Ubisoft updates The Crew 2 offline mode amid advocacy campaign

Ubisoft rolled out improvements to the offline Hybrid Mode in The Crew 2, enabling livery creation and driver statistics access without an internet connection. The Stop Killing Games movement celebrated the update, claiming its campaign influenced Ubisoft's decisions. These changes build on the mode introduced in October 2025.

Ubisoft announced the updates in a blog post, thanking fans for their enthusiasm since the Hybrid Mode's launch last October. Players can now create liveries offline, access their full collection, and save designs from the online library for offline use. Vehicle and pilot statistics also sync to offline profiles, progressing independently. A new 'Back to login' button simplifies switching between online and offline play, accompanied by various fixes. Ubisoft released these enhancements on April 22, 2026, further supporting the game originally pressured into hybrid functionality after the 2023 delisting and 2024 closure of The Crew. The Stop Killing Games X account highlighted founder Ross Scott's videos, where he stated, 'We inadvertently saved two games,' referring to The Crew 2 and The Crew Motorfest, the latter awaiting its offline mode. Scott added, based on company insider hearsay, that Ubisoft feared their European Citizens' Initiative petition—with nearly 1.3 million signatures—would force such changes, preventing end-of-life shutdowns they allegedly planned. The movement recently presented its case in the European Parliament.

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Ubisoft CEO Yves Guillemot announces new Far Cry and Assassin's Creed games at a press conference, with game artwork on screens behind him.
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Ubisoft confirms multiple Far Cry and Assassin's Creed games in development

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Ubisoft CEO Yves Guillemot has confirmed that two Far Cry projects and several Assassin's Creed titles are in active development under the new Vantage Studios. These include single-player and multiplayer experiences for Assassin's Creed, building on a community of over 30 million players last year. The announcement comes amid the company's major restructuring efforts.

France's leading consumer association, UFC-Que Choisir, has filed a lawsuit against Ubisoft over the 2024 shutdown of the online racing game The Crew. The action alleges that Ubisoft misled consumers about the permanence of their purchases and imposed abusive clauses stripping players of ownership rights. The Stop Killing Games movement has backed the lawsuit.

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The Stop Killing Games campaign, led by Ross Scott, plans to create non-governmental organizations in the European Union and the United States to combat publishers ending support for purchased video games. These NGOs will focus on long-term counter lobbying and watchdog activities. The initiative follows the campaign's success in gathering over a million signatures on its petition.

Ubisoft has announced that Assassin's Creed Shadows is now available on Nintendo Switch 2, alongside details on upcoming projects like Codename Hexe and Codename Invictus. The company is celebrating the game's one-year anniversary with a livestream and scaling back support for it. Additional news includes a Netflix series and a performance upgrade for Assassin's Creed Unity.

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Ubisoft has released its winter roadmap for Assassin's Creed Shadows, featuring updates like manual jumping and a community parkour challenge arriving on February 17. The plan also includes the Claws of Awaji expansion for Switch 2 players on March 10 and anniversary celebrations on March 20. These additions build on the game's strong performance since its release last year.

Bungie has released update 1.0.5.2 for Marathon, its extraction shooter, introducing incentives for players to assist strangers. The CyberAcme Runner Reinforcement Initiative offers bonus rewards for completing contracts or exfiling with non-crew players, alongside a Mercy Kit for reviving downed opponents. Balance changes include nerfs to thermal scopes and claymore drones.

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Eidos-Montréal has laid off roughly 124 employees and cancelled an unannounced open-world game tentatively titled Wildlands, according to a report by Insider Gaming's Tom Henderson. Studio head David Anfossi is also leaving the Embracer-owned studio. The project, in development since early 2019, had consumed significant resources.

 

 

 

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