Dark Outlaw Games' cancelled PS5 project was not live-service

Developers from the recently shuttered Dark Outlaw Games have revealed that their cancelled PlayStation project was not a live-service game, contrary to widespread assumptions. The studio, led by Call of Duty veteran Jason Blundell, was closed by Sony this week. The team attributes the cancellation to broader industry challenges rather than project quality.

Sony shut down Dark Outlaw Games on Wednesday, ending development on an unannounced PlayStation 5 project just a year after the studio's founding. The team was headed by Jason Blundell, a veteran of the Call of Duty series. While many speculated the project was a live-service title amid Sony's recent retreat from such ambitions, developers clarified otherwise during a Twitch stream with junior game designer JCBackfire and Blundell, as first reported by Eurogamer.net. JCBackfire expressed enthusiasm for the project, stating he 'loved the type of project' and was 'stoked about' the fact that 'it wasn't a live-service game'. Blundell echoed this sentiment, noting that 'times change, focus changes, but the project we were doing and what we were doing… I think fans would have been very excited.' He added wryly, 'The best game is the one you never play.' The developers described the closure as painful but understandable, blaming a 'tough business environment and industry stuff' rather than any flaws in the game itself. They expressed no resentment toward PlayStation. This follows other Sony studio closures, including Firewalk after its live-service shooter Concord was pulled offline two weeks after its 2024 launch on PC and PS5. More recently, Bluepoint Games—known for the Demon's Souls remake and Uncharted: The Nathan Drake Collection—was also shuttered.

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Realistic depiction of Bluepoint Games studio closure, showing office exterior with closure sign, packed boxes, and somber atmosphere.
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Sony to close Bluepoint Games studio in March

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Sony Interactive Entertainment is shutting down Bluepoint Games, the studio behind acclaimed PlayStation remakes, just five years after acquiring it. The closure, announced in an internal memo from co-CEO Hermen Hulst, cites rising development costs and industry challenges. The Texas-based team, known for Demon’s Souls and Shadow of the Colossus, will cease operations next month.

Sony has closed Dark Outlaw Games, a first-party studio founded in 2025 by former Call of Duty producer Jason Blundell, before it could announce its debut PlayStation title. Bloomberg's Jason Schreier reported the shutdown, which followed an internal announcement on Tuesday and aligns with broader PlayStation staff cuts, including mobile development teams, amid Sony's challenges with multiplayer and live-service games.

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One day after Sony Interactive Entertainment announced the shutdown of its year-old PlayStation studio Dark Outlaw Games, founder Jason Blundell and former level designer JCbackfire discussed the closure on a Twitch stream. They mourned the promising early-stage project—which was not a live-service game—while expressing no ill will toward Sony amid its strategic shifts.

Activision has confirmed that the next Call of Duty game will not release on PlayStation 4 or Xbox One. The announcement ends 12 years of support for those last-generation consoles. The move follows rumors of a possible PS4 version for the rumored Modern Warfare 4.

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Housemarque's Gregory Louden avoided questions on a potential PC release for the studio's upcoming PS5 game Saros in a recent interview, focusing solely on its PlayStation launch. This follows Bloomberg reports that Sony has scrapped PC ports for first-party single-player titles including Saros.

Sony Interactive Entertainment has abandoned plans to release current and future first-party single-player PlayStation games on PC, according to a Bloomberg report. Titles including last year's Ghost of Yotei and the upcoming Saros—a Returnal successor set for April 30—will stay exclusive to PS5, while multiplayer games like Marathon (launching tomorrow on PS5 and PC) and Marvel Tokon continue multi-platform. This reverses six years of ports since Horizon Zero Dawn.

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A fan-made effort to restore online servers for LittleBigPlanet 3 has been abandoned following accusations against its creators. The project, known as LBPOnline, was set to launch earlier this week but faced community backlash. Organizers have since gone silent and removed related materials.

 

 

 

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