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Star Wars: The Old Republic Online Multiplayer Videogame Changing Developers

Discussion in 'SWNN News Feed' started by SWNN Probe, Jun 7, 2023.

  1. SWNN Probe

    SWNN Probe Seeker

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    Bioware is moving on from Star Wars: The Old Republic, the free-to-play MMORPG videogame released on PC back in 2011.



    According to IGN, publisher EA has decided to move Bioware's development team away from the game to focus on other projects, hiring third-party developer Broadsword Online Games to take the reins instead. The deal should be finalized this month so Broadsword can take up the mantle in short order.



    The Old Republic's dedicated community base will be glad to know that Broadsword, who also developed Ultima Online and Dark Age of Camelot, is run by Rob Denton, a former VP at Bioware who worked on The Old Republic early on in the game's lifecycle. The current development team for The Old Republic at Bioware is 70-80 people strong, with more than half of those joining Broadsword to continue work on the game. This should mean that the game's future is in capable hands.



    Broadsword will oversee planned content updates, such as the upcoming patch 7.3 and the next PvP season. It is expected that more content updates will be coming in time under the developer's watch, while EA will continue to publish the game. EA released a statement about the news soon after IGN's article was published:



    When The Old Republic released 12 years ago it was touted by head of LucasArts as the spiritual sequel to Knights of the Old Republic II, as plans were ditched for an official threequel. The MMO initially used a subscription model, but after the game's first year brought in low player counts, Bioware pivoted to a free-to-play model and the player base steadily improved, the game ticking along nicely ever since with a slew of content updates and expansions. In 2019, the game was closing in on $1 billion in lifetime revenue.



    It is believed that the remaining Bioware developers leaving the project will be offered opportunities to join the development teams for Bioware's two other projects, Dragon Age: Dreadwolf and the next Mass Effect sequel respectively, with the former facing challenges after dramatic changes in leadership. Hopefully they can find work after being removed from Star Wars: The Old Republic.

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    #1 SWNN Probe, Jun 7, 2023
    Last edited: Jun 7, 2023
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  2. jan blakstar

    jan blakstar Clone Commander

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    Well, I've been perpetually surprised the game survived as long as it has, considering that Star Wars Galaxies didn't last anywhere near as long and bore much more innovation, IMHO, even if it was much more primitive in terms of graphics and sound.
     
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