Bethesda delists The Elder Scrolls: Blades from stores ahead of June 2026 shutdown

Bethesda has delisted its mobile RPG spinoff The Elder Scrolls: Blades from the Apple App Store, Google Play Store, and Nintendo eShop ahead of a permanent server shutdown on June 30, 2026. Existing players can access all content for free via Gems and Sigils until closure.

The Elder Scrolls: Blades, launched in early access in 2019 for Android, iOS, and later Nintendo Switch, has been quietly removed from major digital storefronts earlier this month, as first reported by Eurogamer via Reddit's r/ElderScrolls community. The free-to-play dungeon crawler, which drew over one million iOS downloads in its first week but earned a 'Generally Unfavorable' Metacritic rating due to repetitive gameplay and heavy microtransactions, will see its servers go offline on June 30, 2026—marking the end of its seven-year run amid ongoing Elder Scrolls projects like Skyrim remasters and The Elder Scrolls Online.

Logging-in players receive this in-game notification: “The Elder Scrolls: Blades servers will permanently shut down on June 30, 2026. From now until June 30, 2026, all items in the store will be available for 1 Gem or 1 Sigil each. All players receive a free bundle of Gems and Sigils, so you can enjoy all content Blades has to offer. Thank you for playing and we hope you have enjoyed your time in Blades.”

This farewell gesture follows Bethesda's shutdown of another spinoff, The Elder Scrolls: Legends, in January 2025. Fans seeking mobile Elder Scrolls experiences can try The Elder Scrolls: Castles, which remains available.

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Realistic illustration of New World: Aeternum's mystical world with server shutdown notice, symbolizing the MMO's end in 2027.
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Amazon's New World: Aeternum MMO to shut down in 2027

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Amazon Games has announced that its MMO New World: Aeternum will go offline on January 31, 2027, following a delisting from digital stores on January 15, 2026. The decision comes after the game received no new content beyond the 2025 Nighthaven seasonal update, amid ongoing challenges for Amazon's gaming division. Players who own the game can continue accessing it until the servers shut down.

ZeniMax Online Studios announced that The Elder Scrolls Online will integrate several paid DLCs into the base game for free starting in March 2026, as part of a shift to a new seasonal content model. This change aims to deliver more varied updates without annual paid chapters. The roadmap includes battle passes, class reworks, and experimental zones throughout the year.

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With just 10 days remaining, Electronic Arts will end support for BioWare's multiplayer game Anthem by switching off its servers on January 12, 2026. This closure marks the final chapter for a title that struggled to find its audience despite high expectations. The decision highlights ongoing debates about the longevity of live-service games.

Bethesda's Todd Howard has reiterated that The Elder Scrolls 6 is still a long way off, urging fans to remain patient in a recent GQ interview. The game, first teased at E3 2018, follows the 2011 release of Skyrim and comes after the studio's work on Starfield as a creative reset. Howard expressed a preference for surprise releases, hinting at a potential shadow drop similar to this year's Oblivion Remastered.

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ARC Team and PUBG Studios have announced that their top-down tactical shooter PUBG: Blindspot will close on March 30, just over two months after its early access launch. The free-to-play spin-off from Krafton struggled with low player numbers and long matchmaking times. Sequoia Yang of ARC Team cited an inability to sustain the desired player experience as the reason for the shutdown.

FromSoftware's parent company Kadokawa has reaffirmed in its latest financial results that The Duskbloods and Elden Ring: Tarnished Edition remain on track for release on Nintendo Switch 2 this year. The announcement comes amid a lack of updates during recent Nintendo events, easing concerns among fans. Both titles were highlighted in Kadokawa's future outlook for the gaming division.

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Highguard, Wildlight Entertainment's multiplayer shooter, has gone offline on March 12, 2026—less than two months after launch—following last week's shutdown announcement amid player retention and funding woes. A former Naughty Dog artist who designed early concept art for hero Condor has sworn off live-service projects, while a Kotaku writer mourned the game's unique chill vibe.

 

 

 

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