Within Hours of Being Revealed, WWE 2K25’s Island Mode Is On the Edge of Stirring Multiple Controversies

The Island Mode for WWE 2K25 has been quite controversial, amassing a large number of negative reviews over its excessive microtransactions.

WWE 2K25 Island Mode

WWE 2K25 recently received a major update for its ‘Island Mode’, a standalone section of the game that offers a way for players to experience the sights and sounds of the WWE 2K franchise.

This online multiplayer map offers a multitude of challenges, events and interesting lore tidbits that should have resonated well with its player base, save for one important set back. The mode is littered with microtransactions, and of the particularly obnoxious variety that has not sat well with its players.

WWE 2K25’s Island Mode launches to an overwhelmingly negative response

WWE 2K25WWE 2K25’s Island has evoked a negative response from fans | Image Credit: 2K

Players of the WWE 2K franchise were in for a rude awakening once they got to enter the Island, which turned out to be a microtransaction-ridden hellscape. While these in-game purchases entirely include cosmetic items, the prices charged for some of these items is quite ludicrous.

For example, having to pay 36,000 VS for a jacket swap. To make matters worse, these prices are a lot higher than comparable items in other sections of the game as well. Even if one were to avoid paying money upfront and instead choose to grind their way through the campaign, it would take ages until they managed to unlock the item.

WWE 2K25 gameThe cost of in-game items is outrageous | Image Credit: 2K

Sinking in a few dozen games just to be able to unlock an item is ridiculous, and 2K seems to be banking on this very fact to have players take the ‘easy way out’ – which is, to purchase these items directly with real-world money.

The fact that WWE 2K25 has a rather non-functional multiplayer only adds salt to the injury, as the developers seem to have shifted their priority elsewhere, as it would appear.

This is not unlike what happened to NBA 2K, which also suffered the same fate after being riddled with microtransactions and a literal casino/slot machine. The game is barely recognizable, and is in an overall unhealthy state.

A lot of players seem to be unhappy with these changes, with many even choosing to abandon purchasing all 2K games from this point on. The fact that the game already costs over $100 and manages to have invasive microtransactions on top of it makes it even worse.

Indeed, the Island Mode seems more like a nostalgia fuelled cash grab. It is clear that this was the intended development from the first place, which makes it all the more unfortunate.

WWE 2K25 needs to act before it is too late

WWE 2K25 gameplay2K needs to stand up and get their head out of the sand | Image Credit: 2K

WWE 2K25 is not the first game to feature invasive microtransactions, and it most certainly will not be the last. However, a common theme shared across such games is their eventual decline, and slump into mediocrity – if not a slow, painful death.

2K needs to step up and address these issues, and work toward solving the game’s core problems instead of diverting focus away toward more short-term benefits. Not doing so will only alienate its player base further, and result in the eventual decline of the WWE 2K brand.

After all, a game without players to play it is not a good outlook and certainly not bringing in a lot of revenue either.

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