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Every PS5 and Xbox Series X game is delayed — and I feel fine

Every PS5 and Xbox Series Ten game is delayed — and I feel fine

Hogwarts Legacy
(Epitome credit: WB Games)

The year 2021 has already been dubbed the "year of delays" by some gamers, and for practiced reason. It feels similar every week, another PS5 or Xbox Serial X title is shifted from its original release date to a nebulous 2022 launch window.

Most recently, information technology was the plough of PS5 exclusive Deathloop to vacate its May release date and instead opt for ane in September. That's actually its 2d delay, after the game was pushed out of 2020 before.

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Arkane Studios' upcoming action-gamble game is certainly not alone in its failure to meet its launch engagement. Returnal, Gotham Knights, Riders Republic, Dorsum 4 Blood, Destiny 2: The Witch Queen, Gran Turismo 7, The Lord of the Rings: Gollum, Far Cry 6, and Hogwarts Legacy, have all received delays of varying degrees this yr.

That's non even an exhaustive list. Those are just the well-nigh significant titles that won't make the developer's intended original launch engagement.

Bloomberg journalist Jason Schreier made the grim prediction in January that 2021 would see "many, many" delays, and only four months into the year, he has certainly been proved right.

Run across more

The impact of the pandemic is well and truly being felt on the industry now. This is clearly going to exist a pretty barren year for brand-new AAA games, and hardly the first full yr on the market that Sony or Microsoft envisioned for their shiny side by side-gen consoles.

All the same despite existence hyped for many of the games that take already been delayed  — Hogwarts Legacy being pushed back genuinely ruined my month — I'm actually starting to see the surprising positives of a yr with fewer brand-new games.

Overlooked no more

It Takes Two review

(Image credit: It Takes Ii)

Every twelvemonth, a scattering of smaller-scale titles (oftentimes called AA games) are released, but
through a combination of limited marketing budgets and bad timing, they go overlooked as big juggernaut franchises and sequels receive all the attention.

This year, non all of the smaller titles have been delayed. Possibly due to a more than limited scope, or more nimble development teams, these games are managing to trickle out.

Titles such as It Takes Two and Outriders have received serious plaudits from both critics and gamers alike. Both games accept been able to dominate the gaming mural in a way they simply wouldn't have if they had been released in a normal twelvemonth aslope some massive AAA game.

It Takes Two is one of my favorite gaming experiences of all time, and I wouldn't have given it much of a chance had the likes of Far Cry half dozen launched around the aforementioned time. Outriders is all anyone on my friends listing has played for the last two weeks, and I'm glad it's found an audience that is appreciating it.

outriders

(Image credit: Foursquare Enix)

I can't look to see what other titles that weren't on my radar in January will surprise me over the next eight months. I haven't even mentioned the slew of incredible-looking indie games that are still flooding digital storefronts each week.

Nosotros might not be exploring Hogwarts or donning a batsuit in 2021 as nosotros had hoped, but there are still fantastic games coming out every calendar month, and I'm glad these titles are getting some much-deserved attending.

Time to articulate the backlog

The other upside to a year with a vastly reduced release schedule (at least on the AAA side of the industry) is that 2021 represents an excellent time to finally clear up your gaming backlog.

Nosotros've all got a backlog. In the last six months, mine has spiraled out of control. Betwixt Game Pass and the PlayStation Plus collection, not to mention the dozens of games I'd bought on auction and never got around to paying, I could never buy some other game again and still accept something new to play each week for decades to come.

Elder Scrolls IV Oblivion

(Epitome credit: Bethseda)

Having just picked up an Xbox Series X last month, I'yard planning to experience some gaming classics this summer, including The Elderberry Scrolls IV: Oblivion and Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic, thanks to the console's incredible backward-compatibility features.

Playing older games like these is something I probably wouldn't have had time to practice if I had to keep up-to-engagement with a packed agenda of releases. All these delays have come with a pretty big silver lining.

I definitely won't be ownership every bit many make-new games in 2021 as I would in a typical year. Simply there'southward some other benefit of a yr with fewer landmark titles: We'll all save some serious money.

This "year of delays" ain't looking so bad later on all.

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Rory is a staff writer at Tom's Guide based in the U.k.. He covers a wide range of topics including tech news, deals, gaming, streaming and more. When he's not writing hot takes on the latest gaming hardware and streaming shows, he can be found watching a borderline unhealthy corporeality of movies and being thoroughly disappointed past his terrible football game team.

Source: https://www.tomsguide.com/features/every-ps5-and-xbox-series-x-game-is-delayed-and-i-feel-fine

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