Underrated sci-fi shooter is back from the dead


The 4V1 monster-hunting madness of Evolve has been given a new lease of life since 2K brought peer-to-peer and matchmaking back.

Evolve is the follow-up to Turtle Rock Studios Left 4 Dead. It saw the studio pivot from pitting players against zombie hordes, to tracking and hunting a player-controller monster instead. Were some people sore about it? Maybe. Were they desperate for Left 4 Dead 3? Yes, yes I was. But after just two years, dedicated server support was retired, and Turtle Rock went back to the zombie drawing board with Back 4 Blood.

Until recently, the only way to play the de-listed Steam game was peer-to-peer. But a few months ago, it stopped working. Players speculated it was due to a platform update and a bunch of Discord admins reached out to publisher 2K to get it sorted (you can read about the sage on Reddit). Long story short, Evolve Legacy's peer-to-peer servers were reinstated. But to our collective surprise, both peer-to-peer, and matchmaking for Evolve Stage 2 were also resuscitated. And player numbers on Steam have surged since then.         

Left for dead

Graph showing upward trend of Evolve Stage 2 players

(Image credit: Steam Charts)

Evolve Stage 2 (the free-to-play version of Evolve, as opposed to the Legacy edition) is now seeing a resurgence on Steam. Steam Charts shows a surge in players since July's update. The playerbase shot up from a piddly 31 in June, to 1,607 after 2K rolled out matchmaking and peer-to-peer server support.  

Over the weekend, Evolve amassed almost as many active players as Back 4 Blood, as spotted by TechRadar Gaming's guides editor, Patrick Dane, on Twitter. 

See more

The community is stoked, and has set their sights on an even bigger goal: getting Evolve relisted on Steam. The redditor who shared the goings-on from the Discord server seems hopeful, given the publisher's shock decision to partially revive the game. 

“From a company that did everything in their power to bury this game and pretend it never existed, that is a HUGE change in attitude towards the game, and I think it's safe to say that their decision was directly influenced by the realization that there are STILL thousands of people madly in love with this game and still playing it regularly,” they said.

“My point is, I think we should carry this momentum in the hopes that maybe they'll one day relist the game on Steam, or hell, maybe even open lobby queueing back up eventually! long shot for that last one, I know. But hey, a man can dream can't he? Especially considering yesterday, I never would have dreamed that they'd restore anything with stage 2.”

For a game that was left for dead, Evolve somehow maintained a dedicated core playerbase. And now everything's coming up Milhouse for them. The world may not have been ready for Evolve's gameplay model when it launched in 2016. But if it had debuted in the current age of live service titles, no doubt it would've found its footing.      

It'll be interesting to see what – if anything – 2K does next with Evolve. Turtle Rock has moved on, recently wrapping up the Tunnels of Terror DLC for Warner Bros. published Back 4 Blood. And Left 4 Dead 3 isn't ever going to materialize unless Valve pulls its finger out. At least the Evolve community has something to hope for. And even if this is as much as they get, they seem to be happy about it. 

Source

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*


16 + 1 =