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Ubisoft cancels The Division Heartland to focus on ‘bigger opportunities’

Characters holding guns in a messed up city in The Division Heartland
Ubisoft

Ubisoft announced Wednesday that it would be canceling its in-development,free-to-play third-person shooter Tom Clancy’s The Division Heartland, citing a recalibration of its resources. It also said that it would be moving workers at Red Storm, the support studio in charge of the game, onto other projects.

In a statement to IGN, a studio spokesperson noted that the company made “the tough call” to end development of the game “effective immediately” to move to “bigger opportunities such as XDefiant and Rainbow Six.”

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“After careful consideration, we have made the tough call to halt development on Tom Clancy’s The Division Heartland, effective immediately. Our priority now is to support the talented team members at our Red Storm Entertainment studio, who will be transitioning to new projects within our company, including XDefiant and Rainbow Six.”

The news comes alongside the company’s latest financial report, which also released on Wednesday. Ubisoft co-founder and CEO Yves Guillemot said that while the studio is “back on track on its profitable growth trajectory” and is looking at a strong lineup for the next year, including Assassin’s Creed Shadows and Star Wars Outlaws, it’ll be refocusing on open-world adventure games in established franchises like Assassin’s Creed and “expanding [its] footprint” into games-as-service titles like XDefiant. It’ll also continue to invest in generative AI

Heartland is just one of multiple titles the publisher has canceled over the past few years. In January 2023, it announced it was canceling three unannounced games, after four were canceled the previous year. As with much of the video game industry, Ubisoft has also seen a number of layoffs — 1,700, according to the financial report.

The Division Heartland was announced in 2021 as a standalone, free-to-play title for consoles and PC. It was being developed by support studio Red Storm, and was set to launch by the end of 2022, according to a Ubisoft blog post, but that did not happen. It was later delayed into 2023, and a closed beta launched in June of that year. This was at a time when Ubisoft was putting more resources behind the franchise, as it also announced a mobile title called The Division Resurgence and a Netflix movie starring Jessica Chastain and Jake Gyllenhaal.

Ubisoft isn’t done with The Division series, though, with Resurgence still in the works. The mobile game just had a limited closed technical test in April, and is on track for a release by March 2025, according to the financial report.

Carli Velocci
Carli is a technology, culture, and games editor and journalist. They were the Gaming Lead and Copy Chief at Windows Central…
Tom Clancy’s The Division 3 is in development under new executive producer
The Division 2

Ubisoft has announced that Tom Clancy's The Division 3 is in the works now that a new executive producer is poised to take over the franchise.
On Ubisoft's blog, the company revealed that Julian Gerighty, who is currently the Creative Director of Star Wars: Outlaws, will transition to being the Executive Producer for The Division Brand once Outlaws comes out. Previously, two The Division games were confirmed to be in the works -- a mobile game titled The Division Resurgence and survival shooter The Division Heartland -- but this announcement confirms that players should also eventually expect a full sequel to 2019's The Division 2.

As Gerighty isn't even in charge of The Division franchise yet and still needs to build a team for the sequel, it's clear that The Division 3 is far from release, and not a lot of concrete details about it can be shared. Still, Ubisoft confirmed that its development will be led by Massive Entertainment, and Gerighty shared a bit of his vision of quality for the franchise. 
"I think that we delivered [quality] with Tom Clancy’s The Division’s cutting-edge visuals, incredible gameplay, and promise to the player that they can't get this experience anywhere else, and then again with Tom Clancy’s The Division 2," he explained. "It’s about refinement, it's about pushing the quality bar consistently forward ... There are a huge number of talented developers currently working on the brand, and I think that having more consistency can only make everybody's work sing."
Ubisoft did not announce platforms or a release window for Tom Clancy's The Division 3. 

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Ubisoft has every right to delete your games — even if it shouldn’t
The GOG Galaxy Mac app showing a library of games.

Everyone's mad at Ubisoft -- and for good reason.

For a moment, it certainly seemed like Ubisoft was not only shutting down inactive accounts, but also deleting games purchased on Steam. Now, not all of that ended up being true, but the controversy has been a not-so-gentle reminder that you don't actually own your games -- and technically, Ubisoft has every right to delete them if it so pleases.
You don't own your games
If you haven't caught wind of the fiasco, an anti-DRM (Digital Rights Management) Twitter user spotted an email circulating from Ubisoft that threatened to delete accounts on the Ubisoft PC app if they remained inactive. If you choose not to follow the link and keep your account safe, Ubisoft will remove your account. Oh, and it seemed like your games along with it.

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Everything announced at the June 2023 Ubisoft Forward
Basim leaps at an enemy in Assassin's Creed Mirage.

The summer of gaming continued with Ubisoft's dedicated showcase on Monday. Ubisoft Forward broke down the publisher's upcoming slate across an 80-minute main show and a 15-minute light preshow. There weren't any surprises, but we got extended looks at some previously announced games. There were gameplay and story reveals for Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora, The Crew Motorfest, and Assassin's Creed Mirage, which had all been teased already. Prince of Persia: The Lost Crown and Star Wars: Outlaws were both announced just days earlier and also got some longer deep dives during the showcase.

When it comes to the Assassin's Creed franchise, we saw some uncut Mirage gameplay and got a little taste of what's to come after Mirage with short teasers for Nexus VR and Codename Jade. In case you missed it, this is everything that was announced during the June 2023 Ubisoft Forward.

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