).

The fact of the matter is this doesn’t mean shit in the grand scheme, and most people have likely never even heard of the game still even with the controversy. The industry is unfathomably massive and one game is tiny, even one with 12+ million sales.

CarbonatedPastaSauce,

Well they lost me with their ridiculous price hike for PSN. I won’t be buying any more multiplayer games for my PS5.

snooggums, to games in After Initial Success, Helldiver’s 2 Has Lost 90% Of Its Players With No Signs Of Recovery
@snooggums@midwest.social avatar

The player base was always going to decline significantly.

It doesn’t have the same kind of slow grind and wide open maps with tonnes of things to interact with that kept up the populations of a game like WoW or Overwatch, so it was going to naturally decline anyway as most people got their fill of the game play and move on to the next game. Anything that is comparable either had a ton of content that was drip fed or has random loot boxes to keep people playing. This game lets you earn enough to play even the highest levels of play fairly quickly, with getting everything taking a bit longer.

The remaining population is actually pretty high for this kind of game, and it is far from dying. I play randoms when friends aren’t on even though I have unlocked all the upgrades to earn myself medals, but also to help out the other players because the game does promote team play even with all the accidental team kills. I never have to wait when there are more than 1,000 players on a planet, and the there are often several planets with several thousand even when people aren’t grouped up for major orders.

The community is engaged and while there will certainly be more of a decline as time passes, I wouldn’t be surprised if the game gets a significant bump in player activity (old players coming back) when they introduce the next faction. Probably not double whatever population is there when it hits, but maybe 50% increase as people come to check out the new content. I think the rapid release was their original plan to keep the player base going and I’m happy they slowed down to address bugs and do quality of life improvements for a bit.

This game also has the most friendly, or at least least antagonistic, player base I have ever experienced in an online game. Although most random games don’t have anyone speak up unless I do first, people help each other out, attempt to get everyone out, and there is often hugs on the ship after extraction. I have only had one player grief in dozens of random games and one match had someone who was rude. Far, far fewer negative experiences than any other game I’ve played.

It may get down to 3% of the highest number of players and will still be alive and kicking for those that do enjoy the game play.

Kecessa,

Deep Rock Galactic would like a word about friendly player base!

snooggums,
@snooggums@midwest.social avatar

I haven’t experienced it, but hear good things about the community.

Cagi,

As would FFXIV.

FoxFairline,
@FoxFairline@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Guild Wars 2 as well. :)

Failx,

Did I hear a “Rock and Stone”?

thanks_shakey_snake,

Rockity rock and stone!

EmptySlime,

ROCK AND STONE TO THE BONE!

MR_GABARISE, to games in After Initial Success, Helldiver’s 2 Has Lost 90% Of Its Players With No Signs Of Recovery

Maybe this will get lost as Just Another Comment but…

I feel like subscription services should actually serve as a true platform for those kinds of games. Something like joining a party playing Game X, and while you play your round(s), Game Y, or a slice of Game Y is downloading. When you finish your round of Game X you get switched to Game Y and it goes on and on, with some kind of voting on the next game.

There is a whole infrastructure dedicated for this required, and nevermind the multiplatform issues.

It just feels like the interactive nature of gaming would deliver one the one issue of streaming services where “there’s nothing to watch”. The cynic in me sees this as just another place to cram ads.

Zeke, to games in After Initial Success, Helldiver’s 2 Has Lost 90% Of Its Players With No Signs Of Recovery

To be honest, the nerfs killed it and the buffs didn't go to the things we enjoyed playing with like the quasar. It went to a lot of other things, but we came back and it still felt awful

Voyajer, to games in After Initial Success, Helldiver’s 2 Has Lost 90% Of Its Players With No Signs Of Recovery
@Voyajer@lemmy.world avatar

That is just the natural lifecycle of every multiplayer game

DragonTypeWyvern, to games in After Initial Success, Helldiver’s 2 Has Lost 90% Of Its Players With No Signs Of Recovery

Not to criticize something people enjoy but I bought it and hated the hell out of it. I genuinely consider even its temporary popularity a sign of the decline of shooter gaming as a whole (that or I’m just bored of the genre after playing entirely too much Destiny)

I also learned that the PS Store doesn’t let you do returns anymore, even if you’ve only played about twenty minutes, so fuck off forever Sony, I guess.

Point is, I wonder how many of these players were actually that active in the first place? I bought it because it was basically going viral, and simply could not return it, unlike Palworld.

SpeedLimit55, to games in After Initial Success, Helldiver’s 2 Has Lost 90% Of Its Players With No Signs Of Recovery

If they want new players they should put it on xbox.

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

Do you think those four people make a noticeable difference?

ocassionallyaduck, to games in After Initial Success, Helldiver’s 2 Has Lost 90% Of Its Players With No Signs Of Recovery

When the initial player base numbers are fucking unsustainable, this is a necessary and expected correction.

Panicked headline aside, there are still tens of thousands of players online at any given time and the game is doing extremely well at for not having had a proper expansion or new faction, and just the steady drip feed of new gear and equipment.

Fades,

It’s clickbait more so than panicked headline but yeah I agree

delirium, to games in After Initial Success, Helldiver’s 2 Has Lost 90% Of Its Players With No Signs Of Recovery
@delirium@lemmy.world avatar

Great core gameplay, multiple boring or just bad patches; devs who care more about their imaginary milsim being close to their imaginary reality than about player fun; slow content rollout (still no new race despite them being leaked many months ago)

In the end I had my fair share of fun but I see no real reason to come back.

Yeller_king, to games in After Initial Success, Helldiver’s 2 Has Lost 90% Of Its Players With No Signs Of Recovery

Why would it sustain those numbers? It’s fine to play a cool game, be satisfied with it, and then move on.

woelkchen,
@woelkchen@lemmy.world avatar

Because in the minds of suits live service games are meant to be played forever.

xenoclast,

I gotta say. Props to Lemmy users here. This thread is just post after post of generally reasonable take on how enjoyment and entertainment work in reality.

And really just a perfect argument for why infinite growth live service games are a fucking cancer dreamed up by humans who are fucking parasites.

Helldivers is great and the devs should be proud of their success. A+ .

Kolanaki,
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

Because it’s a live service game. The disconnect is that this doesn’t make players want to stay as much as the developer/publisher would like.

Delusional,

Yup I had fun with it, now it doesn’t sound as much fun anymore. I played it until it got boring due to repetitiveness.

Ragnarok314159,

They don’t have any kind of single player option which turns off a lot of players. It looked really cool, but as soon as I found out to really experience the game you have to play with others, became immediately uninterested.

MeaanBeaan, to games in After Initial Success, Helldiver’s 2 Has Lost 90% Of Its Players With No Signs Of Recovery

And the Sony account requirement will be reimplemented in 3… 2… 1…

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