
Theorycraft Games is officially pulling the plug on Supervive. The MOBA-battle royale hybrid will be shut down in late February 2026 after struggling to keep players around long-term.
The game’s executive producer Jess “Safelocked” Nam said the team’s changes haven’t been effective in bringing in the new players, as large numbers of people who downloaded and played the game moved on from it pretty fast.
The reality of this inability to retain the playerbase is heavy for Theorycraft Games, as Supervive is an ambitious and expensive game to support, leading to complete unsustainability.
Before the shutdown, Theorycraft is still shipping Patch 2.04, the final patch for the game, which includes the last batch of balance changes, a prototype mode called Prisma Party, and a free cosmetic bundle for players. Nam also noted that the team is offering refunds for any item purchased in the last three months.
Supervive’s end comes after an eventful year: the game came out in Early Access in November 2024, and later had a global 1.0 launch in July 2025. People in the comments are generally lamenting this end for the game, as it had very competent mechanics and crisp presentations, but some of the progression systems weren’t up to par and had to be reworked.

Nam says that Theorycraft believes its next project will look pretty different from Supervive, with a goal of forging a new direction focused on high-quality, sharply focused games that live “more squarely in the space between indie and AAA.” She adds that the studio is likely to go radio silent until the developers have something tangible to share.

Supervive shutdown FAQ
When did Supervive launch?
Early Access began Nov. 20, 2024, and the full 1.0 launch followed in late July 2025.
When does Supervive shut down?
Theorycraft says live service ends in late Feb. 2026.
Who made Supervive?
Theorycraft Games is the developer. The studio consists of the former Riot Games, Blizzard, and Bungie devs.
Why is Supervive shutting down?
Theorycraft cites player retention challenges, changes that didn’t move the needle enough, new player growth, and operating costs as the reasons for its shutdown.
What platforms is it on?
PC via Steam. No console ports were ever released.
What is Theorycraft doing next?
The studio hasn’t revealed a new title yet, but says its next project will be meaningfully different and more focused.
It’s sad to watch the death of another fan-favorite game after Rumbleverse’s demise six months after its global release back in 2023.