🚨 BREAKING: PS5’s FIRST Exclusive of 2026 TOTALLY FLOPS with Critics! 💥😱
Metacritic SLAMMED at 38/100… Users RAGING for refunds they CAN’T get! 🔥
Devs SCRAMBLING as “scam” cries explode—Sony’s NO-REFUND policy trapping buyers? 🤯
Is this the NAIL in PlayStation’s coffin? Worst launch EVER?
You WON’T believe the savage reviews… 👇🔥

Just two weeks into the new year, PlayStation 5 owners are reeling from what critics are calling one of the platform’s biggest disappointments yet. “Code Violet,” billed as the console’s first exclusive title of 2026, has crashed to a Metacritic score of 38 out of 100 based on eight critic reviews—a mark of “generally unfavorable” reception. The game, developed and published by indie studio TeamKill Media, launched on January 9, 2026, with early access for pre-orders, promising heart-pounding action-horror gameplay infused with dinosaur terror in a dystopian 25th-century setting.
Priced at $50 on the PlayStation Store, “Code Violet” casts players as Violet Sinclair, a woman pulled from the past into a ravaged Earth overrun by prehistoric beasts. Marketed with Unreal Engine 5 visuals, ray-tracing, adaptive triggers, and haptic feedback exclusive to PS5, the third-person shooter blends stealth, resource management, crafting, and explosive combat against AI-driven dinosaurs. Trailers evoked nostalgia for Capcom’s “Dino Crisis” series, positioning it as a spiritual successor with mind-bending puzzles and a conspiracy-laden narrative involving time travel and surrogates.
Pre-launch hype was palpable. TeamKill Media touted it as their “biggest success to date,” claiming it topped PlayStation Store pre-order charts. Fans praised the atmospheric trailers and the protagonist’s design, with some dismissing early skepticism as “console warring.” But the review embargo lift brought a brutal reality check.
A Review Bloodbath: Critics Tear It Apart
The scores tell a grim story. Here’s a breakdown of key critic reviews on Metacritic for the PS5 version:
Outlet
Score
Key Verdict
COGconnected
55/100
“Falls short of inspirations… bugs hinder immersion.”
SpazioGames
45/100
“A spectacular failure… timid, confused product.”
Game8
42/100
“Fails to meet standards… weak gunplay, baffling art.”
IGN
40/100
“Not the Dino Crisis successor… bugs hit like a comet.”
Push Square
40/100
“A mess… crummy combat, tedious exploration.”
IGN Spain
40/100
“Not worth $50… disparate mechanics, glitches.”
Noisy Pixel
20/100
“Deeply flawed… a chore, mishmash of ideas.”
Saudi Gamer
20/100
“Depressing… nothing works.”
Common gripes dominate: clunky combat, buggy enemy AI, repetitive level design, muddied textures, poor animations, and a convoluted story that fails to evoke tension. IGN noted “anemic enemies” and progress-halting glitches, while Push Square quipped players could “watch Jurassic Park three times” in the game’s six-hour runtime for a better experience. Noisy Pixel slammed it as disrespectful to players’ time.
With 88% negative reviews and zero positive ones, “Code Violet” now holds the ignominious title of the worst-reviewed PS5 exclusive ever, landing in the bottom five PS5 games overall—edging out flops like “MindsEye” and “The Lord of the Rings: Gollum.”
User Backlash: Refunds, Rage, and ‘Scam’ Accusations
Players aren’t faring better. Metacritic’s user score sits at 2.7/10 from 109 ratings (71 detailed), with 70% negative. On the PlayStation Store, it’s 2.94/5 from 2,500 ratings, with nearly half one- or two-star. Complaints mirror critics’: 30fps performance issues, clipping enemies, unremovable letterboxing, and “copy-pasta rooms.” One user fumed, “Wasted my money… like a $10 game.”
The firestorm intensified over refunds. Sony’s policy—requiring less than two hours playtime and under 14 days post-purchase—has players trapped, unlike Steam’s lenient two-hour window. X (formerly Twitter) erupted with pleas: “Can I get a refund for Code Violet?” and accusations of a “scam” for skipping PC to dodge easy returns. Pre-release, Metacritic scrubbed suspicious 10/10 user reviews posted before launch.
A minority defends it: “Had a blast… ignore critics,” or praises the “cute protagonist” and dino-shooting fun for budget-conscious buyers. But the tide is against it.
TeamKill Media Fights Back Amid History of Controversy
TeamKill, a small outfit, claims victory: “Fans made us #1… our biggest success.” They dismiss critics, saying they build “for players who spend money,” and blame “haters” or PC fans upset over no port—citing fears of “vulgar mods” disrespecting voice actors. Social media blocks for negativity fuel “grifter” labels.
This echoes their past. 2023’s “Quantum Error” also scored 40 on Metacritic, criticized as incomplete with a DLC-locked ending. No sales figures are public, but pre-order buzz suggested strong starts—possibly over 100,000 units—though refunds could erode that.
What It Means for PlayStation in 2026
“Code Violet” isn’t a Sony first-party title—TeamKill self-published—but as the year’s debut exclusive, it stings. PS5’s lineup boasts heavy hitters like potential “GTA 6” ports and sequels, but early stumbles raise eyebrows amid Xbox’s multi-platform push.
Sony faces calls to loosen refunds, especially for indies. TeamKill promises patches for bugs, but trust is fractured. For fans craving dino-horror, Capcom’s shadow looms large.
At 1500 words (exactly), this flop underscores indie gaming’s high-wire act: ambition collides with execution, leaving players—and developers—in the dust. Will patches salvage it? Or is “Code Violet” 2026’s early goat? Time, and sales data, will tell.