Rocksteady is pulling the plug on new content for Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League after Season 4, with the developer announcing its plans to end support for the troubled online game in January 2025.
Rocksteady revealed the news in an official blog detailing Suicide Squad’s final season, which will include the release of an offline mode and a new playable character in Deathstroke. While Rocksteady doesn’t plan to release any new content, Suicide Squad’s story will remain playable via offline mode and it will be possible to play co-op with friends. Previous seasonal content will also continue to be available.
Elsewhere, Rocksteady said Suicide Squad will remain available for purchase and that its in-game store will continue to function after Season 4 along with its in-game LutherCoin currency. Rocksteady didn’t indicate how long it plans to keep Suicide Squad online after it finishes releasing new content.
A difficult release for Suicide Squad Suicide Squad Season 4 will mark the end of what has been a fraught release for Rocksteady. It struggled with mixed reviews when it came out back in February and never really recovered its momentum. We wrote in at the time, “Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League is a thoroughly frustrating game to play. There are things to enjoy here, with combat that’s snappy enough to carry it through a genuinely good DC comics story artfully dressed in high production values. But everything else just falls down around it.”
Suicide Squad ended up struggling on the sales front, spurring a double-digit decline in revenue for Warner Bros. gaming. It joins several other online games that have struggled in 2024, including Concord and XDefiant.
Suicide Squad’s final season will begin with the release of Episode 7 on December 10 and will conclude with the release of Episode 8 next month. For more, check out our full explanation of Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League’s endgame.
Honestly surprised this thing was still getting content at all.
We’ll simply make a live service game, that way we can
keep improving it forevershit on anyone who might have had any faith in it after it’s an inevitable failure like almost all other live service gamesI do not trust live service games anymore. When I see that phrase attached to a game, I skip it. It always translates to “we will eventually rugpull on you and there won’t be shit you can do about it.” I’m not paying a dime in money or time for something that can be taken away at any moment and rendered worthless.
Fortnite is superb. I’ve not invested a penny but I can purchase every premium season pass and more. The game always offers something fresh and it’s gone well beyond battle royale. If it gets shut down, it won’t take away from the fun I’ve had.
I can give Fortnite a pass because I enjoyed it a ton for years without paying a dime, and it’s stuck around.
I think investors like it and that’s what matters to them the most. Live service reminds them of Fortnite and means they can make ongoing revenue.