Gaming

Don’t Expect The Chaos Caused By GTA 6’s Release Date To End This November


With preorders opening and pricing details finally released, Grand Theft Auto VI’s November 19 release date seems like a lock at this point. The video game industry has taken note, and most developers are avoiding launching near GTA 6 like the plague. September and October are absolutely packed with high-profile game launches from top to bottom, and even the early 2027 release calendar is starting to get crowded with the likes of Fable and Tomb Raider: Legacy of Atlantis.
The thing is, it’s a short-sighted mistake to view GTA 6 as if it will be some one-and-done ordeal. Even after the November 19 launch, it’s likely that we can expect updates, ports, and potentially even a new version of GTA Online. The next game from Rockstar will be such a monumental release, and I suspect that the game industry will be reckoning with its repeated impacts for years to come.

As a recent video by Bloomberg reporter Jason Schreier succinctly explains, developers are avoiding launching near GTA 6 because they don’t want to be competing for players’ dollars and attention, physical and digital storage space, and media coverage. At the end of the video, he also briefly notes that a new version of GTA Online or a potential PC port could have similar impacts in the future.

Good or bad, GTA 6 will dominate all of that in the month or so surrounding its launch. But it won’t end there. We’re gaming in an era when even single-player games like Crimson Desert can have an update cadence like a live-service game. There’s no reason to suspect that a game with so much time and money put into it won’t do the same. 

The problems for other games go beyond simple content updates, too. Initially, GTA 6 will be a single-player adventure only. While Rockstar has not confirmed a new version of GTA Online yet, it’s such a moneymaker for the company that it’d be bizarre not to eventually release a new online component to promote. Whether that’s free-to-play, standalone, or incorporated into GTA 6 proper, that’s going to be a big deal whenever it releases.

The fact that we still know nothing about a potential new version of GTA Online makes things uncertain for any game set to launch after GTA 6. It could arrive as early as this November, or drop right into the middle of another month that some games moved to. Whenever a new version of GTA Online is unveiled and dated, it’s bound to cause a lot of chaos, and the power of that rests entirely under Rockstar’s control.

Then, there’s the whole port factor. The GTA franchise is extremely popular on PC, yet that community is not being catered to at all with GTA 6’s initial launch. That said, it’s hard to imagine the game won’t make the jump to computers eventually. Neither a Nintendo Switch 2 port, nor versions of the game for next-gen consoles like Xbox’s Project Helix, are out of the realm of possibility. Once again, those ports will draw player and media attention away from other games and could even crash storefronts as Hollow Knight: Silksong’s popular launch did.

Even if the launches of a hypothetical PC port or GTA 6’s rendition of GTA Online aren’t as massive as the initial release, they’re still going to be some of the most popular launches of whatever month or year they come out in. That’s something that game developers will need to be worrying about, not just this fall, but for the foreseeable future. 

There’s no easy solution or way out for game companies because of this. A developer or publisher could try to position their game as an alternative to whatever version of GTA 6 they are up against, but that is not guaranteed to be successful. Simply put, I don’t expect the chaos this launch is causing for other games to end with its release date. There are just too many unknowns surrounding its future for any game releasing afterward to be confident that they dodged its bullet.

In more ways than one, GTA 6 will be a video game that will impact the industry for years to come once it launches on PS5 and Xbox Series X on November 19.



Source link