Skip to main content

Coronavirus: The ongoing ripple effect throughout the gaming industry

 

The impact of coronavirus, officially named COVID-19, continues to grow as multiple gaming companies announce delays and interruptions. The outbreak has disrupted life in China as daily activities in public spaces and workplaces are put on hold while officials try to contain the virus. With much of the tech industry, including gaming, relying on China for production and materials, a ripple effect was quickly felt. As the virus spreads across the world, including the U.S., further impacts on games, conferences, and hardware arise.

Recommended Videos

Digital Trends is monitoring the situation, and a list of the impacts within the gaming industry follows below.

E3 2020 canceled

E3 2020 contingency plans
Image used with permission by copyright holder

E3 has been the go-to annual occurrence for the video game industry since the ’90s, but the Entertainment Software Association canceled this year’s event. The organization cited the coronavirus as the reason, fearing for game industry employees and attendees’ safety if it were held the traditional way.

A digital-only version could be coming, with several companies like Microsoft, Devolver Digital, and Ubisoft already committing to holding nontraditional press conferences to still deliver the latest game announcements and trailers.

Game Developers Conference postponed

GDC
Image used with permission by copyright holder

This year’s Game Developers Conference is postponed to help prevent the virus’ spread. The conference will be rescheduled to summer and all attendees will receive a refund.

“After close consultation with our partners in the game development industry and community around the world, we’ve made the difficult decision to postpone the Game Developers Conference this March,” an announcement said on GDC’s website.

The decision came after several high-profile game studios dropped out of the event including Microsoft, Sony, and EA. GDC plans to upload planned talks to its YouTube channel and stream certain scheduled events via Twitch.

Nintendo Switch production delayed for the Japanese market

Animal Crossing: New Horizons
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Production on the Nintendo Switch for the entire Japanese market is in flux, leading to shortages of Switch consoles, accessories, and games. Pre-orders for the new Animal Crossing: New Horizons Switch model now have no release date in Japan. Orders of Ring Fit Adventure, which is out of stock in the country, won’t be filled anytime soon either. Nintendo said other accessories like Joy-Cons are also affected.

A Nintendo of America spokesperson confirmed to Digital Trends that the company does not expect delays in other regions, including North America and Europe. Nintendo makes its hardware for Japanese gamers in China, where the coronavirus has killed hundreds and continues to spread.

Oculus Quest back-ordered

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Popular VR headset Oculus Quest is back-ordered, and it seems that it will remain so for a while.

“Oculus Quest has been selling out in some regions due to high demand,” an Oculus spokesperson told Digital Trends in an email. “That said, like other companies, we’re expecting some additional impact to our hardware production due to the coronavirus. We’re taking precautions to ensure the safety of our employees, manufacturing partners, and customers, and are monitoring the situation closely. We are working to restore availability as soon as possible.”

The Quest is out of stock on the company’s website, Best Buy, and Amazon

Overwatch League events canceled

Image used with permission by copyright holder

On March 11, Activision Blizzard Esports decide to cancel all Overwatch League events in both March and April to reduce infection risk for players and attendees. In its announcement, the organization said it will be looking to have matches played when it is “safe and logistically possible,” and that it will try to stick to its original schedule as much as it can. The matches themselves will still be played during this period and broadcast online, but will not be public events when they return March 21. The match schedule is also being revised to minimize any latency issues.

Call of Duty League events canceled

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Following the cancellation of Overwatch League events, Activision Blizzard opted to do the same for Call of Duty League events, moving all matches to an online-only format for the remainder of 2020. It doesn’t appear any games will be canceled as a result of the decision.

The matches will be broadcast live to fans, and the current plan is to move matches back to a city-based format in the future.

Electronic Arts suspends all competitive gaming live events

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Electronic Arts has suspended all competitive live events for its games, including EA Sports titles and Apex Legends in order to mitigate the spread of coronavirus. This not only includes events EA runs itself, but also official events licensed to third-party organizers.

No timetable was given for when the suspension will end other than when “the global coronavirus situation improves.”

Plague Inc. dropped from Apple App Store

The pandemic simulation game Plague Inc. has been taken down from Apple’s App Store in China — after finding renewed popularity due to the coronavirus outbreak.

Sales of Plague Inc. recently surged, particularly in China, eight years after its release, amid concerns over the coronavirus, officially called COVID-19. The app reportedly topped the charts for premium iOS games in China, and also climbed up in the rankings in other countries such as the U.S. and U.K. as well.

