this post was submitted on 17 Jan 2025
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Don't forget Path of Exile.
Id argue a bunch of early access games that get constant updates are Live Service games too.
And indie games like Terraria and Minecraft were the best examples of live service.
I'd consider No Man's Sky a pretty successful live service game, as well.
"Live service" is a game that has an always online requirement. Just getting updates on the regular doesn't make it a live service if the game works just fine without an Internet connection.
Single player Ubisoft games are all "live services", due to some of them needing a constant connection to Ubisoft's servers, and them having in-game shops that only work while online.
I'm not sure you got the right definition of live service game. What you said is the definition of always online games.
They're the same thing. "Live service" is how Activision-Blizzard rebranded games that required to be always online. They also solidified the outline of things publishers at the time were already doing with their always online games, such as endless content players will have to buy.
Those documents leaked many years ago, and soon after that the moniker was changed from "always online" to "Live Service".
You got any links to one of those leaks? That sounds kinda interesting.