BioWare's Anthem servers shut down permanently on January 12, 2026, as planned, ending access to the live-service shooter without an offline mode. In the final days, players returned en masse to bid farewell, sharing memories and videos amid reflections on the game's lost potential and the need to preserve such titles.
Following the announcement covered earlier this year, Anthem's servers went offline on January 12, 2026, marking the definitive end for BioWare's ambitious 2019 loot shooter. Publisher EA provided no offline mode or special events, leaving the game's stunning world of Bastion and hub Fort Tarsis inaccessible forever.
In the lead-up, fans flocked back despite low ongoing numbers. Community moderator Pimpy Shortstocking recalled the launch dread but noted the return: "The people around me don’t have the same patience I do... A lot of them dropped off immediately." Fan Vinny praised momentary highs: "Anthem could feel incredible minute to minute, even when everything around it was held together by duct tape."
Players like WordsMaybe documented the last hours through videos, stressing historical value: "Even though Anthem’s not a good game, I still think it deserves some life... for the historical value of what Anthem was." The subreddit filled with trophy hunts, screenshots, and tributes, offering a grassroots farewell amid muted disappointment from the canceled 2021 overhaul.
As Eurogamer noted, Anthem lingered as a "ghost ship for years," its closure amplifying live-service preservation debates. While community servers remain a distant hope, the shutdown cements Anthem's 'what if' legacy, influencing BioWare's shift back to single-player RPGs.