Outer Worlds port for Switch delayed

Obsidian Entertainment

Beyond hardware, Switch players must now wait for a version of the game Outer Worlds. After announcing the 2019 title would come to the Nintendo Switch just last month, Private Division said on Twitter that the game is delayed. Virtuous, the Singapore-based studio working on the port, has experienced no health issues, the publisher assured, but its office remains closed.

Adding a positive note among the unfortunate news, Private Division said Switch players will get a physical cartridge option for Outer Worlds. Previously, the Switch game was only to be made available via download.

TurboGrafx-16 Mini delayed

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Konami’s TurboGrafx-16 Mini — a plug-and-play console pre-loaded with 50 games from the retro system — was scheduled to release on March 19, but it is delayed indefinitely because of the coronavirus. The manufacturing and shipping facilities where the console and its accessories are handled were both affected by the virus, and a new release date has yet to be set.

Konami said it will provide more information on a new release date when new timing is confirmed. However, pre-order holders don’t know when the console is shipping.

EVE Online’s Fanfest canceled

EVE Fanfest
Image used with permission by copyright holder

EVE Online’s annual Fanfest is canceled due to COVID-19. The event was scheduled to start on April 2 in Iceland, which just confirmed its first case of the virus.

“We realize that the situation a month from now could be very different, but the way events are developing both globally and in Iceland’s neighboring countries, an in-depth and serious review has made it clear that this is a necessary step to take,” explains a post on EVE’s website.

Lisa Marie Segarra
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Lisa Marie Segarra is the Gaming Section at Digital Trends. She's previously covered tech and gaming at Fortune Magazine and…
Battle Aces was born from a rejected StarCraft 2 expansion pitch
Art from the reveal trailer for Battle Aces.

The fast-paced real-time strategy (RTS) game Battle Aces was inspired by an idea that game director David Kim had while working on StarCraft 2 at Blizzard Entertainment.

“Why can’t there be an RTS game that gets rid of all these tedious clicks and focuses on the fun factors?” Kim recalled thinking. “There was a point during Legacy of the Void’s development where we seriously considered cleaning up all of those things and made an RTS game that’s really focused on the fun. But the conclusion was that we should not switch up what StarCraft 2 is on the last expansion of the game.”

Read more
3 new Xbox Game Pass games to play this weekend (November 8-10)
An alien in armor with a light sword standing in front of a space ship window with a planet in the background.

This is a good week for strategy game fans subscribed to Xbox Game Pass because November's first new additions to the service all fall within that genre. Two of them are real-time strategy game classics from Blizzard Entertainment, and the other is a strategic take on an arcade classic. If you're playing on a console, these additions may not mean as much to you, but for Game Pass subscribers with access to a PC, these recently added strategy game games are well worth your time.
StarCraft: Remastered
StarCraft Remastered Announcement

The original StarCraft is a monumental release for Blizzard Entertainment. It gave the studio a third pillar franchise alongside Warcraft and Diablo, was one of the first major esports games, and set a standard that most RTS games after it have tried to follow. In 2017, Blizzard released StarCraft: Remastered, updating the classics' visuals, audio, and online features; that's the version of StarCraft that has come to Xbox Game Pass. While there are more approachable RTS games nowadays, PC gamers should check out the original StarCraft if they've never played it before to better understand the foundational building blocks of the RTS genre.

Read more
All upcoming video games (PS5, Xbox, Switch, PC): 2025 and beyond
Doomslayer on a dragon with red wings.

Keeping track of every new video game release is a nearly impossible task. Games are constantly being announced, delayed, rereleased on new platforms, remastered, canceled — you get the point. With the upcoming games lineup constantly shifting on PC, Switch, Xbox Series X, PlayStation 5, and mobile, it can be hard to find games to look forward to playing (and to budget for) in the coming months.

Despite the herculean task of tracking an entire year of video game release dates, we're giving it our best shot. Check out this month-by-month schedule of new video game releases. We're focusing mainly on highly anticipated titles with concrete release dates, but will also include little-known indies and keep an eye on launch plans for up-in-the-air titles like Grand Theft Auto 6 or games that are still very early on in development like Hogwarts Legacy 2 or The Last of Us Part 3. If you're looking to get a quick glance at the future of video games, this is the place. We'll keep this list updated and as accurate as possible at regular intervals.
2025 release dates
Now that 2025 is here, the early months are already filling up with pretty impressive game releases. We'll be sure to note games that have expected or rumored release windows alongside games with solid launch plans.

Read more