Elden Ring: Nightreign Isn’t A Live-Service Game And Won’t Be Full-Priced

Estimated read time 2 min read



Even with its multiplayer focus, From Software doesn’t look at the newly revealed Elden Ring: Nightreign as a live-service game. The developer wants the co-op action-RPG to be “a complete package out of the box,” and publisher Bandai Namco will price the package similarly to Elden Ring: Shadow of the Erdtree.

PC Gamer spoke with Elden Ring: Nightreign director Junya Ishizaki about whether the multiplayer-centric survival game might borrow live-service mechanics, but that doesn’t appear to be the case. “With Nightreign, we wanted to have a game that felt like a complete package out of the box on the day of purchase, so everything is unlockable, everything is contained with that purchase,” Ishizaki said. “It’s not what we’d consider a live-service game.”

Speaking of purchasing Elden Ring: Nightreign, PC Gamer added that Bandai Namco noted the standalone experience will cost roughly the same as the Shadow of the Erdtree expansion. That was priced at $40 at launch instead of the typical $60 to $70 for full games these days.

Elden Ring: Nightreign was announced at The Game Awards last night and will be set in the ever-changing location called Limveld. Players will pick from eight different characters before embarking on a perilous adventure by themselves or in a group of three where they try to survive “a three-day-and-night cycle” to ultimately take down the Nightlord.

Described as a “condensed action-RPG” by Bandai Namco, Elden Ring: Nightreign seems to lean into roguelike mechanics with unique runs and relics that carry over with each attempt in Limveld. It’s planned to release in 2025.



Source link

You May Also Like

More From Author

+ There are no comments

Add yours