Skip to main content

Sony tests Early Access framework on PlayStation 4 with Dungeon Defenders II

A PlayStation 4 version of Trendy Entertainment’s co-op tower defense game Dungeon Defenders II will launch at the end of September, arriving as the platform’s first-ever “Pre-Alpha” release.

Adapting an approach similar to Steam’s Early Access service and Microsoft’s Xbox Game Preview program, Sony will offer paid access to featured games prior to their completion, giving players a chance to serve an active role in development.

Recommended Videos

Related: The Long Dark and Elite: Dangerous are coming to Xbox One through the new Xbox Game Preview program

Please enable Javascript to view this content

“Our controls aren’t there yet,” producer Brad Logston warns in the above gameplay video. “Some of the menu work isn’t there yet. We’re still iterating on these things. That’s part of us being in this program: [working with Sony] to make it the best Dungeon Defenders experience on a console we can.”

The PC version of Dungeon Defenders II is currently available via Steam’s Early Access program. While core gameplay features have been implemented, Trendy Entertainment notes that the current version suffers from bugs, missing features, and balance issues.

“Some [PS4] features, like local co-op and controller support, will be ahead of the PC version, but other features and content will be rolling in after they are released on PC,” developer Philip Asher explains in a post at Sony’s blog.

Sony’s VP of developer and publisher relations Adam Boyes previously told Gamasutra that the company has had “massive conversations internally” regarding the feasibility of paid alphas. To date, Sony has not announced plans for additional pre-alpha releases on the PlayStation 4 beyond Dungeon Defenders II.

Microsoft recently launched its own Early Access-styled program for the Xbox One with in-progress versions of Hinterland Studio’s wilderness survival game The Long Dark and Frontier Developments’ open-world space exploration sim Elite: Dangerous. Games like Shelter and DayZ are also due to premiere via the Xbox Game Preview initiative in the coming months.

Dungeon Defenders II will be available digitally via the PlayStation Network on September 29. PS4 owners can access the pre-alpha version of Dungeon Defenders II by purchasing an in-game currency bundle at launch.

Danny Cowan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Danny’s passion for video games was ignited upon his first encounter with Nintendo’s Duck Hunt, and years later, he still…
Dreams live support is ending — and that’s a big misstep for PlayStation
Art fights a giant bird in Dreams.

Sony could’ve had its own popular proprietary game engine and metaverse. Instead, it just let it slip through its fingers.

Media Molecule is ending live support for Dreams, its highly ambitious game-creating and playing tool for PS4, on September 1. Its servers are staying online for now -- and it has a few more content updates in the pipeline before then -- but after August, there will be no new tools, ports, or events for Dreams. That means it’s not coming to PS5, PlayStation VR2, and, most critically, PC.

Read more
PlayStation Plus just set a new first-party precedent with Horizon Forbidden West
Horizon: Forbidden West

Sony revealed the games coming to PlayStation Plus Premium and PlayStation Plus Extra this month on February 21, and it's the best month that the service has had since it launched in the summer of 2022. Not only are some great PS1 classics like The Legend of Dragoon and Wild Arms 2 coming to the service, but Horizon Forbbiden West is getting added as well.
Horizon Forbidden West coming to the service one year after launch is a big deal because Sony has been resistant to putting recent first-party PS5 games on its subscription service. While it's still not adding first-party titles on day one like Xbox Game Pass does, this is possibly our first indication of how Sony will handle adding its own games to the subscription. It's not the only PS4 and PS5 title coming to the service this month either, as the following strong lineup of games was also confirmed to be coming on February 21.

The Quarry (PS4, PS5)
Resident Evil VII Biohazard (PS4)
Outriders (PS4, PS5)
Scarlet Nexus (PS4, PS5)
Borderlands 3 (PS4, PS5) 
Tekken 7 (PS4, PS5)
Ace Combat 7: Skies Unknown (PS4)
Earth Defense Force 5 (PS4)
Oninaki (PS4)
Lost Sphear (PS4)
I Am Setsuna (PS4) 
The Forgotten City (PS4, PS5) 
Destroy All Humans! (PS4)

Read more
MLB The Show 23 returns to Xbox, PlayStation, and Nintendo Switch this March
Jazz Chisholm's cover art for MLB The Show 23.

Sony San Diego Studios announced MLB The Show 23 today, and confirmed that it will launch across all major PlayStation, Xbox, and Nintendo systems on March 28. 
No new platforms were added this year, so PC players aren't getting in on the fun. Still, this announcement makes it clear that MLB The Show is a multiplatform series across PlayStation, Xbox, and Nintendo platforms for the foreseeable future. Xbox's version of the trailer also confirms that MLB The Show 23 will be on Xbox Game Pass at launch, making this first-party Sony series a day-one Game Pass title three years in a row. 
MLB The Show 23 - Cover Athlete Reveal
As is typically the case with sports games, MLB The Show 23's reveal was primarily focused on its cover athlete. We learned that Jazz Chisholm Jr., a second baseman for the Miami Marlins, will grace the cover of the game. Like last year, the PS4, Xbox One, and Nintendo Switch versions of the game will cost $60, while players  on PS5 and Xbox Series X/S without Xbox Game Pass will need to pay $70. So far, no new gameplay features have been teased, although a blog post confirms that cross-platform multiplayer, saves, and progression across all versions of the game will return this year. 
So far, there's not a lot that actually seems new about MLB The Show 23, but this reveal concludes the genesis of a new era for the long-running baseball series. MLB The Show 23 will be released for PS4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S, and Nintendo Switch on March 28. 

Read more