Blizzard's survival game has been in development for almost 5 years
It's in a playable state, but we still have no idea when it'll be out.
This article was updated on January 31, 2022 with a statement from Blizzard.
Blizzard clearly isn't ready to share many details about its upcoming survival game, because the only title for the game it's given us is "Unannounced Survival Game." Enigmatic! The non-announcement has at least allowed current and ex-Blizzard developers to speak openly about their involvement, and based on their comments, we've learned that: A) people with knowledge of the project are pretty hyped about it, and B) it's been in some form of development for more than four-and-a-half years.
Unannounced Survival Game's development is being led by Craig Amai, who said on Twitter that the game started as a "humble pitch" on his PC. According to Amai's current LinkedIn profile, he left the World of Warcraft team and started leading the survival game team in July 2017, four years and seven months ago.
Amai has had a long career at Blizzard. According to his resume he joined the company in 2004 as a senior game master who offered "varying capacities of in-game customer support, primarily for World of Warcraft." He later became a senior designer on WoW, and then lead quest designer, working on the MMO all the way until he started on the survival game in 2017.
We also know that the survival game is in a playable state, because Blizzard boss Mike Ybarra said on Twitter that he's "played many hours" of it with the dev team. A smaller detail I noticed today is that Geoffrey Virtue, executive producer of Teamfight Tactics at Riot, co-led Blizzard's survival game between 2019 and 2021.
"This is a project that will have a big impact on the industry," Virtue said of the game this week.
This July, Blizzard's survival game will have been in development for five years, but we don't know how much of that time has been spent conceptualizing and experimenting and how much has been spent producing the meat of the game. We've seen projects stew for a decade or more before being released. Another game recently purchased by Microsoft, The Elder Scrolls 6, was first teased in 2018, and it's currently still in a design phase while Bethesda focuses on releasing Starfield. Even after TES6 goes into full-scale production, whenever that happens, it probably won't release for several more years.
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"We're excited to share a glimpse of a new project and posted some job openings to build a team to bring its vision to life," a Blizzard spokesperson told PC Gamer. "However, we are in the early stages of development and do not have anything more to share at this time."
I’ve played many hours of this project with the team and I’m incredibly excited about the teams vision and the brand-new world it presents for players to immerse themselves in together. Join us to help make it a reality! https://t.co/pLhijX2Li9January 25, 2022
It does seem like Blizzard's survival game is more than a bunch of documents and a prototype, at least. About a year ago, Amai shared a job listing for a lead content designer on LinkedIn, which is the sort of job title you expect to see when a game's production is entering full swing. Blizzard is hiring multiple artists and level designers, presumably to help produce the substance that will make up the released game.
Still, Blizzard's survival game could be years away—Diablo 4 and Overwatch 2 are already on the horizon. Then again, if Amai is really going to embrace the PC online survival genre, he ought to just release a busted alpha version of the game now, and then upgrade it to "beta" six years from now after it's already sold 20 million copies, spawned a dozen new Twitch celebrities, and generated a cottage industry for YouTube crafting and home decorating guides. That's the traditional way.
Tyler grew up in Silicon Valley during the '80s and '90s, playing games like Zork and Arkanoid on early PCs. He was later captivated by Myst, SimCity, Civilization, Command & Conquer, all the shooters they call "boomer shooters" now, and PS1 classic Bushido Blade (that's right: he had Bleem!). Tyler joined PC Gamer in 2011, and today he's focused on the site's news coverage. His hobbies include amateur boxing and adding to his 1,200-plus hours in Rocket League.