
Video games all suffer from the same inevitable suffering that has been around since its inception. It is the potential to rise to greatness and then fall into ambiguity, even though they have a loyal fan base and good play in the heart. Many of the best games out there have gone through the same bike and pulled in huge numbers in the beginning, but slow down slowly as time goes by.
This can happen for many reasons, ranging from lack of updates to a general reduction of interest from the player base. But no matter how many people are still on the servers, the games still remain good on their own, although the overall popularity is on a downward trend.
8
Monster Hunter Wilds
Poor performance that hinders long -term success
Monster Hunter Wilds Is a huge leap forward for the franchise, with improved graphics and a whole series of new enemies to meet. Players can take on fights alone or in a group, and against the latter stages things can become quite intense, which requires a huge amount of coordination and preparation to succeed.
But even though it is a popular and super fun game, it suffers from some serious performance problems that have not yet been raised, which results in a turn in review results from positive to overwhelmingly negative in a few weeks. For many players, the bad optimization has been a business switch and turned them away from what is otherwise an exceptional action game that has so much to offer.
7
Overwatch 2
A review that shared the player base more than ever
Overwatch 2 Is the updated and updated sequel/update to the game with the annual winning shooter who shocked the world back in 2016 with its crazy fun and addictive game board. Now changed to a new format with new heroes, the game feels very different from how it did at the release, with new players who jump in to see what the being is really about.
Unlike other follow -up updates, for example CS2The OW2 seemed to cause significant damage to their player base by switching to 5v5 and permanently changing the game and feeling. Since then, the number of players has been on a slow decline, which also extends to the Esports scene, where the viewing has never really been the same.
6
Titanfall 2
The main motion shooter that slowly disappeared
Titanfall 2 is the long-awaited follow-up of the mech-string hit that imprisoned the world all these years ago. The game is just so satisfactory, from the gun to the movement, with everything that flows together in the perfect unit to deliver an unforgettable shooting experience that really has no modern.
Still, even big shooters can suffer from a lack of interest, and with very few updates or insight from the developers, the game has in principle been left to rot, with a slow drip of players who come in and leave when the game goes for sale. Only the time will show if a sequel is finally released, or if rumors are true that any future plans were scrapped instead of other projects.
5
Battlit remastered
A strong start, but not enough content to keep players around
Battle is an intense PVP shooter that takes everything from games that COD and Battlefield and takes them over to a blocked world full of chaos and shots around every corner. Players can jump into a match for some fun bets and choose between a large number of weapons classes to take out on the open plains in search of enemies to shoot down and goals to catch.
But without any meaningful updates and a fashion fly that only seemed to last a few months, the player base has decreased to the low 1000s and shows no signs of increasing sometime soon. Maybe it was the lack of real progression or simplified loop, but no matter what is the case, the game remains a super cool shooter that deserves a second lease.
4
Among us
The honeymoon has been and gone
Among us Is the festival game that defined the Pandemic era and takes the concept of a social deduction formula and pressing players on a basic spaceship with nothing but their mind to keep them alive. Streaming is what really made the game explode in popularity, as large groups of personalities could be seen playing the game for hours at the end to millions of viewers for a year.
Unfortunately, when the world opened, the interest fell into it, and many content creators chose to move on to other games and newer trends that could give them more of a kick than playing the same maps for the 100th time. It still stands as the foremost deduction game for groups to enjoy and has grown into quite different experiences since the humble early days.
3
Halo endless
Takes a beloved series and struggles to make waves
Halo endless Was supposed to be a big return to the classics, giving players an open world campaign with an ever-developing multiplayer suite, positioned to revive one of the game's most iconic franchises. The launch had strong basics, with narrow mechanics, a nostalgic feel and a free to play multiplayer designed to get new blood, and for a while things looked pretty bright.
But inconsistent content updates, delays to core functions such as Forge and Co-op and a frustrating progression system, the fans carried down. While the game remains excellent, the number of players has steadily declined and the buzz has disappeared with it.
2
Fragip
Innovation in an already crowded genre
Fragip Come out and swung with a spotted aesthetics, a unique card -based twist on hero shooters and fast, neat game that felt like an intersection between Caretaker and Overwatch. Hype for early access painted it as a potential eruption in the competitive FPS space.
However, poor matchmaking and a chaotic launching mood pushed quickly in decline and the first hype was not enough to keep things to go for a long time. Without a significant audience or regular balance updates, its unique identity is not enough to maintain it, and if things do not turn soon, it risks becoming yet another nice shooter that flared out too quickly.
1
Wild
Something new with not much speed
Wildgate promised a deeply engrossing extraction experience with dynamic world events and a reactive game loop that rewarded good players and lifted new ones. It attracted a niche but passionate community during its early launch and showed the promise of growth along the line thanks to the unique with its gaming loop.
Unfortunately, server instability, limited playoffs -content and a general lack of real excitement have caused many players to go away. Despite a dedicated core, the larger recovery mass never completely arrived and left what was a game with a strong foundation for being another fight that is just waiting to be acclaimed forever.