Titanfall, the game which catapulted Respawn Entertainment to the status of EAâs star studio, is being pulled from digital storefronts and subscription services on March 1, 2022. This, to me? Sucks. Howeverâgiven the gameâs recent brush with some very bad hackingâit isnât particularly surprising either.
Titanfall, at the time of its release, was an incredibly ambitious experiment. It was a multiplayer-only FPS, including its campaign modeâwhich attempted to weave story into the gameâs matchmaking. The gameâs multiplayer-only focus, in addition to its phenomenally fluid movement system and weighty mech combat, made Titanfall a brilliant oddityâone that would lay the foundation for all of Respawnâs future projects.
Titanfall 2 is possibly the best first-person shooter released in the last decadeâwith its perfectly paced and impeccably designed campaign and stellar multiplayer. Apex Legends is set in the same universe, uses the same weapons, and has a modified version of Titanfallâs movement system. The game all but reignited movement shooters for a short time, before they sadly returned to the shadows.
For the last few years, Titanfall has been plagued with myriad problemsâmost troubling of which has been widespread hacking throughout the gameâs multiplayer. Both Titanfall and Titanfall 2 were hit with multiple DDOS attacks, which crashed the gamesâ servers, several hacks which would cause playersâ games to crash, and even claims that some security flaws could permanently jeopardize the health of your PC (which Respawn disproved). These security risks, in addition to Repsawnâs insistence that they arenât working on Titanfall 3 right now (but could someday), make the current state of Titanfall anything but cheery. Respawn has said the franchise is at the core of the studioâs identity, but this is all we really have to go on for the future of the series.
Titanfallâs grim fate marks yet another high-profile instance of a game being pulled from saleâwith Rockstarâs recent attempt to remove classic GTA games from various storefronts being the most notable example. Jump Force, the Shonen Jump anime-fighter has also met this fate recently. As someone who cares about games preservation, decisions like this are deeply concerning even if theyâre not unexpected.
Titanfall helped set the tone for an entire generation of first-person shooters, and its effects on the genre are undeniably present even today. Hell, Halo Infiniteâs excellent grappling hook is pure Titanfall. Losing access to this classic is a major blow to anyone with even a passing interest in FPS history.
For those of you who havenât picked up the game, it will remain on sale until March 1, 2022, and the gameâs multiplayer servers will remain online even after the game is taken off stores and subscription services everywhere.
Goodbye Titanfall, rest well my sweet mech-prince.