Stadia’s collapse means the exclusive horror game Gylt will finally release for the rest of us

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Remember Gylt? Perfectly fair if you don’t: It’s a singleplayer action-adventure horror game created by Rime studio Tequila Works, and it released in 2019 as a Google Stadia exclusive. And so it remained, despite some rumbling from the developers (opens in new tab) about going multiplatform. But the looming collapse of Stadia means it’s finally going to happen—eventually.

“Spooky season is around the corner… And we bring terrific news!” the studio announced (opens in new tab) (via Eurogamer (opens in new tab)). “We’ve been working on it for a long time and it’s finally time to make it official: GYLT is going multiplatform in 2023!”

It is admittedly not the most detailed announcement of all time, but I think the Gylt situation overall kind of encapsulates Stadia’s biggest problem: Despite being a platform exclusive from a reputable indie studio, it had very little exposure or visibility, and went largely unnoticed at a time when people were leaning heavily into at-home entertainment (like playing videogames) because of the pandemic. Gylt owners aren’t going to take a financial hit from the Stadia shutdown because Google is offering refunds across the board, but it’s obviously a problem for anyone who wants to keep on (or start) playing—and it’s not great for Tequila Works, either.

Stadia’s coming shutdown—it’s going away for good in January—has left a number of developers looking for new homes for their games. Prior to the Tequila Works announcement, Ubisoft (opens in new tab), IO Interactive (opens in new tab), and Bungie (opens in new tab) said that they’re also looking into other options for their players. For developers with products on the verge of being released, though, it was an even more unpleasant shock (opens in new tab): Mike Rose of No More Robots, for instance, said the studio had a game slated to launch on Stadia in November and expressed concerns about possibly not being paid because the platform is disappearing. “To all the people who kept begging us ‘PLEASE BRING YOUR GAMES TO STADIA’—this is why we didn’t,” he tweeted.

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Splash Damage, which released the eight-player party shooter Outcasters as a Stadia exclusive in 2020, suggested that it could make a similar move, although it hasn’t committed yet, saying only that “we need to take a couple of days (opens in new tab) to evaluate the options for Outcasters moving forward.”

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