Summary

  • Ubisoft has cancelled its free-to-play Division spin-off Heartland three years after it was announced.
  • Developer Red Storm Entertainment will now be working on Rainbow Six Siege and XDefiant.

Ubisoft just announced that it has cancelled the upcoming free-to-play shooter The Division Heartland three years after having been announced.

As reported by IGN, the news broke this morning during Ubisoft's earnings call. The company revealed that it has "redeployed resources to bigger opportunities".

Related

If Watch Dogs Is Dead, It's Because Ubisoft Didn’t Go Big And Bold When It Had The Chance

Legion had a great concept, but fumbled the execution.

Posts

The Division Heartland--developed by Red Storm Entertainment--was delayed shortly after its announcement in 2021. Initially, it was supposed to have launched just a year later in 2022. Now, it joins Project Q and Immortals Fenyx Rising 2 in Ubisoft's growing library of cancelled games.

What Is The Division Heartland?

Ubisoft announced The Division Heartland as a free-to-play spin-off with two main modes set in the fictional Silver Creek, a town in rural America.

Related

Is Massive Big Enough To Make Avatar, Star Wars, And The Division?

The Division 3 studio has a LOT on its plate right now.

Posts

The first was a PvPvE mode with 45 players where you would "fend off against agents from a rogue faction known as the Vultures while surviving a virus". The other was Excursion Operations, a purely PvE mode in which you would "complete missions and collect loot/gear".

The last major update was way back in April of last year, when Ubisoft shared gameplay footage revealing three new classes - Weapons Expert, Medic, and Survivalist. It also revealed that the base of operations--Rocket Rink--would be the first base of operations in the series that's shared among players, making it so that you could easily group up with strangers and customise your characters all in one spot.

What Will Happen To Developer Red Storm Entertainment Following The Division Heartland's Cancellation?

RSE has worked on a slew of games at Ubisoft over the years from The Division to Far Cry 3 to classics like Ghost Recon and the original Rainbow Six. Thankfully, it will continue operations despite the cancellation of Heartland.

"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 [Siege]," Ubisoft wrote.

A leaker also claimed last month that the Watch Dogs series is "dead and buried".

XDefiant is slated to launch later this month on May 21. It's a free-to-play Call of Duty-like live-service shooter that pulls from all across Ubisoft's library, with factions pulled from Far Cry, Splinter Cell, and Watch Dogs to name a few.

The Division

Expand Collapse