| Hellgate: London Not Closing Its Doors
Hellgate: London players will be pleased to know that the game will not be shutting down in North America on January 31st as anticipated. According to Gamasutra, Korean publisher, Hanbisoft, will run its own servers and HG: L will become a 'free to play' game. Hanbisoft also indicated that updates are in the works. Check out the official word below:
Although it is slated to stop operating in the West on January 31, multiplayer online title Hellgate: London will continue on here as a free-to-play game, according to comments from Korean publisher and developer HanbitSoft.
The announcement comes in spite of a decision by Namco-Bandai, which co-published the game through an agreement with Electronic Arts' EA Partners, to terminate the game's servers.
HanbitSoft has asserted that it owns the IP, engines and source code for the Flagship Studios title worldwide, and will maintain Hellgate: London for its global community. HanbitSoft had previously been responsible for only the game's Korean operations.
The switch to a free-to-play model was the first official announcement the company has made regarding the fate of the title, which during its lifetime suffered from perceived quality issues, and an insufficient userbase, playing a key role in the closing of Flagship Studios in July 2008.
HanbitSoft also says in an official press statement seen by Gamasutra that future updates for Hellgate: London are in the works, with a focus on "strengthening community features" while maintaining the core gameplay as is.
The next "large-scale" patch, according to HanbitSoft, will be released "soon," and will combine the game's two play modes to unify its communities. The company also plans class balance improvements and further distinction between the game's five acts.
This is great new indeed. Hellgate: London had finally become a game well worth playing about the time that Flagship Studios tanked. Now maybe it will realize its potential.
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| You honestly don't believe that do you? A game moves to a f2p system, it's not going to go anywhere up. It might stay on the same level, but most likely it will just get worse and worse. You know when I read the topic title, I thought to myself Oh jeez, just let it die nice and quietly, and let it go down in gaming history as a 'what if' game with great potential. Nothing good is going to come out of this. |
| Actually, I think that F2P will work just fine for HG:L for a couple of reasons:
- Gameplay is action-based and enjoybale in short, quick sessions. - Fixing the remaining minor bugs in addition to free single player packs will keep the servers busy all around.
Afterall, free equals more players, probably enough to keep pushing infrequent updates, etc... |
| If they'd just fix some stuff up and try not to touch anything much, it'd be just fine...
No, wait, I was talking about the homeless people I hired to clean my house. As far as HG:L goes, I agree with guitar. |
| HGL was already a F2P game. Most players weren't paying the 5 bucks a month or, God forbid, hadn't purchased the laughable 'lifetime' subscription. I don't see any significant change for the game except for the fact that people who were smart enough to stay away from the subscription will now have access to better equipment and Stonehenge. |
Hellgate: London Not Closing Its Doors
Hellgate: London players will be pleased to know that the game will not be shutting down in North America on January 31st as anticipated. According to Gamasutra, Korean publisher, Hanbisoft, will run its own servers and HG: L will become a 'free to play' game. Hanbisoft also indicated that updates are in the works. Check out the official word below:
This is great new indeed. Hellgate: London had finally become a game well worth playing about the time that Flagship Studios tanked. Now maybe it will realize its potential.
Permalink