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Battalion 1944 Dev Offers Refunds, Ends Deal With Square Enix

The game is also going free-to-play under the name Battalion: Legacy.

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The studio behind of Battalion 1944 has announced it's ending its relationship with Square Enix, and that due to the game never coming to consoles, all console Kickstarter backers will be receiving refunds.

Developer Bulkhead did not explain why it has ended its relationship with Square Enix, only writing "We have formally ended our relationship with Square Enix. We want to start this exciting new chapter where we began, focusing on the players," in the Steam announcement post. On top of this, Bulkhead has announced that Battalion 1994 is being retitled Battalion: Legacy, and is going free-to-play.

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Now Playing: Battalion 1944 E3 2019 Trailer | Square Enix Press Conference

Bulkhead also expressed disappointment in not being able to bring Battalion 1944 to console, saying that it plans to "refund all Kickstarter backers," thanking and apologizing those that did back the console version.

The developer also explained what exactly Battalion: Legacy is, saying that it "is the culmination of work consolidated into one old school experience for all to enjoy," noting things like a working server browser, new weapons, classic Search & Destroy game mode, and a complete UI rework and visual overhaul.

Battalion: Legion is currently planned to launch August 16, but nothing has been announced regarding players who already own the game.

The Kickstarter for the game launched back in 2016, and was successfully funded in under three days. It was eventually released in early access in 2018, receiving a full release in 2019.

During early access, fans expressed concern over the fact that seemingly no work had been carried out on the console version of the game, with Bulkhead at the time saying it had no intention to provide refunds at the time, and that details regarding the console version would come in 2019, though obviously they never did.

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MigGui

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Wow it only took from 2016 to 2022 for the console supporters to receive their money back even though development for consoles never even started

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Simonthekid7

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Square Enix keeps cutting ties with western game developers, it seems?

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Simonthekid7

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Attention: There is a typo in the text because at one place it says "1994" which is not right. :)

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deactivated-64efdf49333c4

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Probably has something to do with Square dumping all things western in the last few months and these guys didn't want to be a part of it anymore.

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Simonthekid7

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@Barighm: It was my first thought. Square Enix keeps cutting off all the western stuff to make it more interesting for Sony or others to buy shares in Square Enix to further fund their venture into NFT.

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Simonthekid7

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Edited By Simonthekid7

@simonthekid7: Maybe things could return to "Only on Playstation" with the Final Fantasy games. I think Sony might have not liked it when Final Fantasy games were available also on Xbox 360. Xbox 360 still did not sell much in Japan. Not even exclusive JRPG:s like Blue Dragon helped much.

But Sony might want the Final Fantasy exclusivity again. Or maybe they just think it is lucrative. A sony owning Final Fantasy might also want to try to do something with Final Fantasy as a movie with Playstation Studios, their movie business. But Final Fantasy as a movie might not work. (They tried once before)

Nintendo are not known at all for going after or buying big game studios. Instead, they might invest in smaller ones who they worked with in the past, or Nintendo might go for a license. There was a time when console exclusive Star Wars games was almost a thing for Nintendo. Not anymore though. And i also think there was an occasional Die Hard or James Bond game and even some sports titles with licenses once.

Nintendo buying Square Enix or trying to does not seem likely. Sony might try. Or maybe Tencent.

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attirex

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Battlefront what? OH, *Battalion* 1944.

...

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