![]() ![]() Last year, for instance, Splinter Cell: Conviction's online functionality was deactivated. The cracks have been appearing for some time. Ubisoft's obsession with keeping every aspect of their games rigidly tied to their online ecosystem has been catching up with them (or, more accurately, players) for a while. Granted, the game rarely has more than three concurrent players a day on Steam, but those are still people who bought a game to own in the last few years, and the primary function of that game is being actively removed from it by its publisher. ![]() As of this moment, the game is still available to buy on Steam (it's currently on sale, but that ends 7 July when it goes back up to $20), and there's no notification on the Steam page that as of 1 September the game will be effectively defunct. More alarmingly, the VR game Space Junkies, released in 2019, is going offline too, despite being very much a multiplayer-focused game. ![]()
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