
As announced by the official RE_Games account on X, Resident Evil Re:Verse is set to be removed from digital storefronts on March 3, 2025, and will completely cease online services on June 29. This will end support for the game entirely, with no plans for further development or maintenance, and Re:Verse will not be playable in any official capacity after it goes offline on June 29. Consequently, Re:Verse also won’t be included for free with purchases of Village after it and its DLCs are removed on March 3.
We regret to share that we will be ending all service and support for Resident Evil Re:Verse on June 29, 2025. Thank you to the Re:Verse players over the last few years! For more details and a schedule of the closure: https://t.co/z0JFdF1dSO — Resident Evil (@RE_Games) February 6, 2025
What Went Wrong With Resident Evil Re:Verse
Gameplay, Balance, & Monetization Issues Doomed Re:Verse From The Start

Despite ostensibly being a celebration of Resident Evil‘s 25th anniversary, reception to Re:Verse on launch was largely negative, with players criticizing the game for gameplay issues, balance issues, a general lack of content, and being overly monetized, with a premium battle pass system and character skins sold as microtransactions.
The game’s negative reputation at launch was only compounded by a lack of updates, leading to the game being mostly forgotten even among die-hard Resident Evil fans – according to Steam Charts, from an already-low all-time peak of just over 2,000 players, the game’s audience has shrunk down to almost nothing, with players counts in the single digits. News of the game’s impending shutdown has presumably boosted the playerbase, but even then, it’s only managed to reach a 24-hour peak of 55 players.
This Is The Right Move For RE
PVP Games Don’t Fit The Resident Evil Franchise






Re:Verse becoming completely unplayable is a negative in terms of preservation, especially for any players who spent extra money on it, but the game itself is unlikely to be missed by many. Unpopular from the very start, Resident Evil Re:Verse is set to be removed from digital storefronts on March 3, and go offline on June 29, and the game’s failure will hopefully steer Resident Evil away from trying to focus on multiplayer- or, at the very least, result in a better multiplayer game in the future.