Double Eleven Keeps Blindfire Servers Alive, Makes Game Free to Play After a year and a half of early access, Double Eleven’s multiplayer first-person shooter Blindfire officially launched this week. The game, which centers on combat in pitch-black arenas using sound, technology, and instinct rather than sight, reached its full release despite struggling to find a broad audience. While the game received mostly positive reviews on Steam, player numbers remained low, and the team faced the typical dilemma of whether to shut down the servers or continue supporting the project. Instead of following the usual pattern of abandoning underperforming titles, Double Eleven made a bold decision: they kept the servers running indefinitely and made the game free for all players. The developers explained their choice in a message to players, stating that Blindfire “meant everything to the team who made it.” They emphasized that the decision was not a marketing stunt or a last-ditch effort to boost numbers, but a belief that creative work deserves to exist regardless of its commercial success. This move aligns with growing concerns in the gaming industry about the practice of shutting down online games once they stop generating profit. The Stop Killing Games movement, which has gained traction in European parliaments, seeks to protect titles from premature shutdowns. Double Eleven took action independently, without waiting for legislative pressure. The developers also confirmed that active development on Blindfire ended roughly a year ago, but they included one final update before shutting down further work. This update introduced two new weapons: the Desolation, an explosive sticky-slug shotgun designed for chaotic close-quarters combat, and the Tempest, a precision burst rifle for players who prefer calculated shots.#audio_aim_assist #double_eleven #blindfire #stop_killing_games #concord
