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Bethesda is shutting down a game it had already forgotten about

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Bethesda might be one of the most beloved developers out there, but the studio has a series problem with long-term support for its games (except Skyrim — it gives all its support to Skyrim). Now, the company is shutting down The Elder Scrolls: Legends, its collectible trading card game that was originally set to be a Hearthstone killer.

Of course, this news doesn’t come as a huge surprise to fans. Legends hasn’t received an update since 2019 — only two years after its launch — and the player count has steadily dwindled. Bethesda did make some improvements to the game after it released, but it wasn’t enough to revive the game in a marketplace that included Hearthstone, Gwent, Slay the Spire, and other un-put-downable titles.

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You can no longer obtain The Elder Scrolls: Legends from Steam, and if you have the game installed and boot it up, you’ll see a message saying the servers will be permanently shuttered on January 30, 2025. That said, there is one slight upside: The cost of all in-game items and events has been reduced to just a single gold each, so remaining players can fully experience everything the title has to offer.

Players are, unsurprisingly, disappointed. Though the game did not have a large fan base, it had a loyal one. And many players are unhappy about losing access to a game they’ve spent real money on. Even if someone starts a private server to keep the game going, which is likely, in-app purchases will be lost forever.

Legends is far from the first game to be closed down when there was still a fanbase, and it won’t be the last. It’s the inevitable result of the way rights are set up, though — as Steam made abundantly clear to all its players, you don’t actually own any games on the platform.

Patrick Hearn
Patrick Hearn writes about smart home technology like Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant, smart light bulbs, and more. If it's a…
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