Goodnight, travel well
Battle royale has another casualty. Apropos for a genre centered around eliminating all competitors.
Developer Xaviantannounced todaythat it’s shutting down the servers forThe Cullingon May 15. The offline portion will remain available to play, but the online player-versus-player battle royale will not. That’s the main draw.The Cullingis effectively dead.

Although, truth be told,The Cullingalready was kind of dead. At the time of writing, it can’t be found onSteam’s list of top 100 games by player count; that means it’s under 3,800 players, which isn’t promising considering that battle royales require a healthy stream of concurrent players to fill lobbies. According toSteam Charts, it peaked at 35 players today.
The Cullinghas something of a bizarre history. It was an early contender in the battle royale genre before being surpassed by the likes ofPUBGandFortnite. In July 2018, Xaviant hastily launchedThe Culling 2before pulling it days later and refunding everyone who bought it. At the same time, the originalCullingwas redubbedThe Culling Originsand made free-to-play.

As Xaviant mentions in its farewell note, the hope was that going free-to-play would drive revenue through microtransactions. That wasn’t the case. Xaviant says “the revenue was only a fraction of what our dev team required to continue daily operations.” As a result, the game is being shut down and the studio has been forced to lay off an unspecified number of staff.
There is still a longshot hail mary forThe Culling. Xaviant is willing to hand the game off to another developer who’s interested in taking over. “We think that with the proper resources and know-how in the free-to-play world, the right group could make great things happen,” Xaviant says. But, for now, another one bites the dust. Vaya con dios, contestants.







