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After a decade of development, Roboquest’s developer is calling time on its roguelite shooter: ‘There’s no way we can continue to provide content for players with over 1,000 hours of gameplay’


When I was a kid, post-launch support was a concept reserved mainly for NASA, and rarely the domain of video games. Sure, you might download the odd online patch on your 56k modem to fix particularly gnarly bugs. But that was more or less it. These days, it’s expected that games will be supported for months and even years after release. And this support isn’t limited to fixing bugs: Developers are expected to add new, often free content to their games if they want to keep those Steam reviews in the blue.

I often wonder about the effect this has upon developers, and if the words of Roboquest’s designers are anything to go by, it sounds like it’s pretty exhausting. A bright and cheerful rogue-lite FPS about blasting robots through randomly generated environments, Roboquest launched into Steam early access in 2020, before formally releasing in 2023. Developer RyseUp Studio has continued to support the game since. Now though, after what the devs say is 10 years of work on the game, that support is coming to an end.

Originally posted by www.pcgamer.com

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