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    Home » The Economics of Failure – Why the Much-Hyped Game Highguard Shut Down in Two Months
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    The Economics of Failure – Why the Much-Hyped Game Highguard Shut Down in Two Months

    Taylor LoweryBy Taylor LoweryApril 20, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
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    When a live-service game’s servers go dark, there’s a certain silence that follows. No final cutscene, no dramatic conclusion. All that’s left is a Reddit thread where the remaining players bid each other farewell and an unresponsive login screen. On March 12, 2026, 45 days after its release, Highguard quietly came to an end. Less than 500 players were still using Steam, and the development team had already mostly disbanded. It didn’t seem like a natural demise. It seemed like a business decision that was made too quickly for anyone to fully comprehend.

    The credentials of Wildlight Entertainment were impressive. Former Respawn and Infinity Ward developers, who created Call of Duty, Apex Legends, and Titanfall, built the studio. In the same way that a film director’s prior credits are important during a studio pitch meeting, that lineage is important in gaming. The subliminal message was to pay attention to this one when Geoff Keighley personally introduced Highguard to the world on stage at The Game Awards in December 2025. The revelation sparked sincere interest. The studio’s CEO and founder, Dusty Welch, subsequently told Polygon that making the announcement at TGA was “maybe a little risky in hindsight.” That’s a methodical way of expressing what proved to be a big error in judgment.

    InformationDetails
    Game TitleHighguard
    DeveloperWildlight Entertainment
    Studio Founder & CEODusty Welch
    Game DirectorChad Grenier
    GenreFree-to-play “Raid Shooter” (FPS / Hero Shooter hybrid)
    Launch DateJanuary 26, 2026
    PlatformsPC (Steam), PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X
    Shutdown DateMarch 12, 2026
    Total LifespanApproximately 45 days
    Peak Concurrent Players (Steam)Nearly 100,000 at launch
    Players at ShutdownBelow 500 concurrent on Steam
    Total Players (All Platforms)Over 2 million tried the game
    Financial BackerTencent (withdrew funding post-launch)
    Layoffs~80% of development team — two weeks after launch
    Reveal EventThe Game Awards 2025 (hosted by Geoff Keighley)
    Comparable FailureConcord (Sony, 2024) — shutdown within weeks of launch

    On January 26, the game debuted amid a wave of anxious anticipation. On Steam alone, almost 100,000 players simultaneously logged in, which would be a promising start for the majority of games. But almost immediately, the numbers began to go in the wrong direction. The peak had already fallen to about 15,000 players by the first weekend following launch. It had barely reached 1,000 after a month. People’s departure wasn’t the only issue. The rate at which they departed and the trajectory they followed—a nearly vertical decline—indicated that the game wasn’t gradually losing players due to typical attrition, but rather wasn’t able to persuade them to return after just one session.

    Polygon reviewer Ford James identified what many players seemed to sense but found difficult to put into words: Highguard lacked identity and had too many ideas. In addition to Rainbow Six Siege-style fortification, Overwatch-style hero abilities, and survival game resource gathering, two teams of three competed to destroy each other’s base in a MOBA-style structure during a single match in this first-person shooter. Every one of those mechanics has a place. Together, they produced a game that made you conscious of every seam while also feeling unfinished and draining. It was evident that the foundational FPS work was competent. The surrounding architecture wasn’t.

    The Economics of Failure: Why the Much-Hyped Game ‘Highguard’ Shut Down in Two Months
    The Economics of Failure: Why the Much-Hyped Game ‘Highguard’ Shut Down in Two Months

    Wildlight was swift. There are now more modes. After receiving favorable feedback, a 5v5 format was introduced and made permanent. There was a new Warden character. Regular patches were used to adjust the balance. In order to create a more instantaneous experience, one update eliminated the stages of match preparation and looting. The decline was not stopped by any of it. The game was peaking at less than 500 concurrent Steam players in the final days before shutdown, which isn’t really a player base at all for a multiplayer shooter. It’s a recollection of one.

    When Bloomberg revealed at the end of February that Tencent had withdrawn its funding due to Highguard’s failure to meet internal retention metrics, the financial picture became more apparent. Just two weeks after the game’s release, about 80% of the development team was let go. During this time, the game was still technically active and receiving updates, developers were still sharing information about future content on social media, and a one-year roadmap was being made public. Chad Grenier, the director of the game, publicly stated that the studio had not made enough money to keep anyone working on it. The statement is brutally honest. Additionally, it serves as a reminder that behind every shutdown announcement is a team of people who worked for years to develop something and quickly discovered that the market had other ideas.

    This place has a lot of Concord vibes to it. In August 2024, Sony’s hero shooter debuted with similarly low retention, shut down its servers in less than two weeks, and became a catchphrase in gaming discussions for avoiding a crowded market. Although Highguard lasted 45 days as opposed to Concord’s 11, the failure’s form was similar.

    A crowded genre, an identity that couldn’t quite cohere, launch numbers that looked promising until they didn’t, and a financial structure that gave the game almost no room to find its footing before the plug was pulled. If Highguard had been given more time and a more narrowly focused scope, it might have been something. The fundamental mechanics of the shooter were effective. However, more time and a smaller scope came at a higher cost, and the funds were already linked to metrics that the game failed to meet.

    As this develops, the unsettling question isn’t really about Highguard in particular. It concerns the type of game that the industry is currently willing to finance and the length of time it is willing to wait for outcomes. In a crowded market, most games—even good ones—cannot generate the immediate retention numbers required by the live-service model.

    Tencent’s decision to pull out after just two weeks of data is a clear example of how limited the window has gotten. The surviving games, such as Apex Legends, Fortnite, and Valorant, are still played by players, which makes it more difficult rather than easier for new games to gain traction. The team at Wildlight had a true pedigree. It was insufficient. What would actually be in this setting is still unknown.

    The Economics of Failure: Why the Much-Hyped Game ‘Highguard’ Shut Down in Two Months
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    Taylor Lowery
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    Taylor Lowery is a senior editor at glofiish.com, a technology writer, and a true circuit enthusiast. She works in the tech sector, so she does more than just cover it. Taylor works for a smartphone company during the day, which gives her a firsthand look at how gadgets are designed, manufactured, promoted, and ultimately placed in people's hands.Her writing is unique because of this insider viewpoint. Taylor makes the technical connections that other writers overlook, whether she's dissecting the silicon architecture of a new flagship chipset, analyzing the implications of a significant Android update for actual users, or tracking the effects of a new AI model announcement across the mobile industry.Her editorial focus covers every aspect of the current tech stack, including smartphone software and hardware, artificial intelligence (from large language models and generative tools to on-device inference), and the broader innovation trends influencing the direction of the consumer technology sector. She is especially passionate about the nexus of AI and mobile computing, which she feels is still in its most exciting early stages.

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