Concord development deal reportedly rivaled The Last of Us Part 2 and Horizon Forbidden West at $200 million, which Sony has now chucked into a big ol' furnace
Concord was a huge loss in every sense
Earlier this fall, Sony stunned everyone by taking its brand new hero shooter Concord offline and issuing full refunds to all players.
Concord never managed to reach more than 700 concurrent players on Steam, so some had already declared it dead on arrival when Sony canceled it. In any case, Sony sure seemed to be banking on a much, much bigger success. Otherwise, the publisher wouldn't have dropped what's now being reported as more than $200 million into Concord's development deal.
Emphasis on over $200 million. Kotaku explains in its report that Sony's initial deal with now defunct developer Firewalk Studios wasn't enough to cover Concord's elongated, eight-year development period, or Concord's IP rights. In addition, Sony purchased Firewalk in 2023 for an undisclosed amount.
This new information from Kotaku lines up with reporting from podcaster Colin Moriarty from 2023, which claimed Sony indeed spent $200 million on the first few years Firewalk took to create Concord, as well as another $200 million on more development in 2023.
Some seriously doubt this apparent total of $400 million in development. If it were accurate, it would rival the development costs of some of the biggest Sony games, including revered titles like The Last of Us Part 2, Horizon Forbidden West, and Final Fantasy 7 Remake. To really drive home how colossal a failure a $400 million loss would be for Sony, that number is $300 million more than what it took to make Ratchet & Clank: Rift Apart and almost $100 million more expensive than Marvel's Spider-Man 2.
Perhaps the most disappointing thing is that, for most players, there just wasn't enough evidence of the time and money Firewalk put into Concord, which by most accounts felt like an underwhelming and cumbersome FPS. We said the same in our Concord review.
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Ashley is a Senior Writer at 12DOVE. She's been a staff writer at Kotaku and Inverse, too, and she's written freelance pieces about horror and women in games for sites like Rolling Stone, Vulture, IGN, and Polygon. When she's not covering gaming news, she's usually working on expanding her doll collection while watching Saw movies one through 11.