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Overwatch 2 Update: Developers Cancel Flagship Game Mode, Reworking Priorities

Overwatch 2's PvE mode has officially been canceled, but the work done for it will be leveraged for PvP

Overwatch 2 Update: Developers Cancel Flagship Game Mode, Reworking Priorities
Álvaro Arbonés

Álvaro Arbonés

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Overwatch is a beloved game. It had a meteoric rise, which managed to attract a large audience beyond the classic gamer crowd, and then had an equally catastrophic fall, due to design and commercial decisions by Blizzard that made the game unsustainable and unfriendly to players. That is why the announcement of Overwatch 2 and the fact that it would add a campaign mode, where it would focus on the single-player and cooperative experience, giving more weight to the story of the characters, was greeted with enthusiasm by the community. It would allow much of the public to return to a game they loved on their own terms. But upon the game’s release, this mode was delayed. And now, Blizzard has announced the cancellation of Overwatch 2’s PvE mode.

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This has been announced through a development diary of the game, where Aaron Keller, game director, has confirmed the new news. Instead they will add small cooperative missions that can be played for a limited time. The justification for this has been that, for the sake of the game, it is preferable to dispense with the PvE mode altogether, in order to focus on PvP, explaining in the process all the content that is to come through a detailed development map.

This is particularly problematic when we consider that Overwatch 2’s big selling point after its disastrous launch was its PvE mode. Their main reason for shutting down the original game’s servers is that its PvE mode, meant to be played solo or accompanied, would be a huge change for the franchise, adding a campaign with skill trees and a progression through a story that would tell us the events experienced by the characters, instead of simply narrating them through comics and cinematics, as the original game had done. Something that has now been completely discarded.

In any case, Keller wanted to shed light on some points that may have been unclear in the development diary. To do so, he decided to give an interview to Gamespot where he develops his perspective on why they have taken this decision.

Regarding what we can expect, Keller has clarified that “the focus is on the story missions and the gameplay experience as opposed to hero mode and that sort of thing (…) we’re not doing hero mode and the talents and the power progression system”. On the reasons why they decided to release the game without PvE mode, deciding to release it with PvP mode only, he stated that “we couldn’t keep all that content over what felt like at least several years to finish it, and to do that, take away more resources from people who might be playing our game and who might be playing Overwatch 2. So we made the decision that same year to focus all of our efforts on our game already on the street and all of our PvE efforts on our new narrative arc that will be released in season 6.”

To justify this decision, he stated that “when you make a plan, it’s based on an idea and a general direction (…) So, I guess, my idea is that, as a team, we’ve learned more about what it takes to do this, more about the time, iterations and technology needed, making it clear that our plan didn’t work”.

As such, it is not to be expected that Overwatch 2 will ever become what we were originally promised: a reboot of the franchise that can once again appeal to the general public that it managed to grab at the beginning of its journey. An evolution of Overwatch that would mean a return to its golden age. And while it is true that it will have a greater focus on the narrative, Keller’s statements are no less disappointing for that.

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Álvaro Arbonés

Álvaro Arbonés

Cultural journalist and writer with a special interest in audiovisuals and everything that can be played. I'm not here to talk about my books, but you can always ask me about them if you're curious.

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