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The cutting room floor — So much screaming inside meGoogle Stadia shutdown stuns indie developers Game makers were still working on their ports when shutdown news went public.

Kyle Orland – Oct 14, 2022 11:00 am UTC Enlarge / Like it never even happened.Aurich Lawson / Getty Images reader comments 69 with 52 posters participating, including story author Share this story Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Reddit

Source Byte Studios Chairman of the Board Nikodem Swider had just put in one final late-night bug-squashing session. After four long months of porting work, his small Polish studio was finally ready to submit a near-final build addressing all of the must fix errors Google had identified before the game Jump Challenge could finally launch on Stadia.

Then, scrolling through the news on his train ride home, Swider saw what he called a horror message on his phone. Stadia was closing down. All his porting work would be for naught.

I [thought] it was some rumor it cannot be true, Swider said in a YouTube video in the immediate aftermath of the shutdown. [Then] I saw [it was an] official statement about Stadia.

I start shaking a little bit, Swider recalled. We put so much effort, so much effort to make it done But everything [is] gone, all work has gone. The blindside

Further ReadingGoogle kills Stadia, will refund game purchasesSwider wasnt the only Stadia developer blindsided by Googles late September announcement that the streaming gaming service would be shutting down next January. Game makers who talked to Ars (and some who shared their surprise on social media) all said they had no indication of Googles shutdown plans before the public announcement.

During correspondence [with Google], we are exchanging emailsnothing showed us it could be the end of Stadia, Swider said. Advertisement Source Byte’s Nikodem Swider shares thoughts on his experience working on an unshipped Stadia port.

Olde Skl Games CEO Rebecca Heineman told Ars her team was still working on a planned Stadia port of casual color-matching game Luxor Evolved the morning of Googles shutdown announcement. Heineman said she was preparing for a marketing meeting with her Google rep, scheduled for the next day, when an employee saw the news on Googles official blog.

Heineman said she immediately reached out to her contact at Google to find out what was going on. A couple of hours later, I got a response saying, WTF? Well, now I know what the all-hands meeting is going to be about,’ Heineman recalled. That was a Stadia employee! So even they didn’t know.” People talked about it shutting down since day one… I just hoped it wouldn’t happen before we could put the gameout!Necrosoft Games’ Brandon Sheffield

Necrosoft Games Director Brandon Sheffield said he had been discussing Stadia Software Development Kit updates and marketing plans just days before Stadias shutdown killed the studio’s planned port of Hyper Gunsport. That said, Sheffield added that he always knew this outcome was a distinct possibility.

I mean, people talked about it shutting down since day one, Sheffield told Ars. I knew it was a risk because Google is a big company, and if they’re not seeing big numbers, either of dollars or users or some other mystery number, they have a reputation for shutting stuff down. I just hoped it wouldn’t happen before we could put the game out! Page: 1 2 3 4 Next → reader comments 69 with 52 posters participating, including story author Share this story Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Reddit Kyle Orland Kyle is the Senior Gaming Editor at Ars Technica, specializing in video game hardware and software. He has journalism and computer science degrees from University of Maryland. He is based in the Washington, DC area. Email kyle.orland@arstechnica.com // Twitter @KyleOrl Advertisement

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