Paradox Interactive Explains Recent Games' Cancellation and DelayPlayers Have Expectations, and Some Technical Problems are Hard to Fix
Learning from their experience with last year's disastrous release of Cities: Skylines 2, the publisher has expressed that it is being more meticulous with sorting out problems found in their games. The publisher is also of the opinion that players need to have earlier access to the game to gather feedback that can aid with development. "If we could have brought players in to try it on a much larger scale, that would have helped," Fahraeus said about Cities: Skylines 2, adding that they hope to have "a far larger degree of openness with players," prior to launching a game.
quot;So it's not the same kind of bucket of challenges that we had with Life By You, which led to cancellation," he explained. "It's more that we haven't been able to keep the pace that we desired," adding that they've found some issues "harder to fix than we thought" when Paradox does "peer reviews of the game and user testing and whatnot."
In Prison Architect 2's case, the problem is "mostly certain technical issues rather than design," Lilja said. "It's more how can we make this technically high-quality enough for a stable release." He added, "It's also based on the fact that we, in all transparency, see that fans right now, with a squeezed budget for games, have higher expectations, and are less accepting that you will fix things over time."
Cities: Skylines 2 launched last year with problems so severe that fan criticism prompted the publisher and developer Colossal Order to issue a joint apology, subsequently proposing a "fan feedback summit." The game's first paid DLC was also delayed due to major performance issues during its launch. Meanwile, Life By You was discontinued earlier this year, as they had ultimately decided that further development on the game would not bring it up to the expectations of both Paradox and its player community. Though, Lilja later explained that some of the problems they've faced were issues that they rather "had not really understood fully," so "that's totally on us." he added.