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Shroud’s Spectre Divide player count drops with thousands of negative reviews

Shroud’s Spectre Divide player count drops with thousands of negative reviews

Joe Pring

Interest in Shroud’s competitive shooter Spectre Divide has waned after a solid debut on Steam, garnering thousands of negative reviews.

Released on September 3 to little fanfare or promotion, Spectre Divide’s cel-shaded visuals and effort to introduce different mechanics helped set it apart from the genre heavyweights. Counter Attack 2 And Brave.

At its peak, the game reached over 30,000 concurrent players, but it quickly became the target of criticism. which many people consider to be excessive price exploitationThe shooter’s first store pack was initially listed at $90, but prices were soon reduced by 17% to 25% “across the board.”

It’s impossible to say whether the monetization controversy contributed to Spectre Divide’s fall from grace, but at least at the time of writing, it has just over 4,000 concurrent players and a 24-hour peak of less than 10,000 per person. SteamDB.

Spectre Divide’s concurrent player count dropped from 30,000 to 4,000 in less than a month.

Drops in active players are nothing new in live service games. The initial excitement is always followed by a sharp drop as curious players move on to the Next Big Thing, but competitive experiences live and die on viewer interest.

Unfortunately for Spectre Divide, its popularity on streaming platforms hasn’t fared much better. Between September 22-23, Twitch views peaked at just over 2,000, compared to its all-time high of over 80,000.

Steam reviews remain decidedly mixed, with negative feedback blaming performance issues, a lack of fun factor, and monetization concerns. Positive reviews are still a healthy amount higher than before, but not enough to push overall reception above Mixed.

As for Shroud, during a September 10 stream, the content creator angrily ended a session of Spectre Divide and then decided to play it later. impasse “I feel like this game, Deadlock, changed the way I perceived myself and my peers. Deadlock warped my brain,” he said. It was said then.