Skip to main content

‘For Honor’ ditches split-screen co-op, despite Ubisoft calling it ‘a key feature’

for honor abandons key offline co op mode forhonor no
Developer Ubisoft Montreal has backtracked its previous statements regarding For Honor‘s local multiplayer gameplay features, revealing that the final product will no longer offer a promised split-screen co-op mode.

The announcement arrived earlier this week despite previous Ubisoft-issued statements describing offline co-op as “absolutely a key feature” that is “super-required” to make For Honor a success, according to Eurogamer.

Announced at E3 in 2015, For Honor is a third-person melee combat game in which players take control of knights, samurai, and vikings throughout a series of brutal skirmishes. In addition to a single-player campaign, For Honor includes a collection of multiplayer modes, some of which pit teams of four players against one another in co-op battles for supremacy.

Though Ubisoft previously assured players that the finished product would offer local multiplayer options, For Honor‘s developers are suddenly downplaying the importance of offline co-op as the game approaches its multiplatform launch in February. This week’s revelation arrives after many fans have already locked in their pre-orders.

“The For Honor team made the difficult decision to cut split-screen co-op in order to deliver the best experience at launch,” Ubisoft said in a statement sent to Eurogamer this week. “It’s a feature that we liked and wished to deliver, but we found we can’t do it without impacting the quality of other elements that are more crucial to the For Honor experience. For Honor fans looking to play with friends will still have the option to play online co-op in the campaign and in all multiplayer modes.”

Despite being a popular feature throughout the previous console generation, split-screen co-op is now seen as a liability by many publishers as development costs continue to rise. Microsoft ignited a firestorm of fan controversy after 2015’s Halo 5: Guardians launched as the first series entry to lack a split-screen campaign mode, and the inexplicable absence of offline co-op in the recent Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutants in Manhattan led many fans to express their disappointment via Amazon, tanking the game’s overall customer review score as a direct result.

Ubisoft’s statement specifically mentions that split-screen co-op will not be available “at launch,” suggesting that a strong response from fans could spur the addition of offline options at a later date.

For Honor launches on February 14, 2017, for the PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC platforms.

Editors' Recommendations

Danny Cowan
Danny’s passion for video games was ignited upon his first encounter with Nintendo’s Duck Hunt, and years later, he still…
The best split-screen PS4 games
It Takes Two

There was a time when there was no other option for playing games with your friends besides plugging a second controller into your console and loading up a game with a split-screen mode. In modern times, thanks to video games taking advantage of the internet to allow for more players to come together, even across continents, split-screen play has slowly become phased out of most titles. Even PS4 games where multiplayer, co-op, or competitive is the primary focus are no longer guaranteed to let two players on the same console play together.

Whether it's due to technical limitations or trying to bring people into their online ecosystems to sell micro-transactions, split-screen gaming on the PlayStation 4 isn't always easy to do. But that doesn't mean every developer has given up on the old tradition of getting together with your friends for a glorious multiplayer session. In fact, there are some absolutely fantastic games that still allow you to team up or battle it out without going online. Here are the best split-screen PS4 games in 2021.

Read more
How to revive dead companions in Baldur’s Gate 3
Withers offering services to the player in Baldur's Gate 3.

You're given a good bit of leeway during battles in Baldur's Gate 3 before you or a companion actually bites the dust for good. While in battle, if a teammate does take enough damage to drop, they aren't dead then and there. Instead, they will be downed with a chance to roll every turn to get back up. If they roll successfully three times, the battle ends, or you use another character to pick them up, they're good. If they fail that roll three times, however, they will be completely dead. That can be harsh when you've become attached to certain characters and want to further their stories, so you'll be looking for any way you can to bring them back. Thankfully you do have a few options for reviving companions in Baldur's Gate 3, but just like respeccing, they aren't so obvious.
Pay Withers to bring them back

Withers is a friendly undead you can find in a secret room in the Dank Crypt found inside the Overgrown Ruins. After finding and speaking to him in his sarcophagus, he will offer you various services, one of which is bringing back any dead companions. He won't do this out of the kindness of his heart (probably because it isn't beating) and will charge you a heavy fine of 200 gold to do so. Still, that's a small price to pay to bring back a beloved character. Once paid, that character will appear in your camp where they would normally be, so there's no need to go back to their corpse and find them.
Use a scroll of Revivfy or learn it

Read more
Every video game delay that has happened in 2023 so far
The player skates toward the moon in Skate Story.

Few things feel as inevitable in the video game industry as delays. Ever since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, game delays have only become more and more common as developers find previously set timelines unrealistic and adjust their release plans accordingly. More than halfway through 2023, we've already seen some notable AAA games like Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League, Skull & Bones, and Pragmata delayed pretty heavily. Because video game release date delays are so common, it can be tough to keep track of every game that has had its launch date shifted in some way.
That's why, just as we did in 2021 and 2022, Digital Trends is rounding up every game delay that's announced throughout 2023. Here are the high-profile ones that have happened so far, listed chronologically by their new intended release dates.
The Dark Pictures: Switchback VR (March 16)

As Until Dawn: Rush of Blood is one of the best games for PlayStation VR, The Dark Pictures: Switchback VR, Supermassive Games' PlayStation VR2 successor, is a highly anticipated launch title for the upcoming VR headset. Unfortunately, it will no longer make PlayStation VR2's February 22 launch and will instead be released on March 16. On Twitter, a message from Supermassive Games says this delay will ensure that players "receive the most polished, terrifying experience possible" at release. The game was released on that date to mixed reviews.
Atelier Ryza 3: Alchemist of the End & the Secret Key (March 24)

Read more