Close Menu
TechUpdateAlert

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    My Health Anxiety Means I Won’t Use Apple’s or Samsung’s Smartwatches. Here’s Why

    December 22, 2025

    You can now buy the OnePlus 15 in the US and score free earbuds if you hurry

    December 22, 2025

    Today’s NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints, Answers for Dec. 22 #455

    December 22, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • My Health Anxiety Means I Won’t Use Apple’s or Samsung’s Smartwatches. Here’s Why
    • You can now buy the OnePlus 15 in the US and score free earbuds if you hurry
    • Today’s NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints, Answers for Dec. 22 #455
    • Android might finally stop making you tap twice for Wi-Fi
    • Today’s NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Dec. 22
    • Waymo’s robotaxis didn’t know what to do when a city’s traffic lights failed
    • Today’s NYT Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for Dec. 22 #1647
    • You Asked: OLED Sunlight, VHS on 4K TVs, and HDMI Control Issues
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    TechUpdateAlertTechUpdateAlert
    • Home
    • Gaming
    • Laptops
    • Mobile
    • Software
    • Reviews
    • AI & Tech
    • Gadgets
    • How-To
    TechUpdateAlert
    Home»Gaming»The proof is undeniable: People will still pay for great shooters
    Gaming

    The proof is undeniable: People will still pay for great shooters

    techupdateadminBy techupdateadminNovember 1, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    fov 90 battlefield 6 redsec
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    FOV 90

    (Image credit: Future)

    Welcome to FOV 90, an FPS column from staff writer Morgan Park. Every week, I’ll be covering a topic relevant to first-person shooter enjoyers, spanning everything from multiplayer and singleplayer to the old and the new.

    The biggest multiplayer shooters of the moment cost money. Arc Raiders is $40, has no free trial, and it’s a top seller. Battlefield 6 launched for $70 and instantly became the most successful game in the series (later adding a free-to-play battle royale mode). Both are raking it in, both are reviewing well, and both are being played more than several of the sturdiest free-to-play shooters on Steam.

    The numbers won’t always look like that, but the wild successes of Battlefield 6 and Arc Raiders prove an important point: people want to pay for great multiplayer shooters again. That’s music to my ears, because it didn’t always look like we’d get back to this point.

    Not long ago, it wasn’t unreasonable to believe the future of all multiplayer gaming was free-to-play. Under the umbrella of Fortnite’s ascension in 2018, new battle royales started cropping up for free, and they were instantly popular. Meanwhile, traditional shooters that dared hang a price tag were suddenly viewed as old-fashioned. DICE was on the wrong side of the trend when it put out Battlefield 5, an eventually beloved game that was ignored at the time.


    Related Articles

    When did the shift happen? I reckon it’s less about how paid games have changed and more up to how the modern free-to-play experience has become a nightmare. Storefront first, videogame second. Everywhere you look are games tangled up in so many layers of microtransactions, limited-time events, and premium tracks that we’ve been collectively wrung-out by the upsell. Paying the price of that exhaustion are a graveyard of good games that deserved to exist, but were shut down because they weren’t immediate hits as free-to-play products.

    Arc Raiders extraction characters

    (Image credit: Embark Studios)

    You can’t argue that the biggest free games aren’t technically a good value, but they come with crap that you’re just supposed to put up with because there’s no cover charge. Marvel Rivals is a decent example: Heroes and maps are free, but the experience of playing it as a free user is like walking a used car lot with an increasingly impatient salesperson.

    Paid games, in the best cases, offer a more favorable contract. Battlefield 6’s best quality is that it’s plucked out of 2011—a good package of modes, maps, and guns that feels complete from the jump (even if it could really use bigger maps). Arc Raiders is similarly fleshed out: its “extraction RPG” loop is surprisingly rich and with four huge maps at launch, it’s also fairly complete.

    Free games tend to launch at the starting point, not the finish line. When Overwatch first came around in 2016, it had over a dozen heroes, lots of maps, and three distinct modes. When Overwatch 2 relaunched as a free-to-play joint in 2022, it had a couple new maps, three new heroes, and a mode. Not exactly earth-shattering stuff, but at least you could immediately spend hundreds of dollars on legendary skins.

    Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.

    This is, and has always been, the advantage of buying games. You buy it, you have it, and there’s ideally enough in there to get all the fun you’ll need from it (see also, Helldivers 2 and BattleBit Remastered).

    Battlefield 6

    (Image credit: EA)

    But expectations are different now. Battlefield 6 and Arc Raiders could be anti-service games. They could cease all updates tomorrow, having sold a complete product, and move onto something else. I could live with that, but even though buying multiplayer games is coming back into fashion, we also still want them to become more over time—more maps, modes, guns, stories, outfits—and will tolerate an amount of free-to-play crap to accommodate that.

    It’s a sticky relationship: how much and how quickly can devs push players to reinvest in the game they’ve already paid for? Hunt: Showdown and Rainbow Six Siege waited years before adding traditional battle pass strings to a paid game, and it went over fine. Judging by the Battlefield 6 community, which is currently in a minor uproar over getting pop-up ads for a $25 battle pass, three weeks is probably too soon. Arc Raiders is going easy on the upsell for now: there’s a store tab with premium skins, but there’s also a free battle pass with outfits and gameplay-relevant items.

    Indeed, being a shooter fan is a more complicated prospect that it was a decade ago, but at least in the short term, the return of paid multiplayer is giving us better things to play.

    great Pay People proof shooters undeniable
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleMeet Focus, the Windows 11 setting that makes distractions disappear
    Next Article I gave myself a monster makeover with ChatGPT, here’s how you can do it, too
    techupdateadmin
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Gadgets

    The Fujifilm Instax Mini 12 instant camera is a great gift at $74

    December 20, 2025
    Gadgets

    Lovense Spinel Review: A Great Mini Sex Machine

    December 18, 2025
    Gadgets

    The Letterboxd video store is a great new idea about streaming

    December 14, 2025
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    NYT Strands hints and answers for Monday, August 11 (game #526)

    August 11, 202549 Views

    These 2 Cities Are Pushing Back on Data Centers. Here’s What They’re Worried About

    September 13, 202542 Views

    Today’s NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints, Answers for Sept. 4 #346

    September 4, 202540 Views
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest tech news from FooBar about tech, design and biz.

    Most Popular

    Best Fitbit fitness trackers and watches in 2025

    July 9, 20250 Views

    There are still 200+ Prime Day 2025 deals you can get

    July 9, 20250 Views

    The best earbuds we’ve tested for 2025

    July 9, 20250 Views
    Our Picks

    My Health Anxiety Means I Won’t Use Apple’s or Samsung’s Smartwatches. Here’s Why

    December 22, 2025

    You can now buy the OnePlus 15 in the US and score free earbuds if you hurry

    December 22, 2025

    Today’s NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints, Answers for Dec. 22 #455

    December 22, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Disclaimer
    • Terms and Conditions
    © 2026 techupdatealert. Designed by Pro.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.