Game Enquirer
  • News
  • How To
  • Reviews
Font ResizerAa
Game EnquirerGame Enquirer
  • Contact Us
  • Donate US
Search
  • Home
  • Categories
  • More Foxiz
    • Donate US
    • Contact Us
    • Complaint
    • Sitemap
Follow US
Home » Ubisoft Signals Multiplayer Will Play a Bigger Role in Far Cry’s Future
Gaming

Ubisoft Signals Multiplayer Will Play a Bigger Role in Far Cry’s Future

By
admin
Byadmin
Follow:
Last updated: September 14, 2025
Share
Far Cry series will push multiplayer “more predominantly” going forwards, according to Ubisoft boss

(Note: Specific gameplay features and release timelines are not yet confirmed—statements below reflect Ubisoft CEO Yves Guillemot’s recent comments and reliable reporting as of September 2025.)

Ubisoft plans to bring multiplayer “more predominantly pushed” into future Far Cry installments, according to CEO Yves Guillemot. Speaking at a recent investor and industry event, Guillemot said the shift is part of Ubisoft’s broader effort to create connected, evergreen franchises that engage players for longer periods.

The statement doesn’t confirm exact formats or features, but it suggests that upcoming entries may lean more heavily on co-op systems, shared progression, or competitive modes than past titles. Historically, Far Cry has centered on expansive single-player campaigns supplemented by optional co-op and occasional competitive multiplayer.

What Ubisoft Has Actually Said

  • Confirmed Direction: Guillemot: “On Far Cry, it’s really to bring the multiplayer aspects more predominantly pushed, so that it can also be played for a long time by players.”
  • Unspecified Details: Ubisoft has not announced whether this means a full live-service game, a standalone multiplayer title, or a campaign-plus-service hybrid.
  • Alignment With Strategy: The comment aligns with Ubisoft’s push for social, connected experiences seen in Assassin’s Creed Infinity and other evolving franchises.

Inferred Possibilities (Not Official)

Industry analysts and outlets have speculated that a stronger multiplayer focus could include:

  • Co-op as a Central Pillar: Missions and emergent encounters potentially tuned for drop-in/drop-out play.
  • Competitive Experiments: Seasonal events or standalone modes to extend engagement.
  • Cross-Play and Cross-Progression: Shared unlocks and frictionless party systems across platforms.
  • Live Storytelling: Rotating objectives or map updates to refresh the sandbox between major releases.

These ideas remain unconfirmed and should be treated as possibilities, not promises.

Protecting Far Cry’s DNA

Ubisoft has consistently emphasized that Far Cry’s trademark single-player campaigns and villain-driven narratives remain core to the series identity. The expectation—based on prior comments and industry norms—is that future entries will:

  • Preserve offline access and self-contained campaigns.
  • Retain villain-centric storytelling and authored set-pieces.
  • Maintain sandbox improvisation (wildlife, vehicles, outposts) even as online features expand.

Technical Backbone and Player Trust

If multiplayer becomes central, Ubisoft will need to deliver:

  • Dedicated Servers & High Tick Rates: To ensure fair, stable matches.
  • Robust Anti-Cheat: Server-side validation, behavioral heuristics, and transparent enforcement.
  • Cross-Play Done Right: Input-based matchmaking, unified progression, and party features.
  • Fast Content Delivery: CDN caching and delta patching to avoid huge downloads.

None of these details have been confirmed, but they are standard requirements for modern service-driven shooters.

Monetization and Progression (Speculative Best Practices)

Analysts suggest that to maintain credibility, Ubisoft should:

  • Keep spending cosmetic-only, without pay-to-win advantages.
  • Provide clear XP thresholds, drop rates, and time-to-unlock estimates.
  • Support earnable alternatives to paid cosmetics through long-term challenges.
  • Maintain a regular balance cadence and feature a robust creator ecosystem for user-generated maps and modes.

Bottom Line

Far Cry’s next chapter is poised to be defined as much by who you play with as by the chaos you create—but exactly how remains unknown. Ubisoft has set expectations, not specifics. Players should watch upcoming Ubisoft Forward showcases or financial updates for concrete details on multiplayer features, monetization, and release windows. Until then, Far Cry’s core identity—exotic biomes, emergent mayhem, and memorable villains—remains the touchstone, even as the franchise edges toward a more social future.

TAGGED:Far CryFar Cry multiplayerFar Cry seriesfirst-person shooterFranchise directionFuture of Far CryGames as a serviceGaming industry newsgaming newslive servicemultiplayerOnline multiplayeropen-worldStrategy shiftUbisoftYves Guillemot
Share This Article
Facebook Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Pokémon Pokopia Announced for Nintendo Switch 2, Out in 2026 Pokémon Pokopia Announced for Nintendo Switch 2, Out in 2026
Next Article Hey Nintendo, Where Mario? Hey Nintendo, Where Mario?
Leave a Comment Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Most

popular

Fortnite leak shows Sonic is coming with new cosmetics
This tiny version of Windows 11 fits into just 2.29 GB and is ‘extremely aggressive’ in removing bloat such as Xbox, Solitaire and Defender
Team Cherry working on “quality issues” with Hollow Knight: Silksong’s Simplified Chinese translation, following mixed Steam reviews
Evening Reading – September 15, 2025
Undertale Anniversary Streams Set, Deltarune Chapter 5 Updated

You Might Also Like

Rhythm dungeon crawler GRIDbeat! announced for consoles, PC
News

Rhythm dungeon crawler GRIDbeat! announced for consoles, PC

September 11, 2025
Former Anthem lead producer says flying in BioWare’s doomed live action shooter is proof of the dysfunction in its development: ‘It’s Anthem’s worst feature, because the consequences of flying aren’t adequately taken into account’
News

Anthem’s Flight Mechanic Called “Proof of Dysfunction” by Former Lead Producer

September 14, 2025
Pokémon Legends Z-A, Mega Evolution, Mega Dimension DLC, Kalos, Lumiose City, Nintendo Switch
News

Pokémon Legends: Z-A Final Trailer Confirms Mega Evolution’s Return and Mega Dimension DLC

September 13, 2025
Monster Hunter Stories 3: Twisted Reflection launches March 13, 2026
News

Monster Hunter Stories 3: Twisted Reflection Dated for March 13, 2026—What the Subtitle Hints and How to Prepare

September 14, 2025
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy

© 2025 Game Enquirer. All rights reserved.
Game Enquirer is an independent gaming news outlet and is not affiliated with or endorsed by any game developer, publisher, or platform holder.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?