The extraction shooter genre is notoriously hard to break into, but if any studio can give it a good shot, it’s Bungie with Marathon. Launching as a premium game with a boxed price, Marathon will have a lot of competition from the likes of Escape From Tarkov and Hunt: Showdown, two similarly premium games, and titans of the genre.

Bungie’s decision that Marathon will not be free-to-play has created some discussion, but the veteran studio is sticking to the plan, saying that it believes the choice is right for the future content schedule of the title. However, as it goes up against well-entrenched games with loyal player bases, Bungie may have to adopt some new tactics to get people to try Marathon in the hopes of turning them into paying customers.

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Is Marathon a Hero Shooter?

The recent gameplay reveal for Bungie's new Marathon game made many fans wonder if it's a hero shooter, but the answer is not so clear-cut.

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Bungie Is Sticking by Marathon as a Premium Release

Bungie revealed Marathon’s gameplay recently, showing off its vision for an extraction shooter. A number of videos were put out marketing the game, while content creators were invited to Bungie headquarters to get a hands-on look. While there has been much discussion about the gameplay, visual design, and its relationship with Destiny, one question has been posed by commentators.

Bungie’s decision to make Marathon a premium game has caused some people to comment on how well it will fare in the difficult extraction market. Citing examples like Sony’s ill-fated Concord shutting down, some people believe that Marathon not being an accessible free-to-play title will hurt its ability to sustain itself in the long run.

In response to this, Marathon Game Director Joe Ziegler said that the choice to price Marathon this way was appropriate, citing the work the studio is doing to support the game with a seasonal model “without an increase to the boxed price.” Bungie seems confident that players will be excited enough about Marathon that they will want to jump in regardless of the revenue model, and that the choice between free-to-play and boxed price has not changed a title’s success or failure within the genre in the past.

There is merit to this philosophy too. Hunt: Showdown and Escape From Tarkov are hugely successful extraction games that do not use a free-to-play model. Escape From Tarkov is not even on Steam, which is often cited as a reason for games not succeeding, which Marathon will be on. Despite its success, it has famously caught flak for its high price of entry, with the controversy around Tarkov’s The Unheard Edition replacing the Edge of Darkness version that was previously the game’s highest price tier.

Marathon’s Premium Plans Shouldn’t Rule Out The Free Weekend Strategy

With Bungie committed, there is still one strategy that the developer has to onboard new players. A popular tactic among live-service paid games is the free weekend, where new players can download the game for free for a limited time, test it out, and then pay for it if they want to keep playing.

Free weekends have historically provided large boosts to games that use them, in many cases doubling, tripling, or multiplying the player base even more, as the window of time gives people who are curious a taste of what they are missing. Free weekends can also extend to holidays, and Bungie should be mindful of deploying them during windows before large seasonal content drops as a way to get new players excited about the upcoming content, as well as inject some extra life into the community.

There is one elephant in the room with this strategy though, and that is Destiny 2, which went free-to-play two years after launch. Originally a full-priced release, the switch made getting new players much simpler. But Destiny 2 has a hefty expansion model to build upon, ensuring that even when free-to-play, money will still come in. Perhaps Marathon will follow in the same footsteps one day, but as it stands, free weekends could be a secret weapon in the fight for space in the crowded extraction shooter market.

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Extraction Shooter
FPS
Multiplayer
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Systems
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Developer(s)
Bungie
Publisher(s)
Bungie
Multiplayer
Online Multiplayer
Franchise
Marathon
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WHERE TO PLAY

DIGITAL
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Genre(s)
Extraction Shooter, FPS, Multiplayer