With the more recent releases coming out of the entertainment Monolith that is Ubisoft, we’ve seen videogame infrastructure lean more and more to online connectivity – allowing for more post-launch content to up the end-game experience. One distinct example is Ubisoft’s open-world third-person shooter, The Division.
In a recent interview with Venturebeat, Head of Ubisoft North America, Laurent Detoc, has reiterated this stance, claiming that ‘Games shouldn’t end.’
“In the case of The Division, we added gameplay. In the case of Rainbow Six: Siege, we added content. In the case of Ghost Recon: Wildlands, we built on the PvP mode six months later. You keep on adding to the experience, and you see people talk about it later. After a year and a half people said that The Division was the best it had ever been, and that helped bring in even more new people. A lot of the people who’ve played The Division came to the brand after patch 1.4. They saw the game in a much better state. When you look at that sentiment going from 30 to 80, a lot of people first came to the game when it was doing better. Now we’re looking at Division 2 with a super happy community, very engaged and satisfied, and they’re looking forward to the sequel.”
“That trend is certainly going to continue. Games don’t end. They don’t stop. We have to commit to making sure that they don’t stop. When people understand that, they stay with them.”
The Division 2 is releasing on March 15 next year on PC, PS4, and Xbox One.